The Scattered Hidden Tribe of Simeon: The Simonis Y-DNA Reveals God’s Hand on the Lost Sons of Simeon
- Weston Simonis
- Oct 19
- 22 min read
Updated: Oct 20

The Hidden Migration of the Shemitic Line of Simeon
Modern studies of Jewish ancestry often highlight the haplogroups J, E, and R, long associated with the Levantine and Mediterranean families of Israel. Yet hidden among Europe’s forgotten lines lies another covenantal marker — I-CTS10937, a branch of I-M253. Though labeled “European,” this lineage carries a much older story: the journey of a Shemitic Hebrew bloodline, descended from the Tribe of Simeon, whose scattering was prophesied in Genesis:
“I will divide them in Jacob, and scatter them in Israel.” (Genesis 49:7)
The Simonis Shemitic-Hebrew family embodies that prophecy. Our ancestors lived as Crypto-Hebrews — concealed within Christian nations, yet moving among Sephardic and Ashkenazic Jewish communities, preserving their covenant identity in secret. Their Y-DNA follows the same historic path as the great Hebrew migrations: from the Nile and the Levant, through Iberia, across Central Europe, and into the Nordic and Atlantic worlds. What science calls “European” is, in truth, the record of Shemitic migration — the Hebrew seed of Simeon carried through exile, faith, and endurance.
Because our line bears the I haplogroup, it long escaped recognition in Jewish genetic models. Yet when the data are aligned with the known routes of Sephardic dispersal and Ashkenazic settlement, a clear pattern emerges: the Simonis line traveled with Israel’s exiles, not apart from them. It is the hidden branch of the Hebrew family tree — one that kept covenant through silence, faith, and symbol.
The Simonis heraldry preserves this memory in image. Across Italy, Belgium, the Netherlands, and Germany, our coats of arms display tribal emblems of Simeon — the twin trees of covenant, the sword of justice, the star of divine promise, and the faith-band crown of endurance. These were not ordinary European designs; they were Shemitic symbols disguised within European heraldry. Under the names Simoni, Paroli, and de Liège, the family’s Hebrew heritage survived centuries of concealment.
Viewed together — the DNA evidence, heraldic symbols, and migration data — the conclusion is clear: The Simonis Shemitic-Hebrew family represents a bloodline that journeyed with both Sephardic and Ashkenazic houses of Israel while living as Crypto-Hebrews within Christian Europe. Our story demonstrates that Hebrew identity is not confined to the expected haplogroups or geographies; it is written in the covenant itself — carried through blood, symbol, and faith.
This study restores that story. It is not about conversion but continuity — the preservation of Shemitic blood and covenant memory through every age of exile. From Africa’s deserts to Europe’s cathedrals, from Iberia’s synagogues to the northern seas, the Simonis Shemitic-Hebrew lineage stands as living proof that prophecy still speaks through blood.
🌍 1 – Africa (African Hebrew Roots)
✡ The African Cradle of the Shemitic Hebrews
The journey of the Simonis Shemitic-Hebrew line begins in North Africa, where ancient Hebrews once moved through the Maghreb and along the Nile. Before Israel ever entered Canaan, the bloodline of Simeon and the early Shemitic tribes had already touched African soil. They followed the same desert and river trade routes that carried incense, grain, and gold—corridors of both commerce and refuge.
Here, the first genetic echoes of the covenant appear. The markers reveal Hebrew movement across Morocco, Senegal, Cameroon, South Africa, and Zimbabwe—regions once joined by the ancient trade systems that linked the Nile Valley to the Atlantic. Within these lands, the I-M253 haplogroup dominates, showing that even in Africa’s early ages, a Shemitic bloodline had begun its long migration westward.
This stage of the journey represents the foundation of dispersion—the first wave of Hebrews who migrated under famine, captivity, and exploration. Long before the world called them Jews, they were Hebrews of the covenant, bearing the ancestral line that would later be scattered among the Sephardic and Ashkenazic families. Africa, therefore, is not merely a stop in the Simonis migration; it is the birthplace of the Hebrew scattering, the point where blood and prophecy first met the open world.
