GLOBAL CELTS & WENDS: WENDISH LANGUAGE & HISTORY
  • Introduction
  • CONTENTS
  • Articles
    • Oct. 2012: Preface
    • Oct. 2012: Part 1
    • Oct. 2012: Part 2
    • Oct. 2012: Part 3
    • Oct. 2012: Illustrations
    • Dec. 2012
    • Spring 2013: Part 1
    • Spring 2013: Part 2
    • Summer 2013
    • Dec. 2013: Part 1
    • Dec. 2013: Part 2
    • Summer 2014: Part 1
    • Summer 2014: Part 2
    • Wendish in Azteks' Military Equipment
    • America and Northern Africa
    • Wends in Roman Tres Galliae
  • History
    • EUROPE'S PRE-COLUMBIAN LINGUISTIC CONNECTION TO AMERICA >
      • Part 1: Introduction
      • Part 2: True & False
      • Part 3: Wendish in Babylon
      • Part 4: Wendish in Japan
      • Part 5: Illyrians and Migmaqs
      • Part 6: Parallel Histories
  • Language
    • Wendish in European Languages >
      • Wendish in English
      • Wendish in German
      • Wendish in Scandinavian
      • Wendish in Old Norse in the Context of Native North American Languages
      • Wendish in The Gallic of Ancient Gaul
      • Wendish in Latin >
        • Introduction
        • Wendish in Latin: Word List 1
        • Wendish in Latin: Word List 2
        • Wendish in Latin: Word List 3
    • Wendish in Japan >
      • Introduction
      • Wendish in Japanese: Word List
      • Wendish in Ainu
    • Wendish Words in American Languages >
      • Wendish in Micmag
      • Wendish in Cree
      • Wendish in Abenaki
      • Wendish in Aztec
    • coming soon... >
      • Wendish in Spanish
      • Wendish in Algonquin
  • Religion
  • Sources
    • Introductory Notes
    • Modern Texts
    • Historical Texts
    • Dictionaries
    • Anecdotal
  • Contact
THIRDLY, by publishing my discoveries, I hope to arouse interest among the young generation of Wendish scholars for further research into their unique history and language. Not only native American languages, but also the most ancient Egyptian, Coptic, and various ancient Middle-Eastern texts offer a wide field for interesting and rewarding further research. The time is also ripe for an objective, unprejudiced review of what had really transpired in Europe in the 20th century – while eyewitnesses and unadulterated archives are still accessible.

FOURTHLY, I want to ensure that Wendish politicians and private individuals do all that is necessary to fund such research in the near future. Before, for example, many of American native languages have vanished for ever – as has happened, in the last half of the 20th century, to the native Ainu of Japan.

With the results of such research, Wends would be able to counteract the prolonged indoctrination to which they have been exposed not only by foreign but even by their own governments – which led to their acceptance of a distorted and falsified version of their own history and language, and their loss of their true identity.

I trust also that all the misleading information about Wends, their language and history, will be promptly removed, at least from all Wendish official websites, and replaced with facts.

LASTLY, and most importantly, I am writing this article to encourage a joint, unified effort of all the remaining Wends – in Germany, in Austria, Hungary, Italy and the Republic of Slovenia - to preserve and strengthen the rich legacy created by their famous ancestry. Preferably, they ought to involve in the union also Slovaks and Czechs, whose languages remain closest relations of Wendish. United, with an organized support of all other small European nations and ethnic groups, Wends will succeed in their demand that the European Union ensures their continued existence, identity, and prosperity. Their remaining areas ought to be declared a UNESCO cultural heritage, exempt from all multicultural and open borders policies pursued by the European Union – which, if continued to be forced upon them, will, no doubt, wipe them out within a few generations.

In future articles, I will elaborate on each of the subjects enumerated above, but not necessarily in the same order. I will give some examples, supporting each of my assertions and discoveries. I shall also explain what had led me to search for Wendish connections in most unexpected places.

The more detailed results of my haphazard “research”, with complete lists of Wendish words which I have discovered in various modern and classical languages and ancient texts, will appear on my future website - when I find time to do so.

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