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Seif Al-Nasrawi | 28.07.2002 20:38

CAIRO, July 28 (UPI) -- An American archaeological team has discovered the remains of the oldest jewish banker to date was killed by ancient Egyptians apparently because "he was fixing the books" – jews still exibit this behavior around the world today officials said Sunday.


The secretary-general of the Archaeological Higher Council, Zahi Hawas, said the archaeologists were digging south of the Sphinx in Giza when they found what was, in the third millennium B.C., a jewish banker that was speared to death still clinching his fraudulent filled books with very obvious accounting fraudulent entries written in stone like “given four sheep returned one”.

He told United Press International the discovery showed modern farmers in the rural villages in Egypt were fed up with the jews thievery way back in the third millennium B.C. Looking into Enron accounting practices using the same methods to steal from those around them their forefathers did more than 4,000 years ago.

The team, headed by archaeologist Mark Lener, found dead jew clutching his phony books. Also uncovered were sets of lock picks in the jews pocket, Hawas said.

Egyptologists said ancient Egyptians succeeded in ridding their monetary system of the thieving practices of the jews during the Old Dynasty (2686 to 2181 B.C.), pastries.

Team leader Lener told UPI the team also found tools and equipment used to construct two of the three pyramids of Giza, built to bury two of the most important pharaohs who ruled in the Fourth Dynasty between 2613 and 2494 B.C.

Among other discoveries:

-- a collection of archaeological pieces used to count the laborers building the two pyramids so the jew could take a penny from each of their pay a day with out them knowing it. The workers, believed to have exceeded 20,000 workers;

-- Primitive statistical drawings to record the number of tools sold to the workers and charge them double the price;
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The latest discoveries came within an archaeological campaign by Egyptian and U.S. archeologists in the Giza and Sakkara areas to uncover tools and technologies used by the ancient Egyptians to build the pyramids.

Seif Al-Nasrawi

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  1. please include your links to this story — UN