The Hivites were a tribe that originated in the area of Canaan in the middle east. It is north of the old site of Sodom and Gomorra at Mt. Baal Hermon near Damascus. If you type in "mt baal hermon" in google earth it will take you there. Kabbalistic, Talmudic, satanic, Moloch, Baal, etc....
Amorites. They appear as an uncivilized and nomadic people in early Mesopotamian writings from Sumer, Akkad, and Assyria, especially connected with the mountainous region now called Jebel Bishri in northern Syria called the "mountain of the Amorites". The ethnic terms Mar.tu (Westerners), Amurru (likely derived from 'aburru', pasture) and Amar were used for them in Sumerian, Akkadian,[2] and Ancient Egyptian respectively. Kurd's hill. National Geographic has portrayed them as lost Caucasians. The locals remember exactly when they showed up, and the Turks, ect.
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think- ago
I'm still puzzled by this Hivite cult theory, since I haven't had time to look into yet.
Otherwise, it's good to focus on the Children of God, and Sarah Ruth Ashcroft and her friend are totally believable imo.
ESOTERICshade ago
The Hivites were a tribe that originated in the area of Canaan in the middle east. It is north of the old site of Sodom and Gomorra at Mt. Baal Hermon near Damascus. If you type in "mt baal hermon" in google earth it will take you there. Kabbalistic, Talmudic, satanic, Moloch, Baal, etc....
YogSoggoth ago
Amorites. They appear as an uncivilized and nomadic people in early Mesopotamian writings from Sumer, Akkad, and Assyria, especially connected with the mountainous region now called Jebel Bishri in northern Syria called the "mountain of the Amorites". The ethnic terms Mar.tu (Westerners), Amurru (likely derived from 'aburru', pasture) and Amar were used for them in Sumerian, Akkadian,[2] and Ancient Egyptian respectively. Kurd's hill. National Geographic has portrayed them as lost Caucasians. The locals remember exactly when they showed up, and the Turks, ect.