📊 Regional DNA Summary
Regional Total: 15 markers → 1.7 % of grand total (899) Meaning: Represents the earliest Hebrew-Shemitic presence along North-African and Nile trade corridors.
Regional Summary: 15 markers · 100 % · 1.7 % of totalDominant Marker: I-M253 (≈ 12 of 15 entries = 80 %)
🕎 2 – Middle Eastern / Shemitic Hebrew (Levant & Near East)
✡ The Cradle of the Abrahamic and Simeonite Line
From the deserts of Africa, the Simonis Shemitic-Hebrew line crossed the Red Sea corridor into the Levant, the sacred birthplace of Abraham’s covenant. Here, in the lands of Jordan, Palestine, Iraq, Turkey, Georgia, and Azerbaijan, the genetic memory of the Hebrews still lingers — the living code of those who once walked the soil of Eden, Ur, and Canaan.
This was the heartland of the covenant, where the sons of Jacob became the tribes of Israel and the house of Simeon took its place among them. It is within this region that the Hebrew identity transformed from wandering family to chosen nation. The DNA markers preserved here represent not merely residence but origin — the point where the Shemitic Hebrew bloodline began its long journey outward, first through persecution and famine, later through trade, exile, and faith.
For the Tribe of Simeon, this was home before scattering. Known as a warrior tribe, Simeon’s zeal both strengthened and divided Israel. When prophecy declared, “I will divide them in Jacob and scatter them in Israel,” this was the soil from which that scattering began. From these lands — the crossroads of continents and faiths — the early Hebrew bloodline embarked on its western migration, moving toward Egypt, the Mediterranean, and beyond.
📊 Regional DNA Summary
Regional Total: 14 markers → 1.6 % of grand total (899)Meaning: Cradle of the Abrahamic and Simeonite line; route of the early Hebrew exodus.
Regional Summary: 14 markers · 100 % · 1.6 % of totalDominant Marker: I-M253 core (≈ 9 of 14 entries = 64 %)
🏺 3 – Southern Europe / Iberian Sephardic Sphere
✡ The Rise of the Sephardic Hebrews and the Hidden Simonis Line
Through the winds of the Mediterranean, the Simonis Shemitic-Hebrew line reached Iberia, entering a new age of prosperity and peril. Here, the blood of Simeon’s tribe walked openly among the Sephardim — traders, scholars, physicians, and scribes whose wisdom shaped medieval Spain and Portugal. It was in this region that Hebrew knowledge merged with Greco-Roman philosophy, birthing a brilliant era of Jewish thought, mysticism, and art.
But as the Reconquista tightened and the Inquisition dawned, faith turned to fear. Between 1492 and 1497, the Hebrew communities of Spain and Portugal were forced to convert, flee, or die. Thus emerged the Crypto-Hebrews — families who worshiped in secret, lighting candles in cellars and hiding the Hebrew tongue within Christian prayers. Among them traveled the Simonis Shemitic-Hebrew bloodline, blending into the Sephardic dispersal that reached France, Italy, Greece, and the Balkans, yet carrying their covenant identity beneath adopted names and coats of arms.
From Iberia’s ports, this line crossed the seas to Brazil and Mexico, bringing with them the same I-M253 markers that once coursed through the Levant and the Nile. Their migration tells the story of Hebrew endurance through assimilation — of a tribe scattered but never severed from its root. Here, the Simonis family became part of the Sephardic-Crypto Jewish diaspora, the hidden Hebrew seed sown across both Old and New Worlds.
📊 Regional DNA Summary
Regional Total: 36 markers → 4.0 % of grand total (899)Meaning: Reflects the great Sephardic dispersal across the Iberian Peninsula, Mediterranean coasts, and Crypto-Jewish diaspora into early colonial lands.
