We currently have a deficit of $190, and we wish to thank those persons who have donated to bring it down to that level from the original $300. We have until the first of December to obtain the funds we need to stay on the net and continue our efforts to bring you truth as this article does. I wish to thank all of you who have helped in the past and who have supported our humble efforts. We are grateful when you notify us of the value this has been to you and yours, it helps us to know that our work is not wasted. God bless and keep you all safe.
Vatic Note: I find it hard to believe that these bohemoth giants allowed themselves to be wiped out by us puny humans. But then there is always David and Goliath to reference when in doubt. This below was hard to believe that giants occupied this planet in any numbers, and I am not sure I would have, had it not been for the Bible's record of their involvement in so much. The Bible is no different in one sense then other ancient written records, in that much of history and the past is recorded there for us to read. In fact, many experts are beginning to say that the Bible is turning out to be one of the more accurate sources of ancient history. Well, if it was written under God's direction, than I am certain that has been the case.
The question is, how did these giants survive the flood? Did Noah's ark carry some of them to preserve their line? Is that why Noah had to build such a "tall" boat? Did the giants really help Abraham in the battle of Sodom and Gomorrah Lots of questions and few answers, but you watch, read and decide. I found it very fascinating in the end. I still want to know why the Book of Enoch was taken out of the Bible. Enoch walked with God and was so favored by God, that He took Enoch up alive. So how come Enoch's writings are missing?
Proof!! Ancient Giants Of South Africa – Vanished Civilizations (New Video)
http://beforeitsnews.com/beyond-science/2013/11/proof-of-ancient-giants-of-south-africa-vanished-civilizations-new-video-2444352.html?utm_content=awesmsharetools-fbshare-small&utm_campaign=&utm_term=http%3A%2F%2Fb4in.info%2FhOUB&utm_source=direct-b4in.info&utm_medium=facebook-post
By Susan Duclos, Before Its' News
Michael Tellinger has just published a video taken when Professor Francis Thackeray showed him and friends a rarely seen part of an upper leg bone which proves without a doubt the existence of giants in South Africa approximately 40,000 years ago. The rare specimen was found by miners in Northern Namibia and has been locked in the vaults of the WITS University, Johannesburg since the early 1960s.
The bone is indicative of a being that would have stood 12 foot tall.
Many claim that the existence of giants is a legend, but bones like the one shown in the video below and the information in the link above that, prove indisputably that they existed as a civilization and vanished.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=SnAgOagVO2c
More on the giants of South Africa here.
Steve Quayles site - http://www.genesis6giants.com/index.php?s=320
Chad's Giants
1 These giants, according to the natives, were called the Saos.
Scholars who traced their history say they came from Kheiber, located north of Mecca, to Bilma, which is situated about three hundred miles north of Lake Chad.A people with a "well-developed religion and culture," they grew in numbers and founded communities at Fort Lamy, Mahaya, Midigue, and Goulfeil. They lived in peace in their new land until the close of the ninth century when the Moslems made wars against them, intending to force their accep-tance of the Islamic faith.
The Saos giants who converted to the faith lived to become servants of the Arabs. But those who steadfastly refused to convert were eventually wiped out.
By the end of the sixteenth century not many Saos remained. (See Jericho's Giants; also see Curigueres; Ifrikish ibn Kais; Sudan's Giants; Watusi Giants; Zanzibar's Giants)
Moroccan Find
"discovered a complete arsenal of hunting weapons including five hundred double-edged axes weighing seventeen and a half pounds, i.e. twenty times as heavy as would be convenient for modern man.
Apart from the question of weight, to handle the axe at all one would need to have hands of a size appropriate to a giant with a stature of at least 13 feet."2 (See Australian Giants; La Tene; South American Giants)
Polo, Marco (See Zanzibar's Giants)
Saos Giants (See Chad's Giants)
Sudan's Giants
"have spread their virile blood far afield, as witness the Masai in Kenya and the giant Watutsi3 in Ruanda-Urundi, who are cousins to the Hamitic Sudanese."4 An example of their gigantic but very slender stature may be seen in Manute Bol, the seven-foot-seven-inch pro basketball giant, who hails from this region.
Slim as he still looks, Bol has put on quite a bit of weight since his rookie year in the NBA. One sports writer jokingly wrote that he has now "added enough poundage to require at least two pinstripes on his pajamas."
