Posted on 08/21/2006 10:32:24 AM PDT by truthfinder9
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has frustrated Western officials by refusing to reply to their offer of various incentives in exchange for Iran’s discarding its nuclear program until August 22. The Western governments had asked Ahmadinejad to reply by June 29; why would Tehran need two extra months?
Farid Ghadry, the president of the Reform Party of Syria, has offered a provocative explanation for this delay. He asserts that the Supreme National Security Council of Iran chose the August 22 date “for a very precise reason. August 21, 2006 (Rajab 27, 1427) is known in the Islamic calendar as the Night of the Sira’a and Miira’aj, the night Prophet Mohammed (saas) ascended to heaven from the Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem on a Bourak (Half animal, half man), while a great light lit-up the night sky, and visited Heaven and Hell also Beit al-Saada and Beit al-Shaqaa (House of Happiness and House of Misery) and then descended back to Mecca.…”
The Night Journey, or Miraj, is central to Islam’s claim to Jerusalem as an Islamic holy city. According to Islamic tradition, Muhammad was carried on a Buraq, a miraculous horse with a human head, from Mecca to Jerusalem, where he ascended into heaven and met the other prophets. The only thing the Qur’an has to say about it is this: “Glory to (Allah) Who did take His servant for a Journey by night from the Sacred Mosque to the farthest Mosque, whose precincts We did bless, in order that We might show him some of Our Signs: for He is the One Who heareth and seeth (all things)” (17:1). There is no identification of the “farthest Mosque” with any mosque in Jerusalem in this, but the Hadith is very clear on the identification of its location with Jerusalem.
The traditions say that Muhammad and the Buraq, along with the angel Gabriel, went to the Temple Mount, and from there to heaven itself, where Muhammad encountered various prophets. In the sixth heaven was Moses, occasioning a dig at the Jews. “When I left him,” Muhammad says, “he wept. Someone asked him, ‘What makes you weep?’ Moses said, ‘I weep because after me there has been sent (Muhammad as a Prophet) a young man, whose followers will enter Paradise in greater numbers than my followers.’”
Evidently, however, Muhammad’s stories of his journey were not altogether convincing: some Muslims even abandoned Islam. Did he really go anywhere? According to his favorite wife, Aisha, he didn’t: “The apostle’s body remained where it was but God removed his spirit by night.” Nevertheless, the Night Journey has become firmly embedded in the Islamic consciousness, such that Muslims today celebrate it as one of the central events of Muhammad’s life. And now, according to Ghadry, Ahmadinejad is planning an illumination of the night sky over Jerusalem to rival the one that greeted the Prophet of Islam on his journey. What the Iranian President, he says, is “promising the world by August 22 is the light in the sky over the Aqsa Mosque that took place the night before. That is his answer to the package of incentives the international community offered Iran on June 6.”
Certainly a nuclear attack on Jerusalem or even an all-out conventional assault against Israel by Iran would be consistent with Ahmadinejad’s oft-repeated denials of Israel’s right to exist and recent predictions that its demise was at hand. He hinted at the use of nuclear weapons in his phrasing when he said that Israel “pushed the button of its own destruction” by finally retaliating against Hizballah’s relentless rocket barrage from south Lebanon.
“Arrogant powers,” Ahmadinejad said, “have set up a base for themselves to threaten and plunder nations in the region. But today, the occupier regime” -- that is, Israel -- “whose philosophy is based on threats, massacre and invasion, has reached its finishing line.”
Will he attempt to make good on these threats this year on the anniversary of the Miraj, illuminating the night sky over Jerusalem? Will Western powers heed Farid Ghadry’s words and move to stop Iran before it is too late?
Mr. Spencer is director of Jihad Watch and author of "The Politically Incorrect Guide to Islam (and the Crusades)" and the forthcoming "The Truth About Muhammad."
If the Iranians nuke Israel, I wouldn't want to be living in Mecca or Medina (not to mention in Gaza, the West Bank, or the al-Aqsa mosque) for the payback.
( No more Olmert! No more Kadima! No more Oslo!)
Tomorrow is basically today over there (it's August 22 in the Middle East in about two more hours). So if nothing happens by the time we go to bed tonight, it's probably not going to happen.
Iran is getting what it wants Headline News. Nothing here, move on.
Not sure I would even want to be the receptionist down at the local mosque if this nut-case starts this crap.
Perhaps the answer will be a North Korea underground nuke test. Iran may then claim to have a similar nuke from the North Koreans.
An Islamic nuke in the hands of Iran would increase Iran's stock in the world considerably.
Next year! In Jerusalem!...........
When I left him, Muhammad says, he wept. Someone asked him, What makes you weep? Moses said, I weep because after me there has been sent (Muhammad as a Prophet) a young man, whose followers will enter Paradise in greater numbers than my followers.
And my grand father wa sthe king of China, you know, I tell you. (See my tagline)
Doesn't make sense when today in America, land of the free, it's 8-21. In Looney Iran today's date is 8-22, so if the demon leaders of Iran actually believe in this 12th whomever [which there is no such being] will usher in IT...then this attack MUST happen TODAY.
I just checked the Arutz 7, Ha'aretz, JPost, and Yedioth Ahronoth websites, and there doesn't seem to be much concern there. As far as the Israelis are concerned, it seems to be SSDD.
I've read the Book - - Israel doesn't get destroyed, but woe to Damascus - - and Russia...and probably Terhan.....
Good point. LOL
Women and minorities expected to be hardest hit.
On the other hand if Israel is destroyed and nobody saves her, does that mean the Christian religion is wrong? That is why one must not be too hung up on predicting when the end times is. Christ had said we will not know the time nor hour.
___________________________________________________________________________ To: EternalHope
People might want to review one other fact that the nervousness hasn't taken into account:
27 Rajab is NOT celebrated as the Lailat al Miraj. Instead, Shia Islam celebrated the day as Mabath, to commemorate the day they believe Allah appeared before Mohammed in a cave and told him he had been chosen as the prophet to spread the divine message across the world. Mabath is marked by Shiites in Iran and other parts of the Middle East with great ceremony.
Now, this may be the day that Mr. A decides to declare the message he believes he is carrying, about the restored Caliphate, a middle east without Israel, without the influence or presence of the US or European powers.
Nobody's talked much about this, because the experts ran with the other idea, which, perhaps, fits in better with our fears and expectations, but he is a Shiite, pushing a Shiite agenda, and he might be interpreting things to do by lights of his own traditions.
Something to ponder while we wait.
Whatever is coming, is coming. I believe the intelligence community has been on top of this. We (you and I and the folks here, who are in not much position to do anything) have to wait and see what happens.
472 posted on 08/20/2006 6:25:06 PM EDT by Knitting A Conundrum (Act
Justly, Love Mercy, and Walk Humbly With God Micah 6:8)
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So in short Muhammed's ascension or dream of flying (Lailat al Miraj) is celebrated on this date by the Sunnis but not the Shi'ites. Ahmadinejad is a Shi'ite. So on this day his version of Islam would instead celebrate the day Allah appeared before Mohammed in a cave and told him he had been chosen as the prophet, which does not have any connection to Jerusalem.
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