"CROWN PRINCE MOHAMED BIN SALMAN'S MOTHER IS JEWISH," PASTOR MIKE EVANS Christian Zionist Pastor Mike Evans tells the story of his meeting with Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince where MBS told Pastor Evans that his mother is Jewish.
Monday 15 April 2024
News ID: 51411Publish Date : 03 April 2018 - 21:38
MBS Admits the Jewish Roots of the Saudi Clan
By: S. Nawabzadeh
The latest remarks about his newfound cousins, the Zionists, by Mohamed bin Salman (MBS) in the US, where he is on a three-week long pilgrimage to worship at the altar of the Great Satan, did not surprise anyone.
As a matter of fact, his words "Israel has the right to exist”, at a time when Palestinians are being bathed in their own blood in their own ancestral lands by the Zionist usurpers, were tacit admission that existence of the spurious entity called Saudi Arabia on the map of West Asia is as illegal as that of Israel.
It is but natural for the two British creations (between 1932 and 1948), now sitting snugly in the lap of the Americans to complement each other for their crimes against humanity and to spew poison at the Islamic Republic of Iran for its defence of Islam against attempts by the unholy trinity (US, Israel and Saudi Arabia) to terrorize and destabilize Muslim countries.
The self-imposed Heir Apparent who has imprisoned his own mother for fear that she would apprise his ailing father, King Salman, of the treachery of her own brat, is living in a fool’s paradise. He thinks he is all set to rule as king for the next fifty years with the blessings of Washington, little realizing that the fate of nations fluctuates like quicksilver, with no one knowing what awaits the seemingly powerful US, let alone whether Saudi Arabia or Israel would exist on the world map in the next couple of decades.
MBS, who has pawned the stolen oil wealth of the deprived people of eastern Arabia to Uncle Sam for a huge arsenal of weapons of all kinds through which he dreams of conquering Iraq, Syria, Lebanon and even Iran, while his armies are unable to browbeat the barefooted and lightly armed people of Yemen into submission, is completely delusional.
In fact, the Jewish origins of the Saudi clan of Najd which was Arabicized in the course of history, has so infatuated him that he openly dallies with the Israeli lobbies in the US, including AIPAC, and the other day uttered blasphemous words that Prophet Muhammad (SAWA) had a Jewish wife.
Fie upon him. He neither knows the history of Islam or the region nor the basic tenets of the faith of Islam. In other words, despite his pretension to be a Sunni Muslim, he doesn’t even know that the Sunnah of the Prophet in accordance with the divine commandment in the holy Qur’an, prohibits Muslims from marrying spouses of other faiths, unless they convert to Islam.
So, how could the Prophet of Islam had married a Jewish woman?
MBS seems to be totally unaware that Safiya bint Hayayy had ceased to be a Jewess when she decided to become Muslim and marry Prophet Muhammad (SAWA) following the fall of Khaibar in 7 AH.
https://kayhan.ir/en/news/51411/mbs-adm ... saudi-clan
IS MOTHER OF MUHAMMAD BIN SALMAN 'MBS' A JEWISH WOMAN ?
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Re: IS MOTHER OF MUHAMMAD BIN SALMAN 'MBS' A JEWISH WOMAN ?
Israel deal concerns lead Saudi Arabia’s MBS to ‘fear for his life’
Monitoring Desk Published August 15, 2024
SAUDI crown prince Mohammed Bin Salman has said he fears being assassinated over his support for normalising Saudi-Israeli ties, a move seen as being a clever diplomatic ploy to get a deal Riyadh is comfortable with, US publication Politico reported on Wednesday.
The Saudi royal is said to have mentioned his concerns to members of US Congress, invoking Anwar Sadat — the Egyptian leader who was slain following a peace deal with Israel in the 1980s.
According to Politico, he has also discussed the threats he faces, explaining why any such deal must include a true path to a Palestinian state — especially now that the war in Gaza has heightened Arab fury toward Tel Aviv.
The broad contours of the largely secret and still-developing pact between the Saudis and Washington include multiple commitments, including security guarantees via a treaty, aid on a civilian nuclear program and economic investment in areas such as technology.
