Wednesday, January 15, 2020

The true history of Israel and Islam in the Middle East.

The true history of Israel and Islam in the Middle East.

Jewish presents in the Middle East has ALWAYS been Israeli land long before Islam even existed.

The Koran was written only in the 8th Century AD and Mohammed was born in the 6th Century (570 AD)

Islam is relatively new, it never existed until then, therefore they have no claim over Israel or Jerusalem.

The Jewish Torah, that includes the old testament of the Bible, was written 3000 years before Mohammed even came to this world in the 6th Century AD.

The fact is, Jerusalem has ALWAYS  been the capital of Israel going back over 4000 years.

Islam was a new violent cult that over ran the middle East with forced conversions that spread to parts of Europe and Asia, essentially India devastating and dividing India's Vedic culture, even the word "Hindu" is found nowhere in Vedic texts, it comes from invading Muslims.

And in 1947 the new now state of Israel took back what has ALWAYS been there land previously called Palestine.

Israel therefore need to also fully take back the Temple Mount and demolish what Islam structures that are there today.

The fact is, Muslims invaders from Saudi Arabia and forcefully built their Islamic structure over the sacred Jewish Temple Mount in the 8th Century.

Muslims have no claim over Israel and its capital Jerusalem. The original owners are the Jews by thousands of years.

Islam is only a very recent belief system only 1,300 years old.

Islam started in Mecca with the birth of Mohammad in 570 AD in what is today known as Saudia Arabia.

Therefore those history books who say Islam originated from Persia (Iran) are wrong, Islam originated from Saudi Arabia

The Koran was written by Mohammed between 610 AD and 632 AD he believed was instructions given by the Arch Angel Gabriel.

All Islam spread from Mecca, however, at first the people of Mecca (Meccans) rejected and fought Mohammed and his followers.

In 622 AD, Muhammad and his few hundred followers left Mecca and traveled to Yathrib (today is Medina Saudi Arabia), the oasis town where his father was buried.

The leaders there were suffering through a vicious civil war, and they had invited this man well known for his wisdom to act as their mediator.

Yathrib soon became known as Medina, the City of the Prophet.

Muhammad remained here for the next six years, building the first Muslim community and gradually gathering more and more people to his side. 

The Meccans (those who lived in Mecca Saudi Arabia) did not take Muhammad's new success lightly. Early skirmishes led to three major battles in the next three years.

Of these the Muslims won the first (the Battle of Badr, March, 624 AD), lost the second (the Battle of Uhud, March, 625 AD), and outlasted the third, (The Battle of the Trench and the Siege of Medina, April, 627 AD).

In March, 628 AD, a treaty was signed between the two sides, which recognized the Muslims as a new force in Arabia and gave them freedom to move unmolested throughout Arabia.

Meccan allies breached the treaty a year later. 

The Conquest of Mecca

By now, the balance of power had shifted radically away from once-powerful Mecca, toward Muhammad and the Muslims.

In January, 630 AD, they marched on Mecca and were joined by tribe after tribe along the way. They entered Mecca without bloodshed and the Meccans, seeing the tide had turned, joined them. 

Muhammad's Final Years

Muhammad returned to live in Medina. In the next three years, he consolidated most of the Arabian Peninsula under Islam.

In March, 632 AD, he returned to Mecca one last time to perform a pilgrimage, and tens of thousands of Muslims joined him.

After the pilgrimage, he returned to Medina. Three months later on June 8, 632 AD he died there, after a brief illness.

He is buried in the mosque in Medina. Within a hundred years Muhammad's teaching and way of life had spread from the remote corners of Arabia as far east as Indo-China and as far west as Morocco, France and Spain. 


No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.