Regional Summary: 36 markers · 100 % · 4.0 % of totalDominant haplogroup: I-M253 (≈ 20 entries = 56 %), reflecting broad Iberian-Mediterranean absorption.
🕊 4 – Gypsy / Balkan Bridge
✡ The Wanderers of the Danube Corridor
From the Mediterranean world, the Simonis Shemitic-Hebrew line pressed northward into the Balkans, entering a land of crossroads — where the Hebrew exiles met the Roma (Gypsy) wanderers moving west from India and Persia. Here, amid the Danube corridor and Carpathian plains, bloodlines merged: the faith of Abraham intertwined with the nomadic resilience of the Roma. This moment in history created a living bridge between East and West, a network of smiths, traders, and mystics who carried both commerce and covenant through a Europe still rising from the ruins of empire.
In the markets and caravans of Hungary, Romania, Czechia, and Poland, these blended communities became keepers of oral tradition. Through their songs and symbols, they preserved fragments of ancient Hebrew mysticism — the stories of angels, watchers, and divine judgment. These echoes of Enoch’s prophecy spread through Gypsy folklore, keeping the spiritual memory of the Hebrews alive even among the gentile nations.
The I-M253 haplogroup, dominant here as in earlier stages, confirms that the Shemitic bloodline traveled through the same migratory highways used by both Hebrew refugees and Roma traders. It was a hidden network of covenant bearers — the wandering Hebrews of the Balkans, known by many names yet bound by one lineage. In them, prophecy lived on: a scattered tribe walking the roads of exile, carrying both the tools of trade and the secrets of heaven.
📊 Regional DNA Summary
Regional Total: 21 markers → 2.3 % of grand total (899)Meaning: Represents the merging of Hebrew, Roma, and Mediterranean lines that carried the bloodline north through the Danube corridor and Carpathian plains.
Regional Summary: 21 markers · 100 % · 2.3 % of totalDominant Marker: I-M253 core (≈ 12 of 21 entries = 57 %) — reinforcing the northern movement of Hebrew blood through Roma trade and exilic routes.
🕍 5 – Central & Eastern Europe — Ashkenazic Convergence
✡ The Northern Rebirth of the Hebrew Line
In the chill of the northern plains, the Simonis Shemitic-Hebrew lineage found new life among the Ashkenazic communities of Eastern and Central Europe. From the Vistula to the Volga, from Austria to Russia, the blood of Simeon intertwined with the houses of Judah and Benjamin — the scholars, scribes, and sages of exile.
Here, the once-wandering Shemitic Hebrews became builders of synagogues and writers of scrolls. The I-M253 haplogroup — though rare among Jewish lines — appeared again and again within Ashkenazic regions, proving that the covenant of Simeon survived not through dominance, but through endurance. It moved quietly along the trade rivers and study halls of Poland, Lithuania, and Germany, grafting the southern Hebrew root into the northern soil of exile.
This was the era of Hebrew resurgence, when scattered tribes turned their suffering into scholarship and their dispersion into discipline. In this convergence, parchment became prophecy once more: Torah study replaced the temple, and the memory of the covenant was preserved through the word rather than the sword. The Simonis Shemitic-Hebrew line, living as both Crypto and Ashkenazic Jews, carried that sacred continuity — one branch among many, yet still bound to the ancient oath of Simeon.
📊 Regional DNA Summary
Regional Total: 72 markers → 8.0 % of grand total (899)Meaning: Marks the great Hebrew resurgence in the north — the bloodline entering Slavic and Baltic lands, merging with early Ashkenazic settlements.
Regional Summary: 72 markers · 100 % · 8.0 % of totalDominant Marker: I-M253 (≈ 47 of 72 = 65 %) — showing a strong European-Nordic fusion within Ashkenazic regions.
