Torrential Rain and High Winds Strike Muhammad's Medina Mosque

2 months ago
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⚡ Heavy rain and flooding hit Saudi Arabia. Cars swept away in Arab-Muslim- occupied Jewish City of Yathrib / Medina amid torrential downpours.

Saudi Arabia has been hit by heavy rain and flash flooding along much of its Red Sea coast.

Images on social media showed cars stranded in floodwaters and others swept away by the torrential rains in Medina/ Madinah.

Two bodies were recovered from a wadi in Dhahab in Al Lith on the Red Sea coast following the extreme weather, according to local news site Okaz, which quoted the country's civil defence.

Saudi Arabia's National Centre of Meteorology on Friday issued a red alert for rainfall in several regions in the west and south-west of country, lasting until 11pm local time.

Earlier in the day, meteorologists warned that areas could be hit by strong winds, lack of visibility, hail and thunderstorms.

Earlier in the day, Saudi authorities said they had mobilised thousands of workers and staff to help manage rainfall at the Grand Mosque and the Prophet's Mosque in Mecca/ Makkah.

⚡ Archangel Uriel: Lightening Strikes Mecca Clock Tower Satan
https://wp.me/piMJL-dv2
https://rumble.com/v5crc4b-archangel-uriel-lightening-strikes-mecca-clock-tower-satan.html

🔥 The 7th-Century Genocide of Arabian Jews, and Its Legacy: Muhammad the Genocider

Three years ago, a crowd of protestors gathered in front of the Amsterdam Holocaust memorial, chanting an Arabic refrain, now familiar from such gatherings, that translates as “Khaybar, Khaybar, O Jews. The army of Mohammad is coming.” The reference is to a location in what is now Saudi Arabia, and to an oft-forgotten piece of Middle Eastern Jewish history.

The genocide begins in 622 AD, when the founder of Islam moved from Mecca to the city of Medina, which at the time was home to three large Jewish tribes.

This was Mohammad’s first regular contact with a full-scale Jewish community. Jews had a long history in the Arabian Peninsula, probably going back to [the 1st century CE]. There is considerable archaeological evidence for Jewish communities in southern Arabia, much of it in the form of cemetery inscriptions, going back as far as the 4th century. By the 7th century, some Jewish tribes had migrated north and establish themselves in agriculture—especially the cultivation of date palms—at Medina. In fact Jews were the majority of the population of this town.

Local Arab tribes had long been locked in a struggle for domination of the town, and they hoped that Mohammad would bring peace. While these tribes swore allegiance to Mohammad and accepted the new religion of Islam, they imposed a simple condition: that their Jewish neighbors who clung strongly to their faith would be protected. Little did the Arabs of Medina know that Mohammad would soon drive out two of the Jewish tribes and slaughter the men of the third, selling the women and children into slavery.

The turning point came after one of those tribes, the Banu Nadir, chose to sit out a battle rather than fight alongside the prophet—because they didn’t want to fight on Shabbat. When he was defeated, he took out his rage on these Jews:
[Mohammad] turned against the Nadir, besieged them, and ordered them to leave Medina. They surrendered [and] departed to the northeast, to the Jewish oasis of Khaybar, proudly marching through the streets of Medina in a caravan reported to have consisted of 600 camels, with music and fancy clothing. Two years later, the men of this Jewish tribe would be killed when Mohammad attacked Khaybar.

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