The True Identity of Yashar’al

"African" Descendants and the Covenant Land’s Restoration

African Descendants and the Covenant Land’s Restoration

Awaken, O nations, to the unshakable revelation preserved in the Set-Apart Scriptures, verified by apocryphal prophecy, historical documentation, genetic markers, and enduring cultural Amat. The Twelve Tribes of Yashar’al are African and African-descended peoples — those who bear the covenant name Ibriym yet have endured the prophetic byword “Nigger” Debarim 28:37.

The original covenant land, Canaan/Yarushalayim, stands desolate due to ancestral rebellion — but prophecy declares it will be rebuilt by the hands of Gentiles YashaYahu 60:10, awaiting the return of the true heirs.

Arzareth— described in 2 Esdras 13:40–46 as a land “where never mankind dwelt” — was a divinely appointed refuge for the Ten Tribes of Yashar’al who fled from Assyrian captivity. This hidden land was given by YaHU’aH as a place where they could preserve the Torah and keep the statutes they failed to uphold in their homeland. While scholars and seekers debate the precise location of Arzareth, the Scriptures are clear: it was a land uninhabited, far removed from Gentile nations, and ordained for prophetic concealment.

However, Africa — especially Sub-Saharan Africa — became the broader preservation ground where remnants from all Twelve Tribes were eventually scattered, regathered, and multiplied after successive exiles. Torah-keeping customs, naming traditions, and prophetic patterns remained deeply embedded throughout this region — from the rivers of Kush to the coasts of Ghana, from the mountain valleys of South Africa to the highlands of Ethiopia.

Meanwhile, America — the modern Mystery Babylon — became the land of captivity for Yahudah and Binyamin, forcibly scattered by slave ships during the Sub-Saharan and Transatlantic slave trades — fulfilling the curses of Dabarim 28:68.

Now, the Great Awakening has begun — not by the will of man, but by the power of the Ruach ha’Qodash — stirring the scattered of Yashar’al from every nation. We now stand on the threshold of prophetic regathering and righteous vengeance, just as it is written in 2 Esdras 15:34–37.

Colonial myths are collapsing. Roman religious fables are being exposed. And from Arzareth’s prophetic concealment to Babylon’s captivity, the evidence is undeniable: the African peoples are Yashar’al — chosen to rise, return, and restore the everlasting covenant.

Shalum.

African Descendants and the Covenant Land’s Restoration

The Twelve Tribes: African Roots and Prophetic Identity

The twelve tribes of Yashar’al, descended directly from Ya’aqob, are unequivocally African and African-descended peoples. Though our true identity has been obscured by centuries of exile, slavery, and deception, it remains unbroken — sealed by the baraks and curses outlined in the Set-Apart Scriptures, especially in Dabarim 28. These covenant markers, coupled with our enduring cultural resilience and the clear arc of prophetic fulfillment, reveal the truth of who we are.

Shir haShirim (Song of Songs) 1:5–6 declares:

“I am black but comely… because the sun has tanned me.”

This is not poetic metaphor — it is a declaration of identity, describing the physical features of the Bantu and related diaspora peoples who remain visibly marked by the African sun. These words echo across generations, confirming that the people of Yashar’al were — and still are — a melanated, scattered, and chosen people.

The stark prophecy of Dabarim 28:68, stating, “YaHU’aH shall bring you back to Mitsrayim [a place of bondage, metaphorically Egypt] in ships… and there you shall be sold to your enemies as male and female slaves,”

finds its undeniable fulfillment in the horrors of the Sub-Saharan slave trade — both the transatlantic trade (1441–1888, estimated 12–15 million enslaved) and the often overlooked Indian Ocean trade (800–1900, estimated 3–5 million) — which specifically tore Yahudah (identified with the Igbo and African Americans) and Binyamin (identified with the Jamaican Maroons) from their African homeland.

Furthermore, the timeline of affliction foretold in Barashith (Genesis) 15:13–14 resonates powerfully with the 400 years of oppression experienced by African Americans from approximately 1619 to 2019 — an era marked by severe bondage, systemic oppression, and trauma, yet culminating in undeniable cultural richness and a rising spiritual awakening across scattered Yashar’al.