Bol and his tall Sudanese kin may have the height of giants, but with such extremely slender builds they could hardly be reckoned among our other mighty men. (See Kreen Akrores; Watusi Giants; also see Chad's Giants; Curigueres; Ifrikish ibn Kais; Zanzibar's Giants)
Watusi Giants
Practically everyone has seen on film or at least heard about the very tall Watusi, who are famous for their dancing. For those who may never have seen them, Glenn D. Kittler offers the following superbly drawn word-picture:
"For the most colorful and exciting dancing, you must go to Ruanda-Urundi... east of the Congo. Here the ruling tribe is the Watusi, the tallest people in the world. It has been said that these giants are born six feet tall, and when you walk among them you can believe it. Men towering seven or eight feet are a common sight. Women gain height by having their heads bound into conical shape in infancy, then training their thick hair to grow straight up to add a few inches. Beholding these lean, dignified, soft-spoken giants is quite overwhelming--and they know it."
"When they start dancing," continues Kittler, "the Watusi discard their usual reserve and become frenzied.... Twisting, bending, squirming, they leap into the air, breaking high-jump records with-out missing a beat. They carry spears, and when one jumper soars especially high the others throw down their spears in defeat. But the dance goes on. Ankle bracelets heavy with bells match the earth-trembling thunder of twenty royal drummers. First ten men dance, then fifty, then two hundred, their speed increasing with their number as they fly through intricate routines with thrilling precision and flair."5
6Giants, who, because of their size, rule over the medium-size Bantu people and the Pygmies. "Outside the hotel in Astrida, next to a woman cupping a child's head to her naked breast," he recalls, "we ran into the tallest man I have seen except in a circus. He made the American playwright Robert E. Sherwood, who is six foot seven, look like a dwarf. He must have been at least seven and a half feet tall."7
"They do not look strong," adds Gunther, "and give the impression of being much inbred. They have small heads for their height, slim wrists, and delicate long thin arms."8
True, because of their great height, the Watusi can accomplish certain feats, like clearing a bar in the running high jump at more then eight feet, or rearing back and throwing a spear to an unbelievable distance. But they exhibit nowhere near enough strength to be reckoned among the other mighty men in this book. (See Kreen Akrores; Sudan's Giants; also see Chad's Giants; Curigueres; Ifrikish ibn Kais; Zanzibar's Giants)
Zanzibar's Giants
In recounting his travels, Marco Polo tells of running into a gigantic people in Zanzibar. Concerning them, he wrote:
"Zanzibar is situated off the coast of Tanganyika. Nearly 53 miles long and 24 miles wide, it is the largest coral island on the African coast.... Numerous bays, reefs, and islets are found along the western coast, while the eastern side is much more regular.
"Zanzibar is a very large and important island. It has a 2,000-mile coastline. All the people are idolaters, they have a king and a language of their own and pay tribute to no one. The men are large and fat, although they are not tall in proportion to their bulk. They are strong limbed and as hefty as giants. They are so strong that they can carry as many as four ordinary men. This is not altogether surprising because while they can carry as many as four men, they eat enough for five. They are quite black and go about completely naked but for a loincloth. Their hair is so curly that they can only comb it when it is wet. They have wide mouths and turned-up noses. . . .
"The natives live on dates, rice, meat and milk. They have grape wine but they also make an excellent wine from rice, sugar and spices. There is a great deal of trade on the island and ships arrive laden with every kind of cargo to be sold. The merchants take away other goods, in particular ivory from the elephant tusks. Because of the whales there is a lot of ambergris.
"The men on the island are excellent fighters and very courageous in battle. They are not afraid of death. Because there are no horses they use camels and elephants in war. They build little turrets on the elephants' backs which they cover carefully with the skin of wild animals. Between sixteen and twenty men get into these turrets from which they fight with lances, swords and pikes. Very bloody battles are fought on elephants. The only arms are leather shields, lances and swords, but the men can be cruelly killed. When the elephants have to charge, they are given as much wine and other drink as they want which makes them more aggressive and therefore more courageous in battle.
"Apart from the men, the animals and produce of Zanzibar, there is nothing more to discuss so we shall move on to the great province of Abyssinia."9 (See Chad's Giants; Curigueres; Ifrikish ibn Kais; Sudan's Giants; Watusi)
References
1 Lee, Giants: The Pictorial History, p. 44.2 Peter Kolosimo, Timeless Earth (New Hyde Park, NY: University Books, 1968), p. 32.
3 A variant spelling of Watusi.
4 John Gunther, Inside Africa (New York: Harper & Bros., 1955), p. 229.
5 Glenn D. Kittler, Let's Travel in the Congo (Chicago: The Children's Press, 1961), p. 30.
6 A variant spelling.
7 Gunther, Inside Africa, p. 685.
8 Ibid., p. 686.
9The Travels of Marco Polo (New York: Facts on File Publications, 1984), pp. 175-176.
The article is reproduced in accordance with Section 107 of title 17 of the Copyright Law of the United States relating to fair-use and is for the purposes of criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research.
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