Vem är egentligen Barak Hussein Obama, mannen som inom kort kommer att tillträda världens mäktigaste ämbete. Finns det några möjligheter att han genom list skall kunna anta Nordlandskungens plats i Dan. 11:21-. Ja om de här uppgifterna som nu sprids av BBC kan bekräftas kanske förursättningarna finns. Men det skall ju förståss till mycket mer innan vi vet svaret på den frågan. Obamas "förlorade" Beduin stam jublar över valsegern och förväntar sig nu att Obama skall träda fram som den fredsfurste som löser konflikten i mellersta östern och gör slut på alla krig.

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/us_and_americas/us_elections/article5142206.ece

 

From The Times - November 13, 2008

 

8,000 Beduins stake their claim as the lost tribe of Barack Obama.

 

A sheikh in Galilee says he has evidence that he and his family are linked by blood to the new President

Now Barack Obama is being claimed by not one but as many as 8,000 Beduin tribesmen in northern Israel.

Although the spokesman for the lost tribe of Obama has yet to reveal the documentary evidence that he says he possesses to support his claim, people are flocking from across the region to pay their respects to the "Beduin Obama", whose social standing has gone through the roof.

 

Sheikh Abdullah swears that he has papers and pictures to back up his claim but has promised his mother not to divulge them until he has presented them to Mr Obama, something he hopes will happen once his "relative" is in the White House.

 

"We want to send a delegation to congratulate him, and we know we’ll get an answer soon," he grinned.

Sheikh Abdullah’s renown as the relative of the soon-to-be most powerful man on Earth has spread like wildfire among the Arab community of northern Israel, and especially among Beduins, a formerly semi-nomadic group of pastoralists corralled into townships by the modern state of Israel.

Two baby boys born into the sheikh’s large clan have even been named Obama.

 

"We knew he’d win," the sheikh said, constantly interrupted by a barrage of phone calls from wellwishers and those hoping to cash in on his newfound wasta, an Arabic term denoting influence or clout. "We have always been a lucky family.

 

"We hope he’ll end all wars and intervene here to solve our problems in Israel. The Beduin are the people who suffer the most here," he added while greeting a wellwisher from Ghajar, an Arab town divided between Israel and southern Lebanon, the bitter legacy of the Jewish state’s long occupation of southern Lebanon.

 

"We hope to God that Obama will solve the problem of Ghajar," said Sheikh Issam al-Khalil, a leading citizen of the divided town, whose residents mostly speak Hebrew and Arabic but many of whom consider themselves as originally Syrian.

 

Shalom!

Fred