Their distinct tribal identities — deeply rooted in the patriarchal baraks and prophetic declarations recorded in Barashith 49 and Dabarim 33 — continue to shine through in the unique languages, traditions, and struggles of various African and diaspora groups. These identities are not speculative—they are encoded in prophecy, preserved through suffering, and now revealed in the appointed time.

Historical Evidence: The Promise of Ya’aqob

Re’uvan (Reuben) → Kongo Kingdom Tribes (Congo, Angola)  

Historical Evidence:

The Kongo Kingdom (1390–1857) was a powerful centralized state governing millions across modern-day Congo and Angola. Its sophisticated political structure, with a king (Manikongo) and provincial governors, reflected the "excellency of dignity" prophesied for Re’uvan. However, the kingdom faced relentless instability from Portuguese slave raids, internal rebellions, and succession disputes, particularly after the Battle of Mbwila (1665), which fractured its unity. By the 19th century, the kingdom’s decline due to European colonial pressures and the transatlantic slave trade, which displaced millions of Kongo people, mirrored the prophecy of being "unstable as water" and not excelling. Archaeological evidence, such as the capital city Mbanza Kongo’s ruins, and written Portuguese records confirm its grandeur and eventual collapse.  

The Promise of Ya’aqob:
Re’uven, you are my firstborn, my might, and the beginning of my strength, the excellency of dignity, and the excellency of power: unstable as water, you will not excel; because you went up to your father’s bed; then you defiled it: he went up to my couch.”
— Genesis 49:3–4 

Learn more about Re’uvan

Shim’on (Simeon) → Ashanti / Ngoni

Historical Evidence:

The Ashanti Empire (1701–1901) in modern Ghana was renowned for its military prowess and cultural unity, centered around the sacred Golden Stool, symbolizing collective brotherhood. The Ashanti’s fierce resistance against British colonization, notably in the Anglo-Ashanti Wars, reflects the "instruments of cruelty" in their defense of sovereignty. Similarly, the Ngoni, migrating from southern Africa in the 19th century, carried warrior traditions across ZambiaMalawi, and Tanzania, establishing militaristic societies. Both groups’ aggressive protection of their people and land aligns with Shim’on’s prophesied traits. Ashanti oral histories and British colonial records document their martial strength, while Ngoni migration patterns are evidenced by linguistic and cultural traces in southern Africa.  

The Promise of Ya’aqob:
Shim’on and Lewi are brothers; instruments of cruelty are in their habitations. O my soul, come not into their secret; unto their assembly, mine honour, be not united: for in their anger they slew a man, and in their selfwill they digged down a wall. Cursed be their anger, for it was fierce; and their wrath, for it was cruel: I will divide them in Ya’aqob, and scatter them in Yashar’al.”
— Genesis 49:5–7 

Learn more about Shim’on

Lewi (Levi) → Lemba (South Africa, Zimbabwe)  

Historical Evidence:

The Lemba people of South Africa and Zimbabwe maintain distinct priestly traditions, including circumcisionkosher-like dietary laws, and Sabbath observance, mirroring the Levitical role as Torah teachers. Genetic studies, notably by Dr. Tudor Parfitt, reveal the Cohen Modal Haplotype (Y-chromosomal DNA) in Lemba men, linking them to ancient Yahudyim priestly lineages. Their oral traditions claim descent from Yemenite **Yahudyim** who migrated to Africa, preserving rituals like animal sacrifice and lunar calendar festivals. These practices, documented in ethnographic studies and PBS’s NOVA series, align with Lewi’s promise to teach Yashar’al’s laws. The Lemba’s survival through centuries of isolation underscores their set-apart duty.  