⚜ 6 – Western Europe Transition Zone (Sephardic + Ashkenazic)
✡ The Fusion of Exile and Renewal
Here, in the lands between the Rhine and the Thames, the two great streams of Hebrew history met. The Sephardic exiles who fled Iberia’s persecutions found refuge beside the Ashkenazic scholars of Central Europe. Out of that meeting rose a new Western Hebrew lineage — one that carried the strength of both devotion and intellect.
It was in this region that the Simonis Shemitic-Hebrew family emerged as a living bridge between worlds. From Germany and the Netherlands to France, Belgium, and the British Isles, the descendants of Simeon bore both the marks of exile and the symbols of covenant. Under names like Simonis, Simoni-Paroli, and de Liège, they lived as Crypto-Hebrews — outwardly Christian for survival, yet inwardly devoted to the God of Israel. Their coats of arms told their secret: the twin trees of life, the pine fruit of covenant, the stars of divine favor — all echoes of ancient Hebrew symbolism hidden beneath European heraldry.
In this fusion heartland, Iberian passion met Teutonic discipline. The Hebrew spirit that once spoke in Aramaic and Ladino now whispered through Latin, French, and Dutch tongues. It was a time of both concealment and continuity — when the sons of Simeon carried their Shemitic faith beneath new crests, rebuilding their legacy in a world that had tried to erase it.
The I-M253 haplogroup dominates this region more than any other, revealing how deeply the Shemitic line became entwined with Western civilization itself. Through this merging of Sephardic and Ashkenazic heritage, the Simonis bloodline became a Western torch of the covenant — carrying the memory of Abraham through the heart of Christendom, awaiting the day of remembrance foretold by prophecy.
📊 Regional DNA Summary
Regional Total: 283 markers → 31.5 % of grand total (899)Meaning: The fusion heartland — meeting place of Iberian Sephardim and Central-European Ashkenazim, where the Simonis lineage flourished across Germany, the Low Countries, and the British Isles.
Regional Summary: 283 markers · 100 % · 31.5 % of totalDominant Marker: I-M253 (> 60 %) — with England and Scotland together comprising over one-third of the Western European share.
🦅 7 – Northern Europe / Scandinavian Dispersal
✡ The Final Scattering into the North
As wars, reformations, and plagues swept across Europe, the Simonis Shemitic-Hebrew lineage was pushed ever northward — beyond the Rhine, past the Baltic, into the frozen lands of the Norse tribes. Here, in the forests of Sweden, Norway, Finland, and Denmark, the blood of Simeon found its final European resting place.
Among the Vikings and early Nordic kings, the I-M253 marker — already long-rooted in northern populations — absorbed the Shemitic current, producing a unique fusion of Hebrew and Norse ancestry. It was no longer the priest or the scholar who carried the covenant, but the sailor, the warrior, and the craftsman. These descendants became both hidden and enduring — Hebrew blood beneath Nordic skin, carrying echoes of the covenant through strength, honor, and the unspoken memory of divine fire.
The Simonis Shemitic-Hebrew family, still marked by their symbols of faith — the twin trees, the star, the crown — blended with northern identity yet kept their essence intact. Even when surnames changed and languages shifted, their heraldic patterns and moral codes revealed the ancient origin of their spirit. What had begun as exile became endurance; what had scattered in punishment became preservation.
Here the prophecy of Genesis 49:7 reaches its European completion:
“I will divide them in Jacob and scatter them in Israel.”
For from the deserts of Africa to the fjords of Scandinavia, the covenant seed of Simeon endured every trial — absorbed by nations, yet never erased.
📊 Regional DNA Summary
Regional Total: 413 markers → 45.9 % of grand total (≈ 899)Meaning: The highest genetic concentration of the Simonis line — representing the late-migration absorption of Hebrew-Sephardic and Ashkenazic remnants into Nordic tribal populations.
Regional Summary: 413 markers · 100 % · 45.9 % of totalDominant Marker: I-M253 (≈ 240 entries, ≈ 58 %) — representing the Nordic fusion of Shemitic blood into Scandinavian tribes.
