- “The Last Semite” presents evidence that the majority of Ashkenazi Jews, who control Israel’s government and military, are not descendants of Shem (true Semites) but are instead descendants of Khazars—a Turkic people who converted to Judaism in the 8th and 9th centuries. DNA studies confirm their haplotypes are overwhelmingly European, with Palestinians carrying more ancient Israelite and Canaanite genetic markers.
- The book exposes that Theodore Herzl’s Zionism was a secular, political project, not a biblical one, and was financed by the Rothschild banking dynasty. The 1917 Balfour Declaration was a secret arrangement between a foreign secretary and a banker, granting land to a foreign elite while dismissing over 90% of the indigenous Palestinian population as “non-Jewish communities.”
- The Scofield Reference Bible, allegedly funded by the Rothschilds, introduced dispensationalist theology that falsely teaches God has separate plans for ethnic Israel and the Church. This corrupted millions of Christians into unconditionally supporting a secular, violent state, despite Paul’s argument in Galatians 3 that the covenant promises were fulfilled spiritually in Christ.
- The term “antisemitism” has been used to silence criticism, but the book argues it is a “Dodo Bird Defense”—since modern Israelis (especially Ashkenazim) are not genetically Semitic, the accusation is invalid. Every Israeli prime minister has been Ashkenazi (e.g., Ben-Gurion from Poland, Netanyahu with a changed surname), documenting their European, non-Semitic origins.
- The book argues the Abrahamic covenant was never about physical land or real estate but about a spiritual seed—Jesus Christ. The destruction of the Temple in 70 AD was the definitive end of the Old Covenant, and to support rebuilding a Third Temple is to reject Christ’s finished work. Christians are called to reject false theology, stand against Israeli oppression of Palestinians, and embrace a kingdom not of this world.
You know that feeling when you’ve been told a story your whole life and then someone hands you a book that makes you realize you’ve been looking at a photograph that’s been completely airbrushed? That’s what reading “The Last Semite: Unmasking the Zionist Deception and Reclaiming the Biblical Covenant” feels like. It’s the kind of book that doesn’t just challenge your assumptions—it detonates them.
The book opens with a knockout punch. Did you know that the term “Semite” comes directly from Shem, the son of Noah? The true Semites are the descendants of Shem—Arabs, Assyrians, Arameans and ancient Hebrews. But here’s where it gets uncomfortable: the vast majority of people who call themselves Jewish today cannot trace their lineage back to Shem.
“The Last Semite” presents genetic evidence that most Ashkenazi Jews—the ones who run Israel, control its government and dominate its military—are actually descendants of the Khazars, a Turkic people from the Caucasus region who converted to Judaism in the 8th and 9th centuries. This isn’t fringe theory. This is documented history. The Khazar king Bulan converted his entire nation as a political maneuver to avoid being crushed between Christian Byzantium and the Muslim Caliphates.
And the DNA confirms it. Y-chromosome and mitochondrial DNA studies consistently show that Ashkenazi haplotypes are overwhelmingly European, with only a tiny fraction of Middle Eastern admixture. Meanwhile, Palestinians—especially Christian Palestinians—carry more ancient Israelite and Canaanite DNA than the people who now claim the land.
The political architects: Herzl and the Rothschilds
The book then takes you inside the boardrooms where modern Israel was actually conceived. Theodore Herzl, the father of political Zionism, was not a religious man. He didn’t care about biblical prophecy. He cared about solving what he called the “Jewish Question”—and his solution was a secular, political state.
But Herzl had a problem. He had vision but no money. That’s where the Rothschild banking dynasty stepped in. The Rothschilds were the most powerful bankers in Europe. They controlled central banks in England, France and beyond. They had funded wars, built railroads and lent money to kings. And when Herzl came calling for help to buy Palestine from the Ottoman Empire, the Rothschilds answered.
This is the part that made me put the book down and just stare at the wall for a while. The Balfour Declaration of 1917—that single letter from British Foreign Secretary Arthur Balfour to Lord Rothschild—was not a divine act. It was a secret arrangement between a foreign secretary and a banker. It promised a “national home for the Jewish people” in a land where over 90 percent of the population was Palestinian. The indigenous people were dismissed as “non-Jewish communities.”
