Despite being one of the greatest tragedies befalling the Muslims, the massacre also served the mission of Zionists in establishing the terrorist State of Israel. They strove hard to drive away the Arabs from their homeland in order to make way clear for the Jewish immigrants from Eastern Europe. Two Zionist terrorist organizations, Irgun and Haganah were responsible for the 1948 carnage, killing hundreds of innocent men, women and children while leaving many orphans.
Terrorism of this nature and degree was unheard of among the Jews living during the Prophet Muhammad's time. What kind of Jews are today's Jews? Why are they much more cruel and violent in treating non-Jews? Is it just to generalize all Jews as enemies of Islam?
The Quran in Chapter of the Cave (Arabic 'Surah Al-Kahf') made mention of the ferocious tribes called Gog and Magog who were locked up behind thick wall made of copper, built by a just Emperor named by God Himself as 'The Two-Horned One', and that one day the wall shall collapse clearing the way for Gog and Magog to terrorize the lands.
Why did the Prophet Muhammad advise the Muslims to read the last 10 verses of Chapter of the Cave, as protection from the Antichrist (Islamic 'Al-Masih Ad-Dajjal')? What possible relationship exists between the Antichrist (whom the Prophet mentioned would be a Jew) and Gog and Magog? In order to answer that, we may have to research further on the World Jewry today.
Jews today constitute two main ethnic groups, first are called the Sephardim, those who came from the Middle East and had been Jews since the time of Moses and the prophets. They are considered the original Biblical Jews, descendants of the Hebrews and also of those Jews in Arabia who had direct encounters with the Prophet Muhammad. Most can speak Arabic with fluency and are well versed with Arab culture, they generally live in peace with their Arab neighbours.
And the second group are called the Ashkenazim, they reside mainly in Eastern Europe as well as various parts of North America and many can now be found in Israel; the Ashkenazic Jews speak Yiddish as their mother tongue.
It is interesting to note that Ashkenazim, being majority of today's Jews, were the main force behind the Zionist movement. Theodor Herl, the Zionist visionary is an Ashkenazic Jew. Those terrorists responsible for the Deir Yassin massacre were all Ashkenazic Jews too.
According to Arthur Koestler, the author of The Thirteenth Tribe, Ashkenazic Jews descended originally from Turkish tribes collectively called The Khazars. Around 740 A.D., their King embraced Judaism as a well planned strategy to maintain Khazaria as a buffer state between the Islamic Abbasid Caliphate and the Christian Byzantium. The conversion was not religious in motive at all.
Over time the Khazar converted Jews began to really consider themselves as biological descendants of Abraham, although in fact they are descendants of Togarmah, descendant of Japheth, Father of the Turks. Abraham was a Semite and direct offspring of Sam, son of Noah. Eventually the Khazars began to establish their Judaic Khazar Empire around the Black Sea.
They were so powerful that even the fierce Vikings around them feared their military might. The vast Jewish empire was destroyed a few centuries later due to military alliance between the Byzantium and the Vikings, and since then the Khazars moved westward towards Europe, and were subsequently known as the Ashkenazim.
Are Ashkenazic Jews of today descendants of the ancient Gog and Magog? Is God through Chapter of the Cave informing Humanity about the coming Zionist Movement, by mentioning the barbarity of Gog and Magog? Is the term 'Anti-semitism' a misnomer? Shall it be replaced with 'Anti-Khazarism'? Are not the Arabs purer semites compared to majority of Jews who are Turkish in origin? These are the questions that need serious research and pondering by us all.
Links:
Gog and Magog and the Kingdom of the Khazars
Benjamin Freedman Speaks
Are Today's Jews True Israelites?
The Dark Side of the Israeli Connection
B'nai B'rith and ADL hypocritical, says critics
Early Russian History
Scythia
The Crusades from the perspective of Byzantium and the Islamic World
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