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| REVIEW OF
  ARTICLE BY NICHOLAS WADE   By Professor Catherine Acholonu   Lead-author, The
  Gram Code of African Adam; They Lived
  Before Adam; The Lost Testament of the Ancestors of Adam.             The New York Times (Apr. 2011) has published an article
  by Nicholas Wade, reviewing a new research, which maintains that all
  languages developed from a common mother-language from Sub-Saharan
  Africa that was carried to other parts of the world by Homo
  erectus African migrants over 100,000 years ago during the Out of
  Africa migrations. The linguistic research was said to have been conducted by
  Dr Quentin Atkinson, a biologist. Though I find it hard
  understand the practice of linguistics by a Biologist, yet this research supports
  our thesis, nevertheless.             I have been getting mails from
  colleagues and readers who maintain that this research
  corroborates our thesis published in the Adam Trilogy,
  where our research team maintain, based on our linguistic findings
  that Homo Erectus left Africa with language and culture and a set of cosmic
  symbols which are found on stones and rock all over the world.             
  The DISCOVERY that language first developed in
  Sub-Saharan Africa  was first released from the findings of the Catherine Acholonu
  Research Center in 2009 and was aired on C-Span Book TV in New
  York. All our findings in this regard are published in our
  ground-breaking/award-winning Trilogy - The Gram Code of African
  Adam (2005); They Lived Before Adam (2009); The Lost
  Testament of the Ancestors of Adam (2010).             The Adam Trilogy proffers
  a pile of proofs that our researchers amassed over a period of
  twenty years in three volumes totalling about 1,500 pages of research to the
  effect that (among other things) Homo erectus had a language and a culture before leaving
  Africa, and that the mother language of humanity  originated in the
  Niger -Congo/Chad basin area of Africa, not Southern Africa as the new
  research purports. As a matter of fact, what this new research calls
  "South-West Africa" should be understood as "West
  Africa", as opposed to "Northern Africa" because the Bantus
  who populate much of East, Central and Southern Africa migrated from Nigeria
  as linguists have long proved. Similarity]ies of words and meanings including
  their clan name, show that the Shan/San Bushmen of the South
  African Kalahari most likely migrated from West African cave-men called Nshi among the Igbo of Nigeria.             The new research by Atkinson
  is based only on phonemes (sounds), but the Catherine Acholonu Research
  Center used both phonemes (common sounds) and morphemes of
  common meanings (cognates) as well as paleontological and archaeological
  evidence to prove our point that all languages originated from West Africa in
  the Nigeria/Cameroon/Chad axis. In fact Australopithecus lived in
  Chad/Nigeria basin by 7 million BC and Homo Erectus his
  direct descendant lived in Igbo land in Nigeria by 500,000 - 1 million
  BC according to the findings of French palaeontologist Prof. Michel Brunet and Nigerian archaeologist, Prof. F.N.
  Anozie of the University of Nigeria.              That first language - the
  mother of all languages was traced all the way through Hebrew,
  Canaanite, Akkadian, the Americas, Chinese, Eastern and Western European
  languages, ancient Egyptian, even Sanskrit in our Adam Trilogy. (See the
  speech by Prof. Catherine Acholonu on C-Span Book TV in July/August, 2009 at
  the Harlem Book Fair, Schomburg Center, New York,  aired thrice in July
  and August, 2009 (available online on U-Tube or C-Span Library).       
  Our new book The Lost Testament of the Ancestors of Adam (2010)
  demonstrates that Egyptian hieroglyphics, as well as many ancient
  inscriptions of the Middle East can be traced back to bronze and pottery
  inscripotions on Igbo Ukwu archeological artifacts dug up by a British
  archaeologist in the 1950s, and to some extent to pre-historic stone
  inscriptions located in Ikom villages in Cross River State,
  Nigeria.             We found several words of common
  sounds and meanings in both Igbo and Egyptian, which means that ancient
  Egyptians spoke Igbo language or a related dialect; but most
  shockingly, we found that Igbo Ukwu, the town where the enigmatic artifacts
  were dug up in the 1950s is still standing on a buried city
  outside living memory. That city's buried artfacts (the few that were
  dug up by archaeologists) have been found to conform to a large extent to
  totems known to be associated with the Egyptian gods Nut,Thoth, Isis and
  Osiris, and with the Egyptian creation story, leading to the suspicion that
  we might be dealing with the lost Egyptian Edenic capital- Heliopolis and the
  lost nation of Punt/Tilmun - the land of the gods of Egypt and Sumer. The
  discovery that THERE IS A BURIED CITY THERE changes everything
  previously thought about Africa, and creates the notion that there might be
  other buried cities in the Nigerian cultural environment such as Nok,
  Oyo, Benin, etc.             The new research by Atkinson did
  not pin-point that original African mother-language, which keeps
  their work still in the realm of speculation. But we did. In fact we
  went as far as answering the now emerging question, What language did
  God speak? and What language did Adam speak? (see volume 2 of the Trilogy, They
  Lived Before Adam, which won the 2009 International Book Awards in
  USA)?               Our research, paralleling that of
  oriental linguist Ralph Ellis, shows that the language spoken in Eden by
  Adam and his family was the same language used by "God" in uttering
  the words of Genesis as contained in Hebrew Torah and in
  ancient Egyptian creation myth and language: "Let there be
  ...", "Let the waters be gathered to one place...". The Torah
  using words that matched ancient Egyptian says that the vernacular words
  used by God for "Let there be" were hahya uwr. In
  Igbo language of Nigeria, the equivalent is haa ya owuru,
  meaning 'let it be allowed to be'! In both Hebrew and ancient Egyptian, the
  words, which God uttered to "divide the waters", were qavah
  and Khef, respectively (see Ralph Ellis - Tempest and
  Exodus/Eden in Egypt). Ellis' study indicates that these words mean in
  Hebrew and Egyptian 'sweep the waters away' and 'tie them together'.The Igbo
  equivalents are Kwaa va, kwoo va and Kee fa
  (meaning - 'push away the wall of water', 'sweep them away' and 'tie
  them together', respectively. Igbo language is still spoken today by the Igbo
  people of southeastern Nigeria.              This discourse is taken up fully
  in my article titled "IGBO LANGUAGE: A FORMER GLOBAL LINGUA FRANCA
  AND THE MOTHER OF SEMITIC LANGUAGES" presented at the Igbo Studies
  Association Conference, at Howard University, 8-9th April, 2011 and
  published on our center's website www.carcafriculture.org.
  But our detailed analyses are to be found in the trilogy, which are
  available on Amazon and Paypal.           |