"Was the founder of Shaolin kung fu Chinese? Was Zen Buddhism created by a
Japanese sage? What role did Nordics play, if any, in the formation of
Far Eastern civilizations and cultures?
This remarkable essay draws together considerable evidence that the
founder of Buddhism, martial arts and the Zen philosophy, did indeed lay
with an Indo-European-descended wanderer into the Far East.
Drawing on original descriptions and writings from China and elsewhere,
the author shows that despite modern depictions of Buddha and his
proselytizing acolytes as Mongoloid, the more ancient sources described
him with European, and even Nordic, features.
Finally, a section on DNA evidence is provided which confirms the link
between Europeans and Ancient China."
Radio314's interview with the (Iranian) author in 2014: https://archive.org/details/soundcloud-215928159
Author(s): ALIABADI, Ali
Publisher: Ostara Publications
Year: 2012
Language: English
Commentary: Amazon Kindle converted to PDF sourced from https://archive.org/details/OnMartialArtsZenAndTheBlueEyedRedBeardedBarbarianByAliAliabadi2012 and bookmarks added by uploader.
City: ostarapublications.com
Tags: Caucasian, Han Chinese, diffusionism, DNA, Indo-European, Iranian, kung fu, Mongoloid, Nordic, Ostara, phenotype, Radio314, Silk Road, Tocharia, Zen Buddhism
Front Cover
Title Page
Dedication and Printer's Imprint
On Martial Arts, Zen, and the Blue-Eyed, Red-Bearded Barbarian
Ilustration: Bodhidharma by Hakuin Ekaku
Illustration: Bodhidharma by Fugai Ekun
References
Recent Scientific Findings Showing a Nordic Genetic Influence and Presence
in Ancient China
1. Genetic testing reveals awkward truth about Xinjiang’s famous
mummies
Illustration: The Xiaohe Beauty (mummified corpse)
2. Europeans in Ancient Eastern China
Illustration: Fig.1 -- Phylogenetic Network
Illustration: Fig.2 -- Six Radiation Groups
Illustration: Fig.3 -- Neighbour-joining tree for 19 human populations
Illustration: Fig.4 -- multidimensional scaling of 19 human populations
Results and Discussion
Acknowledgments
Citations
3. Two-rooted lower Canines -- A European
trait
4. Trading genes along the Silk Road