Comparative Linguistics : Indo - European and Niger - Congo
Recent genetic research at Universidad Complutense, Madrid, has found no substantial evidence for an Aryan invasion of Europe. This invasion is a myth.
We use morphology to demonstrate that the Indo-European languages came out of Africa. They derive from an offshoot of the Niger-Congo group. Agglutination gradually lead to grammatical fusion, with fossilisation and loss of the prefixes. The primary elements were relatively independent monosyllables, used as prefixes, roots, infixes, suffixes.
The Indo-European “invaders” were not strangers, but were genetically related to the original black inhabitants of the Mediterranean lands who spoke Niger-Congo languages. Genetics and linguistics now lead us to the same conclusion. Afro-Asiatic farmers, not conquering Aryans, gradually overlaid these black aboriginal inhabitants, giving rise to the olive-skinned Mediterranean race.
The various alphabets, we now know, derive from an African syllabary. The history of the Indo-European languages is enshrined in their writing systems. The letters were once meaningful African signs used to catalogue the reality of early man.