How the Arab Conquests/Invasions transformed North Africa

DoubleClutch

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dryness is a plague :wow:
giphy.gif


Come on breh :banderas:

Now you gotta explain this gif and how you even found it :lolbron:

I can’t even focus on anything you said above it :hubie:


Dryness is a plague? :jbhmm:
 
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MMS

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Come on breh :banderas:

Now you gotta explain this gif and how you even found it :lolbron:

I can’t even focus on anything you said above it :hubie:


Dryness is a plague? :jbhmm:
@Koichos did describe iron as drought in the other thread

i think the allegory im making is the notion of "gathering" together could be likened to gravity or other attractive forces, but the key phrase is that it says it happens under the heavens (sky)

by default that means it doesnt happen in the sky and above :jbhmm:
 

DoubleClutch

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@Koichos did describe iron as drought in the other thread

i think the allegory im making is the notion of "gathering" together could be likened to gravity or other attractive forces, but the key phrase is that it says it happens under the heavens (sky)

by default that means it doesnt happen in the sky and above :jbhmm:

So that’s why ancient cultures worship the “rain god” :patrice:

Or could it be a fertility “drought” for the pagans :patrice:



Back to topic :hubie:

Arab today is seen today as a big “civilization” or a great empire united by language. The question is what was it thought of before it became both these things?

Semitic Mythology, legends and customs :youngsabo:
 
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theworldismine13

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The invasion never stopped, it's been going in Sudan for the past 100 years, and it's really what the wars in Sudan are about Arabized Islamic negroes have been trying to subjugate the pure negroes of darfur, blue Nile and South Sudan

It's kinda stupid how so many black people will crash out over Palestine but say nothing about Sudan
 

MMS

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So that’s why ancient cultures worship the “rain god” :patrice:

Or could it be a fertility “drought” for the pagans :patrice:



Back to topic :hubie:

Arab today is seen today as a big “civilization” or a great empire united by language. The question is what was it thought of before it became both these things?

Semitic Mythology, legends and customs :youngsabo:

if you first think about procreation in a literal sense then place a spiritual lense you might come to the conclusions youre looking for

IE look at greece, the islands of lesbos and mares of diomedes etc its ultimately the final form "lack" of fertility

consider what women produce and what men produce then consider them the ends of reality (or beginnings depending on how you want to see it) the interaction between would be how the priests saw the outside world as a function of sexuality

this is actually related to the thread as Africa's Islam debate ultimately comes from not understanding djinn logic over vast distances (no pun intended)


in the illusion thread i made the post about Mansa Musa bringing "hoards" of gold to the arabs, well what if that gold ended up becoming ghengis khan and the mongol "hordes". It seems farfetched but its worth considering
 

JadeB

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Because Yahweh made specific promises to his nation. If you believe in the Bible, this figures significantly in the end-times.

It matters to those who believe. :yeshrug:
Y'all still take the Bible and Quran seriously? :mjlol:
 

DoubleClutch

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if you first think about procreation in a literal sense then place a spiritual lense you might come to the conclusions youre looking for

IE look at greece, the islands of lesbos and mares of diomedes etc its ultimately the final form "lack" of fertility

consider what women produce and what men produce then consider them the ends of reality (or beginnings depending on how you want to see it) the interaction between would be how the priests saw the outside world as a function of sexuality

this is actually related to the thread as Africa's Islam debate ultimately comes from not understanding djinn logic over vast distances (no pun intended)


in the illusion thread i made the post about Mansa Musa bringing "hoards" of gold to the arabs, well what if that gold ended up becoming ghengis khan and the mongol "hordes". It seems farfetched but its worth considering


Djinn logic? :patrice:

You gotta explain what that is and how it relates?
 
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Tair

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I don’t think anyone in the Bible is described as literally “white” at all, unless it’s describing some type of skin disease

In contrast, according to descriptions in the Quran, Muhammad is the epitome of whiteness

But that’s another topic for a different day….. let’s not get derailed :whoa:

This thread is slowly becoming about race, when it’s about colonization and culture:snoop:

Moses married a Cushyte woman. That's how she is described.

That doesn't mean Moses wouldn't be described as Black either. It's like saying, "Adedayo (Yoruba) married an Igbo woman."

Is Adedayo not Black?

And, to add further, Miriam was given leprosy - turning her skin white, for not being accepting of Moses' wife.

:dead:
 

Koichos

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@Koichos did describe iron as drought in the other thread
In the context of the tοchaħot, yes. But it is not necessarily a negative. On the contrary; s'gulοt (a talisman of sorts in the Hebrew esoteric tradition) are often made from iron, because the initial letters of the names of Ya'aḳοv’s Four Matriarchs (בִִּלְְהָָָה Bilhah, רָָָחֵֵל Raħel; זִִלְְפָָָּה Zilpah, לֵֵאָָָה Le'ah) form the word בַַּרְְזֶֶֶל barzel ('iron'), representing the protective, divine feminine: sh'chinah. It is no surprise, then, that the present war is called חַרְבוֹת בַַּרְְזֶֶֶל ħarvοt barzel ('Swords of Iron').
 

MMS

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Djinn logic? :patrice:

You gotta explain what that is and how it relates?
honestly i dont think i can really explain it, its unusual even for me to explain.

but it involves taking literalism to a different level.
In the context of the tοchaħot, yes. But it is not necessarily a negative. On the contrary; s'gulοt (a talisman of sorts in the Hebrew esoteric tradition) are often made from iron, because the initial letters of the names of Ya'aḳοv’s Four Matriarchs (בִִּלְְהָָָה Bilhah, רָָָחֵֵל Raħel; זִִלְְפָָָּה Zilpah, לֵֵאָָָה Le'ah) form the word בַַּרְְזֶֶֶל barzel ('iron'), representing the protective, divine feminine: sh'chinah. It is no surprise, then, that the present war is called חַרְבוֹת בַַּרְְזֶֶֶל ħarvοt barzel ('Swords of Iron').
:ohhh: "thou shalt break them with a rod of iron"

and the Lord said to Moses to catch it by the tail, it became a staff again

and Jacob did say he crossed the Jordan with a staff :jbhmm: the iron golem
 

Koichos

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K'lal Yisraʾel
:ohhh: "thou shalt break them with a rod of iron"
Rash"i in his second note there explains בְְּשֵֵֽׁבֶֶֶט בַַּרְְזֶֶֶל b'sheveṭ barzel ('with an iron rod') as referring to הַַחֶֶֽרֶֶב haħerev ('the sword')!

and the Lord said to Moses to catch it by the tail, it became a staff again

and Jacob did say he crossed the Jordan with a staff :jbhmm: the iron golem
There is a fascinating remez ('hint') regarding Iron, Matriarchs, Patriarchs and Erretz Yisra'el in the last book of Tοrah, brought down by the 19th-century Turkish Rav, Ħayyim Palaji (somewhere in his work entitled ‘Artzot Haħayyim’, in the name of his son Rav Yitzhaḳ Palaji). God willing, I will find it before Yom Kippur.
 
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