The Scofield trap
If you grew up in evangelical circles, you’ve probably heard of the Scofield Reference Bible. What you might not know is that Cyrus Scofield’s notes—printed right there in the margins of millions of Bibles—created a theological system that has led Christians to support a violent, secular state in the name of prophecy.
Scofield popularized something called dispensationalism, which teaches that God has two separate programs: one for Israel and one for the church. According to this view, the church is just a “parenthesis” in history and God’s real focus is on ethnic Jews. Scofield’s notes taught that Old Testament land promises were still waiting to be fulfilled—even though the Apostle Paul explicitly says in Galatians 3 that the promises were made to Abraham’s “Seed,” which is Christ.
This is where the deception becomes spiritual. Scofield’s Bible taught millions of Christians to support Israel unconditionally, no matter what the Israeli government does. It turned the cross into a political weapon. It made Christians passive spectators rather than active defenders of justice.
Here’s where the book hits its stride. The term “antisemitism” has been weaponized to shut down any criticism of Israel. But think about this logically: if the people calling themselves Jews today are not actually Semites—if they’re descendants of Khazar converts rather than descendants of Shem—then the accusation loses its power.
“The Last Semite” calls this the “Dodo Bird Defense.” You can’t be “anti-dodo” because the dodo bird is extinct. In the same way, you can’t be “anti-Semite” against a group that isn’t Semitic. The biblical Semites are largely gone. The people who now claim the title are using it as a shield to protect a political project.
Every single prime minister of Israel has been Ashkenazi—descended from European converts, not from Abraham. David Ben-Gurion was born in Poland. Golda Meir was born in Ukraine. Benjamin Netanyahu’s grandfather changed the family name from Mileikowsky. These are not secrets. They’re documented facts that the mainstream media refuses to connect.
The biblical unmasking
The theological section of this book is worth the price alone. The author shows that the Abrahamic covenant was never about real estate. It was about a spiritual seed—Christ. Paul makes this crystal clear in Galatians 3: “If you are Christ’s, then you are Abraham’s seed and heirs according to the promise.”
The destruction of the Temple in 70 AD was not a tragedy to be reversed. It was the definitive end of the Old Covenant age. Jesus Himself predicted it. The Book of Revelation describes the judgment that fell on first-century Israel, not events still in our future. To insist on rebuilding a Third Temple and restoring animal sacrifices is to reject the finished work of Christ.
This book will make you uncomfortable. It will challenge things you’ve been taught since Sunday school. It will make you question pastors you’ve trusted and politicians you’ve supported.
But here’s the liberating truth: you don’t have to be afraid anymore. You don’t have to fear “cursing” Israel by speaking out against injustice. The blessing of Abraham is for all who have faith in Christ—not for a political state that bombs hospitals and starves children.
“The Last Semite” calls Christians to become the voice for the voiceless. To speak up for Palestinians who are being crushed under occupation. To reject the false theology that has turned the church into a cheerleader for genocide. To reclaim the true gospel—a kingdom not of this world, where our citizenship is in heaven.
This is not a book for the faint of heart. But if you’re ready to have your eyes opened, your mind renewed and your spirit set free, pick it up. Read it with an open Bible. Check every claim. And then decide whose side you’re really on.
The deception is being unmasked. The truth is marching on. And you get to be part of it.
Grab a copy of “The Last Semite: Unmasking the Zionist Deception and Reclaiming the Biblical Covenant” via this link. Read, share and download thousands of books for free at Books.BrightLearn.AI. You can also create your own books for free at BrightLearn.AI.
Watch the video below, where Health Ranger Mike Adams interviews TJ Smith, author of “The Last Semite,” on Biblical history, Noah, Israel and true Semite ancestry.
This video is from the Health Ranger Report channel on Brighteon.com.
Sources include:
Books.BrightLearn.ai
BrightLearn.ai
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