
You celebrate what now?
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A PROCLAMATION TO THE TWELVE FAMILIES OF YASHARAHLAH
FATHER’S DAY AND MOTHER’S DAY
What Yahawah Never Commanded
For 13,496 years, the holidays now known as “Father’s Day” and “Mother’s Day” were never recognized, instituted, or commanded by Ahlah Shadaya Yahawah AhlahYama Hayahawashai Mawashaiyai Yaraya. Let that sink in before you read another word. If you are basking in either of these practices and calling it righteousness, you are basking in heathen tradition — not in instruction from the Throne.
This is not a word against loving a mother or a father. It is a correction of misplaced devotion. A father is honored when his children keep his instruction. A mother is honored the same way. In the language of Hathawaratha, honor is not a feeling performed once a year — it is obedience, practiced daily.
The Standard Yahawah Actually Set
John 14:15 gives the standard plainly: “If ye love me, keep my commandments.” Love is not declared by ceremony. Love is demonstrated by obedience.
This is the same standard built into the Fifth of the Hamatazawatha:
“Honour thy father and thy mother: that thy days may be long upon
the land which Yahawah thy AhlahYama giveth thee.”
EXODUS 20:12
Read it again. Notice what is commanded — ongoing honor, obedience, reverence within the household. Notice what is absent — a holiday, a brunch, a card, a single Sunday set aside on a Roman calendar to discharge an entire year’s worth of duty. Deuteronomy 5:16 repeats the same charge. Neither giving of the Hamatazawatha — not at the mountain, not in the wilderness, not in the Land — ever instituted a calendar observance to fulfill it. Man added that. Yahawah did not.
Where These Holidays Actually Came From
Modern “Mother’s Day” in the West traces to Anna Jarvis of Grafton, West Virginia, who held the first observance in 1908 in memory of her own mother. It became a national holiday in 1914 by an act of the United States government — not by any word of Yahawah. Long before Jarvis, ancient Rome held spring festivals to Cybele, the “Mother of the Gods,” and Greece held similar rites for Rhea — observances later echoed in the European custom of “Mothering Sunday.” Jarvis herself spent her later years fighting the commercial industry that grew up around the day she started, disowning what it had become.
“Father’s Day” followed a similar path. Sonora Smart Dodd of Spokane, Washington proposed it in 1909 to honor her own father, and the first observance was held in 1910. It did not become a permanent national holiday in the United States until 1972 — a stroke of a president’s pen, not a word spoken at Sinai.
Whatever sentiment birthed these days, this is the point: they are man’s institutions, attached to no covenant, commanded by no prophet, confirmed by no scripture. They were not given on the Mount. They are not found in Hathawaratha. They are not among the Nine High Holy Days. They are inventions of recent centuries, dressed in the language of honor while quietly substituting for the obedience that honor actually requires.
Honor Is a Daily Walk, Not a Calendar Square
Scripture never separates the honoring of parents from the keeping of Yahawah’s whole Hamatazawatha. Exodus 16:28-29 records Yahawah’s rebuke — “How long refuse ye to keep my commandments and my laws?” — tied directly to the keeping of Sha-Ba-Tha. Leviticus 22:31-33 commands: “Therefore shall ye keep my commandments, and do them: I am Yahawah… that brought you out of the land of Ma-Taza-Ra-Ya-Ma, to be your AhlahYama.”
Leviticus 26:3-13 lays out the blessing that follows obedience — rain in season, safety in the land, peace, fruitfulness, Yahawah’s own presence walking among His people. Verses 14-17 lay out the opposite: terror, sorrow, defeat, and exile for the one who “will not hearken.” This pattern runs through the whole witness of scripture. 2 Kings 17:13-23 records exactly what happens to a people who trade the commandments for their own statutes — Yasharahlah was carried away, and Ya-Ha-Wa-Da-Ha was left to repeat the same sin and suffer the same fate. Nehemiah 1:9 holds out the remedy: “if ye turn unto me, and keep my commandments, and do them… I will gather them.”
Proverbs 3 ties this same obedience to length of days, favor, healing, and provision — the very promises men mistakenly attach to a holiday brunch instead. “My son, forget not my law; but let thine heart keep my commandments: for length of days, and long life, and peace, shall they add to thee” (Proverbs 3:1-2). 2 Esdras 16:74-78 warns that those bound by sin and covered by their own iniquities — including idle tradition mistaken for righteousness — are left undressed, gathered like thorns for the fire.
Sentiment Is Not a Substitute for Obedience
None of this means a child should withhold love, gratitude, or care from a mother or father. It means love and gratitude were never meant to be confined to a single Sunday, packaged by greeting-card companies and broadcast networks, and substituted for the daily walk of obedience that scripture actually commands. A father is not honored by flowers in June. He is honored when his household keeps Yahawah’s instruction, because that instruction is the inheritance he was charged to pass down. A mother is not honored by brunch in May. She is honored when her children walk uprightly before Yahawah, because that uprightness is the fruit she labored to produce.
John 15:10-11 closes the matter:
“If ye keep my commandments, ye shall abide in my love; even as I
have kept my Father’s commandments, and abide in his love. These
things have I spoken unto you, that my joy might remain in you,
and that your joy might be full.”
JOHN 15:10–11
Full joy is found in obedience — not in a holiday invented by men and adopted by a heathen world.
The Real Father’s Day — and the Real Mother’s Day
Keep Sha-Ba-Tha. Keep Hathawaratha. Keep the Hamatazawatha. Walk in them every day of your life, and you will have honored your father, your mother, and Yahawah Himself — far beyond what any calendar square could ever require.
Shalawam.
(Mess Around And Find Out)



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