zumaale wrote:Bilis have you even read Futhul Habash?
The passage you just quoted as evidence is from Laitin and Samatar's book via Wikipedia and is not the complete list of clans that took part in the Futhul Habash wars.
Furthermore, in Futhul Habash, the Harti are mentioned as being from Mait in North Eastern Somalia. Clans from a wide geographic area were drawn to the war against the Abyssinians and not necessarily from the Northwestern region.
Countless of clans are mentioned in Futhul Habash such as the Gurgura (Dir) and as a matter of fact the Gurgura provided more troops than the Mareexan or Harti for instance.
Sure, I've read the Futuh. I actually quoted directly from it a little earlier with regard to the Harti. I'm well aware that other clans participated. I'm also familiar with their functions in the Futuh, their actual numbers, and their alternate names. For instance, the Madhiban are the "El Maya".
Mait is in Sanaag, so it's more in the generic north than either the northeast or northwest.
zumaale wrote:It is an established fact among Somalis that Northern Somalia has always been a homeland for Dir clans
The north
western area, yes. Certainly not the northeast.
zumaale wrote:the fact that T haplogroup is found among them at high percentages is possibly a reflection of their common paternal ancestry. Take me for example, my clan ancestor is buried in Northern Somalia and his descendants gradually moved South. Now can it be a coincidence that Surres from Southern Somalia who have done a y-dna ancestry test belong to haplogroup T like the majority of their Northern clan kin who have taken the test?
I don't dispute that.
zumaale wrote:Similarly, it is not a coincidence that Daroods that have been tested are predominately haplogroup E-V32. The six (Somalia) individuals tested by Trombetta are from Puntland and they all belong to E-V32.
Where in the study does it indicate that these individuals are from Puntland? Please link to it.
zumaale wrote:Even the 40 plus people that were tested in Jijiga by Plaster et al were overwhelmingly E1b1b1. Jijiga is a mainly Darood city with a Dir minority. Whereas, 80 percent or so of the 18 Somalis tested in Dire Dawa were haplogroup T. Moreover, 75 percent of the the Somalis tested in Djibouti ny Trombetta did not belong to E1b1b and could more than likely belong to haplogroup T. I am not saying we have conclusive proof yet as a subclan by subclan test of all Somalis should be conducted. Nonetheless, one cannot deny that there is a noticeable trend in the results coming out so far, be it on an individual basis or in an academic study.
If you can understand that the lack of E1b1b found among Somalis in Djibouti by Trombetta implies that the majority instead belonged to haplogroup T, why is it difficult for you to accept that the lack of E1b1b found among Somalis in Ethiopia (not just Jijiga) by the same scientists likewise implies that the remainder belonged haplogroup T?