The Promise of Ya’aqob:
“They will teach Ya’aqob your judgments, and Yashar’al your Torah: they will put incense before you, and whole burnt sacrifice upon your altar. Bless, YaHU’aH, his substance, and accept the work of his hands; smite through the loins of them that rise against him, and of them that hate him, that they rise not again.”
— Deuteronomy 33:10–11 

Learn more about Lewi

Yahudah (Judah) → Igbo / African Americans

Historical Evidence:

The Igbo of Nigeria uphold traditions like circumcision on the eighth daypurity laws, and a monotheistic creator (Chukwu), paralleling Yahudah’s royal and spiritual leadership. Their oral histories and cultural practices, such as the Eze kingship system, reflect the scepter of authority. During the transatlantic slave trade, over 700,000 Igbo were forcibly transported to the Americas, fulfilling the prophecy of being brought “into Egypt again with ships.” African Americans, many descended from Igbo and other West African groups, carried forward cultural resilience, seen in spirituals and community leadership. Igbo Yahudyim communities today and historical records of slave ports like Calabar solidify these connections.  

The Promise of Ya’aqob:
Yahudah, you are he whom your brethren will praise: your hand will be in the neck of your enemies; your father’s children will bow down before you. Yahudah is a lion’s whelp: from the prey, my son, you are gone up: he stooped down, he couched as a lion, and as an old lion; who will rouse him up? The scepter will not depart from Yahudah, nor a lawgiver from between his feet, until Shiloh come; and unto him will the gathering of the people be. Binding his foal unto the vine, and his ass’s colt unto the choice vine; he washed his garments in wine, and his clothes in the blood of grapes: his eyes will be red with wine, and his teeth white with milk.”
— Genesis 49:8–12


“And YaHU’aH will bring you into Egypt again with ships, by the way whereof I spoke unto you, You will see it no more again: and there you will be sold unto your enemies for bondmen and bondwomen, and no man will buy you.”
— Deuteronomy 28:68 

Learn more about Yahudah

Dan (Dan) → Dan People (Ivory Coast & Liberia)

Historical Evidence:

The Dan people of Ivory Coast and Liberia are known for their intricate tribal legal systems and secretive societies, embodying Dan’s promise to “judge his people.” Their cultural use of serpent imagery in masks and rituals aligns with the “serpent by the way” prophecy. The Dan’s stealth-based hunting and warfare traditions, documented by anthropologists, reflect the viper’s cunning. Ethnographic records and British colonial accounts highlight their judicial councils and symbolic art, which persist in modern Dan communities, reinforcing the prophetic parallel.  

The Promise of Ya’aqov:
Dan will judge his people, as one of the tribes of Yashar’alDan will be a serpent by the way, an adder in the path, that bites the horse heels, so that his rider will fall backward. I have waited for your salvation, O YaHU’aH.”
— Genesis 49:16–18 

Learn more about Dan

Naphtali (Naphtali) → Beta Israel / Acholi

Historical Evidence:

The Beta Israel of Ethiopia maintained Hebrew liturgySabbath observance, and Torah study, embodying Naphtali’s “goodly words.” Their religious texts, like the Orit, and festivals mirror ancient Yashar’alite practices. The Acholi of Uganda, with oral traditions and spiritual songs, reflect similar eloquence in their cultural expressions. Beta Israel’s migration to Yashar’al (Operation Moses, 1984) and Acholi’s preservation of communal storytelling, documented in ethnographic studies, align with the “hind let loose” imagery of freedom and grace. Historical records from Ethiopian monasteries and colonial archives confirm these parallels.  

The Promise of Ya’aqob:
Naphtali is a hind let loose: he gives goodly words.”
— Genesis 49:21 

Learn more about Naphtali Naphtali

Gad (Gad) → Ewe (Togo, Benin)  

Historical Evidence:

The Ewe people of Togo and Benin faced repeated colonial assaults but preserved their Vodun religion, which venerates a supreme creator (Mawu) and ancestral laws, aligning with Gad’s promise to “overcome at the last.” Despite French and British colonization, the Ewe maintained cultural cohesion through festivals and oral traditions. Their resilience is evident in the survival of Vodun practices, documented in anthropological studies, which parallel Gad’s triumph over adversity. Ewe migration and resistance to slave raids further reflect the prophecy of overcoming troops.  

