Tuesday, March 17, 2015

Is Scholz's star Nibiru ?

It seems quite natural to associate the planet Mars with the "mythical" planet Nibiru, from which the Anunnaki are supposed to have visited planet earth. This is because the word "Nibiru" sounds like a corruption of the Tswana word "n'hibidu" meaning "red". Mars, as we know, is also known as "the red planet". Thus, following the Tswana/Coptic/Sumerian family of languages, I concluded that Mars is indeed Nibiru.

As I have written in the past, there is a tiny, very delicate, bright red insect which appears after rains. As Kalanga-speaking kids, we used to call it "ndzimu", meaning "god". When I became aware of the saga involving the planet Nibiru (red?) and the Anunnaki gods, a few years ago, I came to the conclusion that the gods must have come from a red planet, wherever that is; and that therefore Mars is Nibiru.

However, there was a nagging problem at the back of my head - what has the planet Mars got to do with "not burning" ?

You see, in Anunnaki (proto)language the word "Si" means "fire". The (Italian?) word "Si", meaning "yes" is its direct derivative, originally meaning  that the Anunnaki rocket "agrees" to start/fire. The (Italian?) word shares this origin with its Russian couterpart - the word "Da", derived from the Kalanga word "Da", which means "to like /to accept" (to start?). In earliest Kalanga or Anunnaki (proto)language one probably said "ya si", meaning "it (the rocket) has fired/started".  It would seem that this is  the origin of the English word "yes".

One way of making a fire in nature is through friction. One wooden stick is rotated under pressure, against another stick until the generated friction produces fire. In Kalanga, this process is called "sika"; "si meaning "fire", and "ka", meaning "spirit".

So what has all this got to do with either Mars or Nibiru? In Kalanga, there is a star which ususally rises just before dawn, and is called "Masasi". The root of the word is "-sasi". The prefix "sa" means "not". Thus "-sasi" means "not burning". Indeed a spark is called "sasi" in Kalanga. The Kalanga word "Masasi" therefore means "the one that does not burn". I believe that the English word Mars is its derivative.

So, how does planet Mars "not burn" ?. I don't know, and I have been wondering about this until I heard about the discovery of the cosmic encounter between Scholz's star (with its red dwarf partner) and our solar system 70,000 years ago. A red dwarf doesn't burn - Masasi. There is yet another feature of Scholz's star that suggests that it could indeed be Nibiru. The ancient Maori heiroglyphic script on Pitcairn's island has a figure (6) that could possibly represent a double star system.  I have surmised that the Jewish "star of David" may well be a projection of that figure (6), with the two triangles intersecting.

The probability of Scholz's star (or a planet orbitting it) being Nibiru, is much higher than that of the red planet Mars.