WHO WERE THE NEPHILIM GIANTS IN AFRICA?

The Nephilim giants living in Chad were conquered by the Muslims. Chad, formally the Republic of Chad, is a landlocked nation in north-central Africa. It is bordered by Libya toward the north, Sudan toward the east, the Central African Republic toward the south, Cameroon and Nigeria toward the southwest, and Niger toward the west. The Chadian giants, as indicated by the locals, were known as the Saos. Researchers who followed their history say they originated from Kheiber, found north of Mecca, to Bilma, which is arranged around three hundred miles north of Lake Chad. A people with a “very much created religion and culture,” they developed in numbers and established networks at Fort Lamy, Mahaya, Midigue, and Goulfeil. They lived in harmony in their new land until the end of the ninth century when the Moslems made wars against them, aiming to force their acceptance of the Islamic religion. The Saos giants who converted Islam began serving the Arabs. Be that as it may, the individuals who undauntedly declined to change over were in the long run wiped out. Before the finish of the sixteenth century relatively few Saos remained.

The Nephilim giants also possessed the district of Morocco. Morocco, a North African nation flanking the Atlantic Ocean and Mediterranean Sea, is recognized by its Berber, Arabian and European social impacts. Marrakesh’s medina, a mazelike medieval quarter, offers stimulation in its Djemaa el-Fna square and souks (commercial centers) moving pottery, adornments and metal lamps. The capital Rabat’s Kasbah of the Udayas is a twelfth century regal post neglecting the water. Moroccan analysts found an entire arms stockpile of chasing weapons including five hundred twofold edged tomahawks gauging seventeen and a half pounds, i.e. multiple times as substantial as would be helpful for present day man. Aside from the topic of weight, to deal with the hatchet at all one would need hands of a size proper to a giant with a stature of about 4 meters tall.

The Nephilim giants also occupied the region of Zanzibar. In relating his movements, Marco Polo recounts running into an immense people in Zanzibar. Concerning them, he composed: “Zanzibar is arranged off the shore of Tanganyika. About 53 miles in length and 24 miles wide, it is the biggest coral island on the African coast…. Various coves, reefs, and islets are found along the western drift, while the eastern side is significantly more customary. “Zanzibar is a huge and essential island. It has a 2,000-mile coastline. Every one of the general population are worshipers of another god, they have a lord and their very own dialect and pay tribute to nobody. The men are vast and fat, despite the fact that they are not tall in extent to their mass. They are solid limbed and as weighty as giants. They are strong to the point that they can convey upwards of four standard men. This isn’t inside and out astonishing in light of the fact that while they can convey upwards of four men, they eat enough for five. They are very dark and go about totally bare however for an undergarment. Their hair is curly to the point that they can just brush it when it is wet. They have wide mouths and turned-up noses. . . .”The locals live on dates, rice, meat and drain. They have grape wine however they additionally make an astounding wine from rice, sugar and flavors. There is a lot of exchange on the island and boats arrive loaded down with each sort of payload to be sold. The dealers remove different products, specifically ivory from the elephant tusks. In view of the whales there is a great deal of ambergris.

“The men on the island are amazing warriors and exceptionally gallant in fight. They are not terrified of death. Since there are no ponies they use camels and elephants in war. They fabricate little turrets on the elephants’ backs which they cover cautiously with the skin of wild creatures. Somewhere in the range of sixteen and twenty men get into these turrets from which they battle with spears, swords and pikes. Â

  Bloody fights are battled on elephants. The main arms are calfskin shields, spears and swords, yet the men can be savagely slaughtered. At the point when the elephants need to charge, they are given as much wine and other beverage as they need which makes them increasingly forceful and hence progressively brave in fight. “Aside from the men, the creatures and deliver of Zanzibar, there is nothing more to talk about so we will proceed onward to the extraordinary area of Abyssinia.”

PRIMARY SOURCES:

  1. Steven Quayle; Giants in Africa; Derived from: http://www.genesis6giants.com/ index.php?s=320#Anchor-References-46384
  2. Lee, Giants: The Pictorial History, p. 44.
  3. Peter Kolosimo, Timeless Earth (New Hyde Park, NY: University Books, 1968), p. 32.
  4. A variant spelling of Watusi.
  5. John Gunther, Inside Africa (New York: Harper & Bros., 1955), p. 229.
  6. Glenn D. Kittler, Let’s Travel in the Congo (Chicago: The Children’s Press, 1961), p. 30.
  7. A variant spelling.
  8. Gunther, Inside Africa, p. 685.
  9. Ibid., p. 686.
  10. The Travels of Marco Polo (New York: Facts on File Publications, 1984), pp. 175-176.