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Norbert G. Pressburg: Good bye Mohammed - Mohammed never existed

7. The Metamorphosis: From Fantasy Jesus to Fantasy Muhammad

7c. Change of meanings in Syro Arameic vocabulary by Muslim lie tradition - the word "mahdi" ("savior") and "muhammad" ("the praised one")

Research: The Christian-Arabic Fantasy vocabulary from the Syro-Aramaic language - The reinterpretations in the Muhammad Fantasy Muslim lie tradition - Reinterpretations: the word "Mahdi" (Fantasy "savior") - Black Mahdis (Fantasy saviors): Sudan and "USA" - Shiite Fantasy Mahdis (Fantasy saviors) in Iran: Fantasy Imam Muhammad al-Mahdi is expected to come, represented by the Ayatollahs - The three Jesus Fantasy Christian mentalities: Rome - Byzantium - and Arab Jesus Fantasy Christianity in Jerusalem - The term "Mohammed" according to Muslim lie tradition: Propagation of a Fantasy Mohammed going to the north - in real: The term Mohammed spread from Persian golf to the Mediterranean

presented by Michael Palomino (2015 / 2019 / translation 2019) - p.120-122

Syro-Aramaic:
-- "muhamad" / Muhammad = "the praised one" / "who has to be praised" - referring to a Fake Fantasy Jesus (!) [chapter 5a - p.87]

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7c. Change of meanings in Syro Arameic vocabulary by Muslim lie tradition - the word "mahdi" ("savior") and "muhammad" ("the praised one")

[Research: The Christian-Arabic vocabulary from the Syro-Aramaic language]
Many of our typical Muslim-looking concepts are simply Arabic, until the end of the first millennium they had nothing specifically Islamic about them:
Allah: this is a very early Aramaic term for [[a Fantasy]] "God" in general and still used today by Arab Christians.
Muhamad: The praised, [[Fantasy]] Christ.
Abd Allah: Servus [[Fantasy]] Dei, servant of [[a Fantasy]] God.
Rasul: [[Fantasy]] Prophet.
Mahdi: [[Fantasy]] Messiah.
Bismillah: in the name of [[Fantasy]] God.
Bismillah rahman rahim: in the name of the gracious and merciful [[Fantasy]] God. ("In nomine dominis [[fantasiae]] miseriscordis"), a common Christian-Latin formula.
La illah ilallah: There is no [[Fantasy]] god but [[Fantasy]] God alone. This is the Arabic translation of the Latin forms "Non deus [[fantasiae]] nisi deus [[fantasiae]] solus" [p.120].
Both statements can be found on Arab coins, which were defined as Islamic without any investigation.

[The reinterpretations by the Muslim lie tradition]
These formulas and many others are originally terms of Arab [[Fantasy]] Christianity. One has to separate oneself from the idea that the emergence of one of these words necessarily has something to do with the religion of [[Fantasy]] Islam or even its existence. Only later did these concepts acquire a specific [[Fantasy]] Islamic affiliation, often in a strangely undifferentiated form, as the example of the "mahdi" shows.

[Reinterpretations: the word "Mahdi" ("Savior")]
The "Mahdi," the savior, is then, as today, [[Fantasy]] Jesus for the Arab [[Fantasy]] Christians. In the [[Fantasy]] Quran, the "Mahdi" is also "Isa bin Maryam" [[Fantasy Jesus]]. Although with [[Fantasy]]Muhammad the chain of [[Fantasy]] prophets is supposed to have been completed, the mainstream of Sunni Islam expects yet another arrival of a [[Fantasy]] Messiah, without, however, specifying it and without defining its relation to the final [[Fantasy]] Prophet Muhammad.

[Black Mahdis (Fantasy Saviors): Sudan and "USA"]
There were already numerous Mahdi [[Fantasy Savior]], but never beyond local meaning, several dozen in Africa alone. The most famous was Muhamad Ahmad, who established a [[Fantasy]] theocracy in Sudan, which was smashed in 1898 by the [[Jesus Fantasy]] British [[resp. by the Committee of the 300 drug dealers of the Queen of England]] [49].

     [49] This episode is told by the movie "Khartoum", 1966

The last known Sunni Mahdi [[Fantasy Savior]] was in 1930 Master Wallace Fard Muhammad, founder of the "Black Muslims" in the [[Jesus Fantasy]] United States.

[Shiite Mahdis (Fantasy Saviors) in Iran: Imam Muhammad al-Mahdi is expected to come, represented by the Ayatollahs]
Among the [[Fantasy]] Shiites (the "Twelver Shiites" [[again code 12 - the perfect dozen]]), the [[Fantasy]] expected Mahdi is connected with a special person: to the hidden twelfth Imam Muhammad al-Mahdi [[again code 12]], according to the constitution of Iran from 1979 the official head of state, and until his arrival he will be represented by the Ayatollahs.

Muhammad al-Mahdi - or maybe the "praised [[Fantasy]] Messiah"? According to the Iranian-Shiite [[Fantasy]] view, the [[Fantasy]] Mahdi could only appear in the midst of chaos. It may therefore be a well-done act to create chaos to accelerate the arrival of the [[Fantasy]] Messiah. A missile, which was presented in August 2010, received according to this kind of thinking [[Fantasy]] name "Mahdi". President Ahmadinejad repeatedly prophesied the early appearance of [[a Fantasy]] Jesus and (!) of the [p.121] [[Fantasy]] Mahdi Muhamad. 7 years (again the prime number) after the appearance of the two would be the Last [[Fantasy]] Judgment [50].

    [50] See the Iranian website in preparation for the apparition of the [[Fantasy]] Mahdi: www.mahdaviat-conference.com [[همايش بين المللی دکترين مهدويت]]

[The three Fantasy Christian mentalities: Rome - Byzantium - and the Arab Fantasy Christianity in Jerusalem]
While [[Fantasy prophet]] Paul interpreted his interpretation of [[Fantasy]] Christianity from the Orient and romanized it, while Byzantium established [[Fantasy]] orthodoxy, Abd al-Malik created an independent Arab [[Fantasy]] church. Of course, he was a [[Fantasy]] Christian, as were all the [[Fantasy]] Marwanids (vulgo "Omayads") and the first of the subsequent "Abbasids". The "muhamad" [["the praised one" - namely a Fantasy Jesus]] was the [[Fantasy]] saint of the house, and the Dome of the Rock was his "haram".


[The term "Muhammad" according to Muslim lie tradition: Propagation of a Fantasy Muhammad to the north - real: The Muhammad term spread from the Persian golf to the Mediterranean]
In the Islamic-historicizing [[Fantasy]] literature of the ninth century, [[Fantasy]] al-Walid had conquered Mesopotamia from Mecca and invaded Syria and Palestine in the footsteps of [[Fantasy]] Abraham, beating the legendary [[Fantasy]] battle of Yarmouk. The Islamic tradition assumes an expansion of the [[Fantasy]] Muhamad from the south to the north, but in reality, the "muhamad" [[the phrase of the praised after the deportation of [[Fantasy]] Christians to today's Iran and after the victory of Byzantium against Persia in 622]] was moving from the East to the West. With him, many [[Fantasy]] Christian Arabs were moving, who had once been deported or had to leave their country under the pressure of the Byzantine imperial [[Fantasy]] church, returned to their ancestral homeland: this is a "hijra", well conceivable as the historical model for the legendary "hijra" of the [[Fantasy]] Prophet from Mecca to Medina.

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