The Promise of Ya’aqob:
Gad, a troop will overcome him: but he will overcome at the last.”
— Genesis 49:19 

Learn more about Gad

Ashar (Asher) → Akan (Ashanti, Fante)  

Historical Evidence:

The Akan people, including Ashanti and Fante of Ghana, are renowned for their wealth in goldcocoa, and kente cloth, fulfilling Ashar’s promise of “royal dainties.” The Ashanti’s gold-laden palaces and the Fante’s coastal trade networks, documented in British colonial records, reflect economic prosperity. Akan artisanship in jewelry and textiles, preserved in museums, mirrors the “fat bread” prophecy. Their matrilineal inheritance and cultural sophistication, seen in festivals like Akwasidae, solidify the parallel to Ashar’s blessing of abundance.  

The Promise of Ya’aqob:
“Out of Ashar his bread will be fat, and he will yield royal dainties.”
— Genesis 49:20 

Learn more about Ashar

Yissakhar (Issachar) → Xhosa / Tswana  

Historical Evidence:

The Xhosa and Tswana of South Africa endured forced labor under apartheid, reflecting Yissakhar’s promise of “bowing his shoulder to bear.” Their resilience is evident in anti-apartheid movements, with leaders like Nelson Mandela (Xhosa) embodying wisdom and strength. Both groups maintain circumcision rites and oral traditions, documented in ethnographic records. The Xhosa’s prophetic figures, like Nongqawuse, and Tswana’s communal governance align with Yissakhar’s burden-bearing endurance. Historical accounts of Bantu migrations and apartheid resistance reinforce these connections.  

The Promise of Ya’aqob:
Yissakhar is a strong ass couching down between two burdens: and he saw that rest was good, and the land that it was pleasant; and bowed his shoulder to bear, and became a servant unto tribute.”
— Genesis 49:14–15

Learn more about Yissakhar

Zebulun (Zebulun) → Zulu

Historical Evidence:

The Zulu, located near South Africa’s eastern coast, leveraged their maritime proximity for trade and military strategy, aligning with Zebulun’s promise to “dwell at the haven of the sea.” Under Shaka Zulu (1787–1828), their disciplined armies expanded control over coastal regions, as documented in British and Dutch records. The Zulu’s strategic use of Port Natal (Durban) as a trade hub reflects the “haven of ships” prophecy. Archaeological evidence of Zulu kraals and oral histories of their naval engagements solidify this parallel.  

The Promise of Ya’aqob:
Zebulun will dwell at the haven of the sea; and he will be for an haven of ships; and his border will be unto Zidon.”
— Genesis 49:13 

Learn more about Zebulun

Ephrayim (Ephraim) → Sotho  

Historical Evidence:

The Sotho people of Lesotho and South Africa expanded across highland territories, establishing thriving settlements with strong kinship laws, mirroring Ephrayim’s “fruitful bough” whose “branches run over the wall.” The Basotho, under King Moshoeshoe I, resisted Boer and British incursions during the Basotho Wars (1858–1868), as recorded in South African archives. Their communal land systems and cultural festivals, like Morija, reflect Ephrayim’s expansive prosperity. Archaeological sites, such as Thaba Bosiu, confirm their fortified settlements.  

The Promise of Ya’aqob:
“Yoseph is a fruitful bough, even a fruitful bough by a well; whose branches run over the wall: the archers have sorely grieved him, and shot at him, and hated him: but his bow abode in strength, and the arms of his hands were made strong by the hands of the mighty AL of Ya’aqob; (from thence is the shepherd, the stone of Yashar’al:) even by the AL of your father, who will help you; and by the AL Alyon, who will bless you with blessings of shamayim above, blessings of the deep that lies under, blessings of the breasts, and of the womb: the blessings of your father have prevailed above the blessings of my progenitors unto the utmost bound of the everlasting hills: they will be on the head of Yoseph, and on the crown of the head of him that was separate from his brethren.”
— Genesis 49:22–26 

Learn more about Ephrayim

Manasseh (Manasseh) → Shona  

Historical Evidence:

The Shona of Zimbabwe and southern Zambia built Great Zimbabwe (11th–15th centuries), a stone-walled city that served as a royal and trade center, reflecting Manasseh’s inherited blessings. Their centralized mwari cult and monotheistic worship, documented in archaeological and Portuguese records, align with Yoseph’s spiritual legacy. Shona stone masonrygold trade, and governance systems, preserved in sites like Great Zimbabwe’s Great Enclosure, mirror the prosperity prophesied. The Shona’s resistance to colonial rule further underscores their enduring strength.  