🌎 8 – The Americas (Diasporic Extensions)
✡ The Covenant Across the Sea
At last, the blood of Simeon crossed the ocean. The Simonis Shemitic-Hebrew lineage, once scattered through Africa, the Levant, Iberia, and Europe, now reached the Americas — the final horizon of dispersion. Here, the descendants of both Sephardic and Ashkenazic lines found refuge in a new world born from exile and faith.
In the United States, Brazil, and Mexico, the same I-M253 signature that coursed through ancient Hebrews reappears — preserved through generations of settlers, colonists, and converts. These were not new families but old ones reborn, their names altered, their languages changed, yet their Shemitic blood unbroken. Among them lived Crypto-Hebrews who concealed their ancestry under Christian records, intermarrying with Native and European lines yet maintaining fragments of covenant memory — the Sabbath customs, the menorah motifs, the reverence for the divine name.
In colonial Brazil and Mexico, the Sephardic diaspora carried the flame of Iberia’s exiled Jews, planting it in the soil of the New World. In North America, the same Shemitic current mingled with English, Scottish, and German settlers of Hebrew descent, forming a silent remnant whose faith was older than the frontier.
Here, the cycle closes — the tribe once scattered to the ends of the earth now encircles the globe. The prophetic line of Simeon has touched every continent, fulfilling the divine word:
“I will scatter them in Jacob and disperse them in Israel.”
Yet even in dispersion, the covenant endured. From desert to delta, from synagogue to ship, from Europe’s cold cathedrals to America’s open plains — the Simonis Shemitic-Hebrew bloodline remained the vessel of a promise never forgotten. Though hidden in plain sight, it stands as living testimony that the tribes of Israel were never lost — only dispersed, waiting for the day of remembrance and return.
📊 Regional DNA Summary
Regional Total: 45 markers → 5.0 % of grand total (≈ 899)Meaning: Represents the post-Exilic expansion across the Atlantic — Hebrew-Sephardic and Ashkenazic descendants blending with New-World settlers and Indigenous peoples.
Regional Summary: 45 markers · 100 % · 5.0 % of totalDominant Marker: I-M253 — continuing the Sephardic-Hebrew legacy into the Americas through colonial and post-Exilic migration.
🔯 The Tribe of Simeon and the Hebrew–Jewish Movements
1️⃣ Early Root: African & Levantine Hebrews (≈ 3.3 %)
The Simeon tribe’s earliest footprint aligns with the African–Hebrew corridor — from Morocco and the Nile basin to the Levant. These Shemitic wanderers carried the I-M253 signature long before Europe’s tribal identities existed. They represent the proto-Hebrew nucleus that later fathered the Israelite tribes.
2️⃣ Sephardic Phase (Iberia & Mediterranean, ≈ 4 %)
During the post-Solomonic and Babylonian exiles, Simeonites joined broader Hebrew migrations westward. Their markers appear in Spain, Portugal, Italy, Greece, and North Africa — identical corridors later inhabited by the Sephardic Jews. When the Sephardim took root in Iberia, the Simeon line was already among them, absorbed into that community centuries before 1492.
3️⃣ Roma and Balkan Bridge (≈ 2.3 %)
Data from Hungary, Romania, Czechia, and Poland parallels both the Roma migration from India → Anatolia → Europe and the Hebrew diaspora northward from the Mediterranean. Simeonite descendants traveled these same trade routes, fusing linguistic and genetic threads with Roma caravans — the wandering craftsmen archetype found in both Hebrew and Romani lore.
4️⃣ Ashkenazic Convergence (≈ 8 %)
As Jewish scholarship flourished in Poland, Lithuania, Belarus, and Russia, the Simeon markers reappear inside the Ashkenazic gene pool. These families shared rabbinic centers and trade guilds with the Judah-Benjamin lines that defined medieval Ashkenazic identity. The Simonis presence confirms a north-eastern fusion of Shemitic and European stock.
