اللات

  • HOW THE VATICAN CREATED ISLAM

    AUTHOR: // CATEGORY: Al-Islam, Al-Uzza, Allah, Allat, Blog, Makkah, Manat, Pre-Islam, Religion, الإسلام, العزى, اللات, الله, شمس, مناة‎

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    Alberto Rivera

    How the Vatican created Islam. The astonishing story from an ex-Jesuit priest, Alberto Rivera, which was told to him by Cardinal Bea while he was at the Vatican.

    From “The Prophet”:

    The Prophet, Muhammad

    This information came from Alberto Rivera, former Jesuit priest after his conversion to Protestant Christianity. It is excerpted from “The Prophet,” published by Chick Publications, PO Box 662, Chino CA 91708.

    Since its publication, after several unsuccessful attempts on his life, he died suddenly from food poisoning.

    His testimony should not be silenced. Dr. Rivera speaks to us still…

    “What I’m going to tell you is what I learned in secret briefings in the Vatican when I was a Jesuit priest, under oath and induction.

    “A Jesuit cardinal named Augustine Bea showed us how desperately the Roman Catholics wanted Jerusalem at the end of the third century.

    “Because of its religious history and its strategic location, the Holy City was considered a priceless treasure. A scheme had to be developed to make Jerusalem a Roman Catholic city.

    “The great untapped source of manpower that could do this job was the children of Ishmael. The poor Arabs fell victim to one of the most clever plans ever devised by the powers of darkness.

    “Early Christians went everywhere with the gospel setting up small churches, but they met heavy opposition. Both the Jews and the Roman government persecuted the believers in Christ to stop their spread. But the Jews rebelled against Rome, and in 70 AD, Roman armies under General Titus smashed Jerusalem and destroyed the great Jewish temple which was the heart of Jewish worship…in fulfillment of Christ’s prophecy in Matthew 24:2.

    “On this holy placed today where the temple once stood, the Dome of the Rock Mosque stands as Islam’s second most holy place. Continue reading

  • ISLAM AND GODDESS WORSHIP

    AUTHOR: // CATEGORY: Al-Islam, Al-Uzza, Allah, Allat, Blog, Makkah, Manat, Pre-Islam, Religion, الإسلام, العزى, اللات, الله, شمس, مناة‎

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    Goddess’ Worship and Wicca

    Islam is the largest and fastest growing cult or religion in the world. The most holy site of Islam is the black meteorite in Kaaba, Mecca. This stone is worshipped by veneration, as was practised before the advent of Islam.

    The sign of Islam is the Crescent, sometimes along with a star, just as was the Babylonian Goddess worship. The most holy object in the Kaaba is the black meteorite stone, once the throne of Isis, now connected with Allah. Another goddess objects in the Kaaba are the Crescents and the towers. Towers have been one of the main symbols of Babylonian paganism since the time of Nimrod. His followers decided to build their own tower, their own name.

    Later, Nimrod‘s wife, Semiramis, erected a 130 feet tower in Babylon. Babylonian pagans prostrated themselves before this icon, even mentioned in the third chapter of the Book of Daniel. Moses Maimonides, the mediveal Jewish philosopher, had read deeply into the learning of the Babylonians.

    He described the myth of Tammuz’ death, quoted by Hislop in The Two Babylons, p. 62, as follows:

    When the false prophet named Thammuz preached to a certain king that he should worship the seven stars and the twelve signs of the Zodiac, that king ordered him to be put to a terrible death. On the night of his death all the images assembled from the ends of the earth into the temple of Babylon, to the great golden image of the Sun, which was suspended between heaven and earth. That image prostrated itself in the midst of the temple, and so did all the images around it, while it related to them all that had happened to Thammuz. The images wept and lamented all the night long, and then in the morning they flew away, each to his own temple again, to the ends of the earth.

    Those familiar with the Biblical story of Daniel’s friends should recognize this. The whole world bowed down in worship for the king’s pagan gold image. The astonishing issue is, however, that Muslims still do. The prostrate themselves in the direction (qibla) of the former Goddess symbols in Mecca, now Allah‘s sanctuary. From the beginning, towers or obelisks were symbols of pagan worship as conducted in Babylon and Egypt, and later all around the world. The obelisk was originally a symbol of Baal (Nimrod) and sexual rituals in the context of sun-worship.

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  • ATLANTIS CONSPIRACY – THE MANIPULATED ARAB TRIPLE GODDESS

    AUTHOR: // CATEGORY: Al-Uzza, Allah, Allat, Arabic, Blog, Makkah, Manat, Pre-Islam, اللات

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    Arab triple Goddess
    It is common knowledge that these are the triple Goddess of Arabia which existed before the advent of Islam which was introduced by prophet Mohammed.

    They were the Goddesses of the lands from Nabatean Petra ( North) Arabia Felix (South), Saba ( Biblical Sheba), Iran, Palmyra. These three Goddesses were the main Goddesses of Mecca, far before the advent of the Mohammed.

