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Sunday, January 25, 2009

Who Is Allah?

Have you wondered why Muslim terrorists seem to be a bunch of luna-tics? Perhaps this post from Pat Dollard explains it fully.

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Dr Sami Alrabaa said: “If you say that Islam is a violent faith, you are accused of being anti-Islam and you are propagating Islamophobia.

There are more than one billion Muslims around the world, and I’m one of them. We are told that the Koran is the “word of God.” When you read the Koran, however – which over 90% of all Muslims have never read, according to a survey by Bielefeld University in Germany, and if they ever do, either they do not understand its archaic language or they do not ponder on what it says – you find out that it is full of passages that incite to hatred, killing, and discriminate against women. “ All of these passages are supposedly revelations to Mohammed by Allah.

If you do a Google search on the word “Allah”, you will find that in Western dictionaries, the word means “God”. But is Allah really God or something else? Do Christians and Muslims worship the same God as the History Channel would have us think? Or is Allah something other than God?

A little research reveals that Allah is not God. In fact he never existed at all; except in the minds of the Ishmaelite tribes that lived in Arabia at the time of Mohammed.

As we have discussed repeatedly, the pre-Muslim world worshipped 360 different gods one of which was Allah. Allah was the favorite god of the Quraysh tribe into which Muhammad was born. The literal Arabic name of Muhammad’s father was Abd-Allah. His uncle’s name was Obied-Allah. These names reveal the personal devotion that Muhammad’s pagan family had to the worship of Allah, the moon god.

The name Allah was well-known in the timeframe that Muslims call Jahilliya or pre-Islamic Arabia. Both the male and feminine form “Allat” are found in Arabic inscriptions prior to Islam.

In pre-Islamic times Allah-worship, as well as the worship of Ba-al, were both astral religions in that they involved the worship of the sun, the moon, and the stars

The Arabians reversed the sex of their sun and moon gods from the way Egyptians had worshipped them. The sun god was viewed as a female goddess and the moon as the male god. The moon god was called by various names, one of which was Allah. Allah, the moon god, was married to the sun goddess. Together they produced three goddesses who were called “the daughters of Allah.” These three goddesses were called Al-Lat, Al-Uzza, and Manat.

Interesting that the Qu’ran is correct when it says that Allah had no son. (Sura 19 Aya 88-92). That’s because Allah had three daughters!!!!!

“The daughters of Allah, along with Allah and the sun goddess were viewed as “high” gods. That is, they were viewed as being at the top of the pantheon of Arabian deities.“

The origin of the word Allah comes from the compound Arabic word al-ilah. Al is the definite article “the” and ilah is an Arabic word for “god.”

“The word “Ilah . . . appears in pre-Islamic poetry . . . By frequency of usage, al-ilah was contracted to Allah, frequently attested to in pre-Islamic poetry.”

However, Allah is neither a Hebrew or Greek word for God; as found in the Bible. “Allah” is a pre-Islamic name . . . corresponding to the Babylonian’ Bel’.

“The origin of this deity goes back to pre-Muslim times. Allah is not a common name meaning “God” (or a “god”), and the Muslim must use another word or form if he wishes to indicate any other than his own peculiar deity”

There is no reason, therefore, to accept the idea, that the concept, or worship of, Allah somehow passed to the Muslims from the Christians and Jews. Nor should anyone accept that Allah is anything but a pagan non-entity whose worship is symbolized by the crescent moon. (which is the symbol of moon-god worship).

Semper Fi Bros

Dan (The Infidel)

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