The first samurai were not Japanese

03. 11. 2017
6th international conference of exopolitics, history and spirituality

Few people know that the Japanese are not the original inhabitants of Japan. In front of them lived the Ain - a mysterious nation around which there are still many puzzles. The Ain were pushed north by the Japanese.

There is written evidence that the Ains were the original masters of the Japanese and Kuril islands, as evidenced by geographical names that evidently come from Ain. Even the symbol of Japan, Mount Fujiyama, has in its name the Ain word fuji, which means the deity of fire. Scientists believe that the Ain settled on the Japanese islands 13 years ago and are the founders of the Neolithic culture of Jomon.

The Ains did not engage in agriculture, they subsisted on hunting, gathering, and fishing. They lived in villages that were relatively far apart. Therefore, the area they inhabited was quite large. Sakhalin, Primorsky Krai, Kuril Islands and South Kamchatka. In the 3rd millennium BC, Mongoloid tribes arrived on the Japanese islands and brought rice with them. It provided livelihood for a large number of people - in proportion to the area. And that's when the Ain problems began. They were forced to begin moving to the northern regions and leave their land to the colonizers.

The Ains were excellent warriors who fought perfect bows and swords, and the Japanese failed to defeat them for a long time. For a really long time, almost 1500 years, they did not succeed until the advent of firearms. The Ain ruled very well with two swords and wore two kinžals on the right side, one of which was intended for committing harakiri, which we now consider one of the features of Japanese culture, but in fact it belongs to the Ain civilization. There is still controversy about the origin of the Ain, but it is clear that this nation has no relationship with other ethnic groups in the Far East and Siberia. Their characteristic features are thick hair and beard in men, which we do not find in the Mongoloid race. It has long been thought that they have common roots with the peoples of Indonesia and the natives of the Pacific islands because they had similar facial features. However, genetic analyzes ruled out these variants. And the first Russian Cossacks to reach Sakhalin considered the Aina to be Russians - they were so different in appearance from the Siberian peoples and more like Europeans.

According to surveys, the only ethnic group with which the Ains are related dates from the Jomon period and are considered the ancestors of the Ains. Ain language also does not fit into the current world linguistic map, and so far linguists have not been able to find the language's "location."

Today, there are about 25 Ains, living mostly in northern Japan and practically assimilated by the Japanese.

 

 

Links:

We wrote about Ainech already in the article The mysteries of the Aina tribe

And compare the pictures of Ain women with the image of the monkey king Hanuman

Mysteries of Rama Bridge

http://www.sacred-texts.com/shi/aft/index.html

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