    1) Al-Uzza – Mighty one, Goddess of the morning star ( Warrior Goddess )

    2) Al-Lat – Mother Goddess of prosperity who oversees the fertility of the land and the people. ( the great mother) Her Symbol is the Sun that gives life to the lands.

    3) Menat – Crone-goddess of Fate or Time and her Symbol is the moon, hence she is a Moon Goddess.

    aluzza – the warrior goddess

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  • THE YONI OF THE ARABIAN GODDESS

    AUTHOR: // CATEGORY: Al-Uzza, Allat, Arabic, Manat, Pre-Islam, Religion, اللات

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    The Islamic Holy of Holies
    an except from the book The Yoni: Sacred Symbol of the Female Creative Power


    The Goddesses Al’Uzza, Al’Lat, & Menat formed a triad on pre-Islamic Arabia”In his work The Apology, the Arabian philosopher and alchemist al-Kindi (810-872) let the world of the ninth century know that it was the moon goddess Al’Uzza who was enshrined in the Kaaba, and it was her residence that made this site a sacred place.  It may be for this candidness as well as other writings that al-Kindi, once first among the Islamic philosophers, lost all influence on Muslim thinkers only a century after his death.  This is of great interest considering that the Kaaba at Mecca is the holy of holies of Islam, a truly monotheistic religion not especially friendly toward women and one that is centered on the male Allah as the Supreme Being, certainly not on a woman or a goddess.  However, the moon goddess identified by al-Kindi is now known to be one aspect of the Triple Goddess known as Al’Lat*, the Great Goddess of the nomadic peoples of Arabia.  In pre-Islamic times, it was she who was worshiped at the Kaaba.  Here at her sacred place, a great stone in the shape of her Yoni, Al’Lat was served by seven priestesses, and her worshipers-in total nudity-circumambulated the sacred black stone seven times, once for each of the seven ancient planets.**
    The Goddess’s Yoni or the hand of Allah?

    “As with all triple goddesses, a religious concept found worldwide, Al’Lat has three manifestations, each one connected to a phase of the moon and simultaneously to a phase in a woman’s life.  The waxing, crescent moon is represented by the maiden Q’re or Qure, the young girl and virgin (the Greek Kore); Al’Uzza (A: “the strong one”) is the full moon or mother aspect (the mature woman corresponding to the Greek Demeter); and Al’Menat is the waning moon or the crone, a wise old woman concerned with fate and skilled in prophecy and divination.

    “The Goddess’s sacred place, with its life-giving well next to it, attracted pilgrims and worshipers from all over the Arabic peninsula and its neighboring regions.  Here, with the sacred black stone as a symbol of her Yone and in an oasis of life-giving waters, the Goddess resided in her aspect of Earth Mother, creatrix of life and helper of women in childbirth.  To this image and gocus of energies people came to pray, to ask for offspring and protection, and to celebrate life.  It was to this place that the great patriarch Abraham (c.  1900 B.C.E.) came with his wife, Sarah, who was barren for many years.  He knowingly chose this place of the Goddess and her fertile powers as the place where he would like with Hagar, the young and beautiful Egyptian slave who was to bear his first son.  For millennia the Kaaba was a place of power where men and women worshiped the Goddess in the form of her Yoni. Continue reading

  • WHO IS ALLAT? – AND WHAT IS ARAB PANTHEON?

    AUTHOR: // CATEGORY: Allat, Blog, Religion, اللات

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    Allat اللات‎ was a Pre-Islamic Arabian goddess who was one of the three chief goddesses of Mecca. She is mentioned in the Qur’an (Sura 53:19), which indicates that pre-Islamic Arabs considered her as one of the daughters of Allah and Shams along with Manat and Al-Uzza.

    The shrine and temple dedicated to al-Lat in Taif was demolished by Abu Sufyan ibn Harb, on the orders of Muhammad, during the Expedition of Abu Sufyan ibn Harb, in the same year as the Battle of Tabuk (which occurred in October 630 AD). The destruction of the idol was a demand by Muhammad before any reconciliation could take place with the citizens of Taif who were under constant attack.

    According to midrashic literature, Adam’s first wife was not Eve but a woman named Lilith, who was created in the first Genesis account. Only when Lilith rebelled and abandoned Adam did God create Eve, in the second account, as a replacement.

    Lilith was the descendant of the Sumerian goddess, Ninlil.  You can see the root name “LIL” in both names. Lilith is said by Cabbalist pagan occultic Jews to be the wife of Satan.  According to these Cabbalist blsphemers, Elohim was married to Shekhina, but left her for Lilith, and when Elohim returns to Shakhina, the Messianic Kingdom will come in.   Lilith is also the goddess of the Eastern Star, and when a Freemason has sexual intercourse with his wife, it is taught in that cult that he is in union with Lilith.  Nice doctrine, right?

    Allat is then the direct descendant of Lilith.  How?  The name tells all.  You may not see the connection.  Allat is a contracted form of the Babylonian  name, “AL ILAT” meaning, “The Goddess.”  Note the “ILAT.”  This is from “BA ILI” and “BA ILAT.”  The “LIL” form is easily seen, and the heritage of their name changes is very clear in the epigraphs. Continue reading