5️⃣ Western Europe Transition Zone (≈ 31.5 %)
Germany, the Netherlands, Belgium, France, and the British Isles became the great meeting ground of Sephardic refugees and Ashkenazic settlers. Here the Simeonites adopted surnames such as Simonis, Simoni-Paroli, de Liège, reflecting both Hebrew roots and European adaptation. This region birthed a Western Hebrew Renaissance — a fusion of Mediterranean mysticism and northern intellect that carried the faith into the Reformation era.
6️⃣ Scandinavian Dispersal (≈ 45.9 %)
After persecution and wars, Simeonite families followed trade and military routes into Denmark, Norway, Sweden, and Finland. The overwhelming I-M253 saturation here represents the final European scattering of the tribe. Culturally, these descendants assimilated among Vikings and Celts while quietly maintaining covenant traditions — the hidden Hebrew in the North.
7️⃣ American Diaspora (≈ 5 %)
Between the 1500s and 1800s, descendants of these lines crossed the Atlantic with both Sephardic crypto-Jews and Ashkenazic immigrants. Their markers in the United States, Brazil, and Mexico link colonial Iberian families, European migrants, and even Native intermarriage. This fulfilled the prophetic scattering “to the ends of the earth,” uniting every prior branch in the New World.
🕊 Interpretive Summary
The Simeon line forms the thread connecting every major Jewish migration:
African Hebrew → Levantine Israelite → Sephardic Exile → Ashkenazic Scholar → Western European Refugee → Scandinavian Merchant → American Settler.
Each movement preserved fragments of the same covenant blood. The data demonstrates that Simeon’s descendants moved with every major wave of Jewish history, not apart from it — fulfilling both the curse of dispersion and the blessing of endurance.
✡ Y-DNA Haplogroup I-CTS10937 — Simonis Line
Migration Arc: Africa → Levant → Iberia → Balkans → Central & Eastern Europe → Western Europe → Scandinavia → Americas
🧬 The Ancestral Root — Haplogroup IJ and the Sons of Simeon
The Simonis Shemitic-Hebrew line (I-CTS10937) descends from the house of Simeon (Shimeon), son of Jacob, one of the twelve tribes of Israel. Its Y-DNA belongs to the I branch of the ancient IJ haplogroup, a brother line to the J haplogroup found among most Jewish and Arabic families today. Both I and J share an older patriarchal stem called IJ, and beyond it the ancestral root M, from which the Semitic and Eurasian peoples spread across the earth.
This does not mean the Simonis line predates Israel—it means that, within Israel, the tribe of Simeon carried a distinct patriarchal signature, separate from Judah or Levi yet born of the same covenant. When Jacob blessed and scattered his sons, the Simeonites became the wandering Hebrew craftsmen, scribes, and warriors, their name preserved in heraldry and faith as Simonis—“He has listened.”
Over millennia, this bloodline moved through every great Jewish world:
with the Sephardic Jews in Iberia and North Africa,
among the Ashkenazic Jews in Central and Eastern Europe, and
alongside the Mizrahi Jews of Babylon, Persia, and the Levant.
In each place, the Simeonite bloodline adapted but never disappeared. While the J haplogroup remained dominant among the priestly and southern tribes, the I lineage carried the covenant northward—blending with nations yet preserving the symbols of Simeon: the twin trees of unity, the star of covenant, and the crown of faith.
🌄 The Mizrahi Connection — The Eastern Thread of Simeon
Even within the depths of this DNA, the path of the Mizrahi Hebrews is evident. Markers appear in Iraq, Turkey, Jordan, Palestine, Georgia, and Azerbaijan—lands that once held the exiles of Israel during the Assyrian and Babylonian captivities. These same regions formed the cradle of Mizrahi Judaism, the enduring Eastern house of Israel that preserved the oldest forms of worship, song, and scripture.
