"Te'kel" = weighed
Mayan "Ti'kal" = place of judgement
A) The RED Bow is a uniquely "Jewish" symbol shows up in some other, very interesting, places...
Stele of victory for Shalmaneser III over Judah
Emblem glyph of Ti-Ka-L in Guatemala
Codex Ixtlilxochitl - in several places, with a Blue variation
B) The phrase "mene, mene, te-k-el upharsin (litterally "numbered, numbered, weighed, divided" ) appears in Daniel 5...
From which we get our modern expression “the handwriting is on the wall”
Found @ Tikal - "A pointer to read the codies with..."
Schele Number: 45072
Description: Sculpture fragments from Structure 16?
"Star of David" on the wall at the synagogue of Capernaum in Israel =>
While serving in Guatemala in 1986-87,
I personally clipped this article from the Church News. In those years, missionaries mail was often 3-4 months old by the time it reached the jungle villages where we were serving, so I do not know the exact month, or year for that matter, but I believe it was published in 1987 =>
This interlocking "star of David" was originally found in 1970 by G. Lynn Justice. Elder Justice later served as the director of temporal affairs in Guatemala for the Church of Jesus Christ of Later Day Saints and returned to the ruins in Copan to photograph "the star" he had seen years earlier...
Aramaeans (Hebrew: אֲרַמִּים) - were a tribal[2] Semitic people[3][4] in the ancient Near East, first documented in historical sources from the late 12th century BC. Their homeland, often referred to as the land of Aram, originally covered central regions of what is now Syria. The people of Aram were called "Arameans" in Assyrian texts[8] and the Hebrew Bible,[9] but the terms "Aramean" and “Aram” [Abram] were never used by later Aramean dynasts to refer to themselves or their country, except the king of Aram-Damascus, since his kingdom was also called Aram.[10] Aramaic eventually became the lingua franca of public life and administration as Imperial Aramaic, particularly during the periods of the Neo-Babylonian Empire (612–539 BC)
Dr. Brian Stubbs
Thursday, October 2⋅6:20 – 7:20pm
"Hebrews spoke Aramean"... Jacob got his wife Rachel from Laban, "son of Bethuel the Syrian"... Gen 28:5
Because their mother spoke "Aramean/Aramaic, it was the NATIVE language of the House of Israel. They learned Cannanite/Hebrew in their father's business, and later their descendants learned Egyptian while in captivity, but they ALWAYS spoke Aramean/Aramaic
"Their homeland, often referred to as the land of Aram, originally covered central regions of what is now Syria..." - => "...early references to the people of "Aram" have appeared at the archives of Mari ~1900 BC"
Aram => "Abram" I will bet
Uto-aztecan is a MIX of 3/4 Aramean + 1/4 mulekite (Phoencian)