The Promise of Ya’aqob:
“Yoseph is a fruitful bough, even a fruitful bough by a well; whose branches run over the wall: the archers have sorely grieved him, and shot at him, and hated him: but his bow abode in strength, and the arms of his hands were made strong by the hands of the mighty AL of Ya’aqob; (from thence is the shepherd, the stone of Yashar’al:) even by the AL of your father, who will help you; and by the AL Alyon, who will bless you with blessings of shamayim above, blessings of the deep that lies under, blessings of the breasts, and of the womb: the blessings of your father have prevailed above the blessings of my progenitors unto the utmost bound of the everlasting hills: they will be on the head of Yoseph, and on the crown of the head of him that was separate from his brethren.”

— Genesis 49:22–26

Learn more about Manasseh

Binyamin (Benjamin) → Jamaican Maroons  

Historical Evidence:

The Jamaican Maroons, descended from enslaved Africans, waged guerrilla warfare against British forces in the First Maroon War (1728–1739), embodying Binyamin’s promise to “ravage as a wolf.” Their tactical ambushes in Jamaica’s Blue Mountains, documented in British colonial records, reflect the predatory imagery. Maroons preserved African spiritual practices, including obeah, and established autonomous communities, as evidenced by treaties like the 1739 peace agreement. Their fierce independence and cultural retention align with Binyamin’s morning and evening prowess.  

The Promise of Ya’aqob:
Binyamin will ravin as a wolf: in the morning he will devour the prey, and at night he will divide the spoil.”
— Genesis 49:27 

Learn more about Binyamin


Covenant and Corruption: Cultural Practices Beyond Torah

 While many African tribes preserve undeniable signs of Hebraic identity — such as circumcision, monotheism, and moral codes — centuries of exile, colonization, and cultural blending introduced practices not aligned with Torah. These distortions 

came through idolatry, ancestral worship, syncretized rituals, 

"Star of David" and foreign religious influence.

  • Vodun/Voodoo among the Ewe (Gad): Though originally rooted in reverence for a single Creator (Mawu), the system became filled with spirit intermediaries (Trowo), contrary to the commandment: “You shall have no other mighty ones before Me.”  Shemoth (Exodus) 20:3
  • Ifá divination among the Yoruba (Dan): This complex system of spiritual consultation contains echoes of prophetic practice but lacks the Ruach Qodash (Set-Apart Breath) and becomes a form of unauthorized spiritual access. Torah says: “There shall not be found among you anyone who makes his son or his daughter pass through the fire, or who practices divination, or is a soothsayer, or an enchanter, or a witch, or a charmer, or one who consults spirits, or a wizard, or a necromancer. For all that do these things are an abomination unto YaHU’aH.”  Debarim (Deuteronomy) 18:10–12
  • Ancestor reverence across several tribes: From Ashanti to Zulu, honoring ancestors has sometimes replaced direct obedience to YaHU’aH, despite His clear instruction: “You shall fear YaHU’aH your AL’uah and serve Him, and shall swear by His Name. You shall not go after other mighty ones, of the mighty ones of the people which are round about you.”  Debarim (Deuteronomy) 6:13–14
  • Sabbath and Feast replacement: Even among Torah-linked groups like the Lemba or Beta Israel, colonial disruption and missionary distortion led to the abandonment of the Appointed Times, which were commanded: “These are the Feasts of YaHU’aH, set-apart convocations, which you shall proclaim in their seasons.”  Wayyiqra (Leviticus) 23:1–2

Despite these deviations, the prophetic remnant is awakening,

and the promise remains:

“And it shall come to pass, when all these things have come upon you — the blessing and the curse, which I have set before you — and you shall call them to mind among all the nations, wherever YaHU’aH your AL’uah has driven you, and shall return unto YaHU’aH your AL’uah, and obey His voice… then YaHU’aH your AL’uah will turn your captivity and have compassion upon you, and will return and gather you from all the nations, wherever He has scattered you.” — Debarim (Deuteronomy) 30:1–4

 For deeper insight into the prophetic migration and refuge in Arzareth, 

see the dedicated Arzareth section here