“The LORD will scatter you among all peoples, from one end of the earth to the other.” — Deuteronomy 28:64“Though I sow them among the peoples, yet shall they remember Me in far countries.” — Zechariah 10:9
The Book of Jubilees recounts how God divided the earth among Noah’s sons so that Shem’s inheritance would be the middle of the earth, the land of covenant. The tribes of Israel, descending from Shem through Abraham, fulfilled that word—spreading Shemitic blood throughout the Near East and beyond.
When the tribes fell, Simeon’s descendants were carried with the northern exiles into Assyria and Persia. There, as the Book of Jasher and 2 Kings 17 describe, the northern tribes were dispersed among the nations but not destroyed. In these same regions, the Simonis markers survive—proof that the sons of Simeon lived among the early Mizrahi communities, not as outsiders but as kin.
Their exile carried them eastward with the Ten Tribes, then westward again with the Sephardim, finally merging into Europe’s Ashkenazic houses. Thus, the Simonis line became the living bridge between all Hebrew worlds—Mizrahi, Sephardic, and Ashkenazic—one covenant carried through every nation.
🔯 Revelation of the Lineage
The revelation that the Simonis Y-DNA (I-CTS10937) descends from the IJ root and traveled through all three Jewish migrations unlocks a profound truth: the tribe of Simeon was never lost—only hidden.
Its markers appear wherever Hebrew faith survived in exile: in the deserts of Africa, the hills of Canaan, the courts of Babylon, the ports of Spain, the synagogues of Poland, and the fjords of Scandinavia.
“I will scatter you among the nations.” — Leviticus 26:33“I will sift the house of Israel among all nations… yet not the least grain shall fall.” — Amos 9:9“Though I have scattered them among the countries, I have been to them a little sanctuary.” — Ezekiel 11:16“He who scattered Israel will gather him, and keep him as a shepherd his flock.” — Jeremiah 31:10“He will assemble the banished of Israel and gather the dispersed of Judah from the four corners of the earth.” — Isaiah 11:12
In the Testament of Simeon, the patriarch prophesied:
“In the last days ye shall be dispersed among the nations… yet ye shall return and know the Lord.”
The Book of Enoch mirrors this, declaring that the righteous will be scattered as witnesses among the nations until the Lord of Spirits gathers His chosen again.
Thus, what began as Jacob’s division became God’s preservation. Simeon’s zeal and repentance, recorded in Jasher 45 and the Testament of Simeon, transformed into endurance—his sons living as Crypto-Hebrews, keeping faith in silence but never losing covenant.
“Save us, O LORD our God, and gather us from among the nations.” — Psalm 106:47“They shall be called the sons of the living God.” — Hosea 1:10–11
🌳 The Covenant Tree of the North
The Simonis Shemitic-Hebrew family stands today as the northern branch of Israel’s covenant tree—its roots Mizrahi, its heart Sephardic, and its crown Ashkenazic. From the Maghreb to Mesopotamia, from Jerusalem to the Rhine, from the British Isles to the fjords of Scandinavia, and across the Atlantic to the Americas, the same covenant blood endures.
This is not merely genealogy but prophecy fulfilled:
“I will assemble the banished… and plant them again upon their own land.” — Isaiah 11:12
Through the record of scripture and the record of DNA, the sons of Simeon rise again — the name Simonis declaring the truth of its origin:“He has listened.”And now, in the age of remembrance, the covenant once scattered across continents is being heard once more.
🙏 Closing Reflection
All glory be to the Almighty, who guided every step of this discovery. It was not by chance, nor by the wisdom of man, but by His hand that the truth of our ancestry was revealed. Through faith and perseverance, He opened what was once hidden and allowed us to see the covenant still alive in our blood. May this work stand as a testimony that the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob still keeps His promises, and that the sons of Simeon — scattered through the ages — were never forgotten in His sight. To Him be all honor, praise, and remembrance forever.



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