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Romani / Gypsies supposedly had direct contact with King Jesus.
Which makes sense if you realize He lived in the early Middle Ages and He visited India and likely Egypt, allegedly homeland of Gypsies?
Also, they were present in "Rome"?
They saved 3 nails? like a trident?
Also maybe they rescued him off the Cross, since the cave where he was supposed to be, was empty on inspection .
They are also known to be thieves, (as nomads thrown out from everywhere - they learned it as survival) But Savior is savior of everybody, including thieves?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Romani_crucifixion_legend
==The laudatory version states that a Romani stole the fourth nail of the crucifixion to repair his cart, the fourth nail being the one which would have pierced Jesus's heart, and that ever since God has granted the Romani people the moral right to commit petty thefts for things they need on their travels. Writing for website Travellers Times,
Supposedly they saved his life. Maybe scavenging for nails on the sabbath, and took him down?
Damian Le Bas comments: "In reality, both stories are equally absurd, since Jesus was crucified long before the ancestors of today's Romanies ever left India. But the facts have done little to sap the legends' power."[3]==
Just a theory, but makes sense if you realize the timeline, accepted chronology, is incorrect.
Nails of Crucifixion
https://sacred-texts.com/neu/roma/gft/gft021.htm
Nails could also be a metaphor.
Just a theory.
the Gypsies of Alsace have a legend of their own, opposed to, and probably devised expressly to refute, the gaújo or Gentile version. How there were two Jew brothers, Schmul and Rom-Schmul. The first of them exulted at the Crucifixion; the other would gladly have saved Our Lord from death, and, finding that impossible, did what he could–pilfered one of the four nails. So it came about that Christ's feet must be placed one over the other, and fastened with a single nail. And Schmul remained a Jew, but Rom-Schmul turned Christian, and was the founder of the Rómani race ('Die Zigeuner in Elsass and in Deutschlothringen,' by Dr. G. Mühl, in Der Salon, 1874).
In a letter of 16th December 1880, M. Bataillard wrote: 'An Alsatian Gypsy woman, one of the Reinhart family, has been at me for some time past to procure a remission of sentence for one of her relations who has been in gaol since ad October. "The Manousch" [Gypsies], she urges, "are not bad; they do not murder."
And on my answering with a smile that unluckily they are only too prone to take what doesn't belong to them, and that the judges, knowing this, are extra severe towards them, her answer is, "It is true, it's in the blood. Besides, you surely know, you who know all about the Manousch, they have leave to steal once in seven years."
"How so?"
"It's a story you surely must know. They were just going to crucify Jesus. One of our women passed by, and she whipped up one of the nails they were going to use. She would have liked to steal all four nails, but couldn't.
Anyhow, it was always one, and that's why Jesus was crucified with only three nails, a single one for the two feet. And that's why Jesus
gave the Manousch leave to steal once every seven years."'
1 The Lithuanian Gypsies say, likewise, that 'stealing has been permitted in their favour by the crucified Jesus, because the Gypsies, being present at the Crucifixion, stole one of the four nails. Hence when the hands had been nailed, there was but one nail left for the feet; and therefore God allowed them to steal, and it is not accounted a sin to them.' ('The Lithuanian Gypsies and their Language,' by Mieczyslaw Dowojno-Sylwestrowicz, in Gypsy Lore Journal, i. 1889, p. 253.
So there's definitely a Gypsy. King Jesus connect.
They call themselves "Romani" not "Gypsy"
Roman times. People from Roman times?
Do you suspect the "Y heads" killed King Jesus? Does Y Head cult correlate with Romans?