WWW,
2006 (Archived) - Do you remember the staged
"people's uprising" in Iraq (only
a few dozen people in reality)where the
americans teared down Saddam's statue? Well
the neo-BABYLONIANS put a new statue at the
location. This one is filled with the
occultic symbolism that rooted in the bloody
and godless "culture" of Sumer.
You'll see the sun, this represents satan in
occultic symbology. You'll see the moon, the
symbol of Semirames. She was Nimrod's wife
and Nimrod founded babylon. Semirames is is
fact the she-gods such as Ishtar and Diana.
When you read the article, you will see I'm
not joking. They say that this statue indeed
resembles ancient Sumeria, although the say
the moon is symbol for Islam the roots of
the moon can be traced back to Sumer too.
When you read the article, you will read
that they call Sumerian civilizxation
"peacefull"
Yeah, they were peacefull. They put children
in the fire, they were ruled by the bloody
and violent nephilim/annunaki who were a
cross-breed between fallen angels and
humans. Oh how lovely they were.... NOT!
But it shows the connection that the
globalist forces have with the ancient
globalist forces. It's the same spirit, it's
the same bloodline, and JAH has said that
one day...
BABYLON WILL FALL!
New statue replaces Saddam A group of Iraqi
artists has unveiled a sculpture to replace
the statue of Saddam Hussein which was torn
down by US troops and Iraqis on the day the
Iraqi president lost control of Baghdad.
The new sculpture is seven metres (23
feet) high and shows a symbolic Iraqi family
holding aloft a crescent moon and a sun.
The sculpture was erected in the Fardus
square by a group called the Najin - the
survivors, alluding to the fact that they
evaded the authorities during Saddam
Hussein's rule.
The square is opposite the Palestine
Hotel, which was the base for international
media during the Iraq war.
One of the group told Kurdish TV that the
sculpture represents Iraqi society, with the
crescent moon representing Islam and the sun
representing the Sumerian civilization in
Iraq.
"These two civilizations have called
for love, peace and freedom," he said.
The group said the sculpture was only one
third of the work they had planned for the
Fardus square and the other two thirds would
cover the whole area. They added that
financial problems had delayed its
completion.
The sculptor of the piece, Basim Hamad,
was optimistic about the future for the
Iraqi people after the war.
"What we see today in our country
could be the first signs of freedom,"
he said. "What remains is a history
that we will make together with the Najin
group at its heart."
BBC Monitoring , based in Caversham in
southern England, selects and translates
information from radio, television, press,
news agencies and the Internet from 150
countries in more than 70 languages.
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