The
name “Moses” is Egyptian and it means “son of” and we find it
in names of Egyptian pharaohs like Rameses and Tutmoses. Moses was a
renegade prince,who fled Egypt after killing a supervisor of Jewish
laborors. They worked as slaves on the city of Piramses, build by
Ramses II, the Great. He escaped the wrath of the pharaoh and went
to the country of “Midjan” (across the “Gulf of Eilat or the
“Arig al-Aqaba” in, now, Saudi-Arabia).
After
Jaweh presents himself to Moses, he returns to liberate his people
(the Jews). They lived in the North of the delta for a few
generations, after fleeing Kanaan because of a draught. Josef
welcomed them and gave his tribe access to the wealth of the country
along the Nile. After Jozef's death and changes in Egypt's leadership
the hospitality faded and the Jews worked as slave-laborers to build
the new capital of Ramses II. This places the Exodus, according to
historians, around 1200 BC.
Some
say that the Jews were kicked out of Egypt, because the local people
envied their wealth and feared their secluviness. Next the fleeing
Jews are saved from the forces of the Pharaoh, because the waters of
the Red Sea part and the Jews escape. The charriots of Ramses
disappear into the returning waters, killing most of the soldiers.
But
is this correct (geographical)? First it seems quite illogical, that
the future Israelites crossed the Red Sea. They lived in the North
and they had to leave Egyptian territory, by following the route
Moses knew, the road to Midjan (Midian), that led out of the
pharaonic Empire. That would also explain, the signs the fugitives
saw. Clouds/smoke during daytime and fire at night, that showed the
way. According to Ron Wyatt (Biblical archeologist) the Jews marched
towards the “Gabal al-Laur”, an active volcano. In Saudi-Arabia.
The parting of the sea took place in the “Gulf of Eilat”, before
they reached the safety of Midjan.
But
why did Ramses send his elite-soldiers after the Jews. The story
goes, that Moses stole an ancient piece of technology, that belonged
to the Egyptian rulers. With this technology Moses was able to part
the Harig al-Aqaba and “closing” the waters, when the Egyptian
army followed the Jews into Midlan. Ron Wyatt had unearthed a number
of wheels and bronze ornaments, belonging to Egyptian charriots.
Ramses was defeated and after Moses received the Ten Commandments,
they went North on their journey of 40 years to the Holy Land. You
ask: “What happened to the mysterious weapon, Moses stole?” Moses
had made a special box for this “wonder-weapon” and he called it
“the Ark of the Covenant”.
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