Engineer suggests biblical Eden may be hidden in lush Ethiopian highlands
As the world spins itself in circles on everything from cancel culture to climate policy, one Texas thinker is planting his flag where few dare—a possible rediscovery of the Garden of Eden.
Mahmood Jawaid, a Texas-based chemical engineer, has put forward a bold theory that challenges conventional theological geography: he claims the real Garden of Eden isn’t in the Middle East but nestled in Bahir Dar, Ethiopia, near the crystal waters of Lake Tana, as Daily Mail reports.
This proposal, floated in 2025, leans on religious texts and observable ecological clues, suggesting that the terrain surrounding the Blue Nile may be far more Eden-esque than the once-assumed sites in modern-day Iraq.
Texas Engineer Challenges Mainstream Assumptions
According to Genesis, Eden had a central river that split into four—Gihon, Tigris, Euphrates, and Pishon. While secular academics often tied the Tigris and Euphrates to Iraq, Jawaid argues that this pattern fits better in Ethiopia, where the Blue Nile emerges from Lake Tana and flows through lush, elevated terrain in Bahir Dar.
His study draws on both the Bible and the Quran, connecting the “land of Cush”—commonly believed to be Ethiopia—with the Gihon River. And suddenly, Scripture sounds a lot more African than Arabian.
“All clues point to Bahir Dar, near Lake Tana, a region of striking beauty, abundant vegetation, and the source of the Blue Nile,” wrote Jawaid. That’s saying more for Ethiopia than any garden landscaping plan courtesy of woke urban planning boards.
Volcanic Highlands Support A Scriptural Clue
Jawaid’s theory doesn’t just rest on maps and climate—it borrows from the poetic. He suggests that the volcanic ridges circling the Lake Tana highlands might be the literal “flaming sword” guarding Eden’s Tree of Life in the Genesis account.
“Considering that the valley is surrounded by historically active volcanoes, it is very much possible that the active volcanoes formed the flaming sword mentioned in the Bible,” he noted. One can almost hear the humming in the air—a natural warning fence, ancient-style.
The fact that Bahir Dar sits at 6,000 feet above sea level and boasts a pleasant climate doesn’t hurt either. It’s the kind of place where, unlike today’s crumbling metropolises, you could picture Adam and Eve lounging amongst birdsong, figs, and fragrant breeze.
Ecological Details Match Age-Old Descriptions
The region is blessed with an arsenal of greenery: bougainvillea, hibiscus, frangipani, mango trees, and acacias—all thriving without the interference of bureaucrats obsessed with banning gas stoves or making everything electric and gray.
According to Jawaid, Bahir Dar’s natural beauty and abundance make it an ideal candidate for the location where life, if not civilization, may have begun. “With its languid air and bounty of flowers and birds, Bahir Dar is about as close as one gets to paradise in Ethiopia,” he writes.
The Blue Nile’s banks are shaded by eucalyptus trees, while songbirds and buffalo weavers chirp over grassy bottoms—a far cry from today’s concrete jungles, where even the birds seem stressed.
Scripture Meets Science In The Rift Valley
Jawaid links his location theory to human origins, noting that East Africa’s Rift Valley—near Ethiopia—has often been called the cradle of human evolution. If true, Adam and Eve could’ve started nearby and been placed in the garden just west of the valley.
The theory claims that after the Fall, the first man and woman may have descended to the Rift Valley, in line with Quranic interpretations that describe their banishment through the word “habata,” meaning “go down.”
It’s a seamless blend of theology and geography—two things that increasingly don’t get invited to the same party anymore unless there’s a protest involved.
Alternative Location Sparks Renewed Debate
This isn’t a peer-reviewed journal paper, and no one's handing Jawaid a Nobel—but it’s one of the more thought-provoking ideas to challenge entrenched academic dogma in recent memory.
And it offers a reminder that not everything has to be guided by groupthink coming out of crowded faculty lounges or the marble halls of self-satisfied NGOs.
After all, sometimes it takes a chemical engineer from Texas—not a tenured sociologist—to ask good questions about the foundations of faith, history, and human origin.