The Politico report claimed that in exchange, Saudi Arabia would limit its dealings with China and establish diplomatic ties with Israel.
To MBS’ chagrin, however, the Israeli government has been unwilling to include a credible path to a Palestinian state in the pact. The report described the overtures as “a clever diplomatic marketing strategy.”
Published in Dawn, August 15th, 2024
https://www.dawn.com/news/1852371/israe ... r-his-life
Monitoring Desk Published August 15, 2024
SAUDI crown prince Mohammed Bin Salman has said he fears being assassinated over his support for normalising Saudi-Israeli ties, a move seen as being a clever diplomatic ploy to get a deal Riyadh is comfortable with, US publication Politico reported on Wednesday.
The Saudi royal is said to have mentioned his concerns to members of US Congress, invoking Anwar Sadat — the Egyptian leader who was slain following a peace deal with Israel in the 1980s.
According to Politico, he has also discussed the threats he faces, explaining why any such deal must include a true path to a Palestinian state — especially now that the war in Gaza has heightened Arab fury toward Tel Aviv.
The broad contours of the largely secret and still-developing pact between the Saudis and Washington include multiple commitments, including security guarantees via a treaty, aid on a civilian nuclear program and economic investment in areas such as technology.
The Politico report claimed that in exchange, Saudi Arabia would limit its dealings with China and establish diplomatic ties with Israel.
To MBS’ chagrin, however, the Israeli government has been unwilling to include a credible path to a Palestinian state in the pact. The report described the overtures as “a clever diplomatic marketing strategy.”
Published in Dawn, August 15th, 2024
https://www.dawn.com/news/1852371/israe ... r-his-life
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Re: IS MOTHER OF MUHAMMAD BIN SALMAN 'MBS' A JEWISH WOMAN ?
Historic Nobility
Mohammed bin Salman
The son of Salman ibn Abdulaziz, Mohammed bin Salman, became the de facto ruler of Saudi Arabia during his father's reign and, as crown prince, became poised to be the first member of his generation to lead Saudi Arabia.
Mohammed bin Salman also known as: MBS, Muḥammad ibn Salmān ibn ʿAbd al-ʿAzīz Āl Saʿūd
Written and fact-checked by
Last Updated: May 14, 2025
Mohammed bin Salman (born August 31, 1985) is the de facto ruler of Saudi Arabia, known for his aggressive foreign policy, ambitious economic vision, and controversial social reforms. He formally serves as crown prince (2017– ) and prime minister (2022– ) and has previously served as minister of defense (2015–22). He is the son of Saudi King Salman bin Abdulaziz and his third wife Fahdah bint Falāḥ ibn Sulṭān.
Early life
From a young age Mohammed was interested in government, shadowing his father and remaining conscious about his image. Along the way he learned how to communicate with a wide variety of dignitaries and to avoid indiscretions. He attended King Saud University in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, where he graduated with a bachelor’s degree in law in 2007. He afterward founded a number of firms and a nonprofit organization intended to promote entrepreneurship in the kingdom. In 2009 he became a formal adviser to his father, who was then governor of Riyadh. As Salman rose in rank and influence, eventually becoming crown prince in 2012, his trusted son Mohammed rose with him.
In charge of defense and economic policy
In January 2015 Saudi Arabia’s King Abdullah died and Salman became king. He immediately appointed Mohammed as his defense minister. In a matter of months Mohammed launched an aggressive military intervention in Yemen’s civil war. Known as Operation Decisive Storm, the campaign intended to give the government of Yemeni Pres. Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi a decisive advantage against the Shiʿi Houthi insurgency in the north of the country. It was thought that a Houthi victory might give Iran, Saudi Arabia’s main regional rival, a foothold along Saudi Arabia’s southern border. The campaign, however, failed to turn the tide in the war and led to little more than a prolonged stalemate and one of the worst humanitarian crises in modern history.
Mohammed was also placed in charge of the state oil company Aramco and the Council of Economic and Developmental Affairs, the country’s primary policy-making body for economic development. He sought to open up Aramco for an initial public offering (IPO) and set out on bold development initiatives, such as his Vision 2030 plan designed to attract foreign investment for industries outside its energy sector. Some of these policies proved too ambitious, however. Though he anticipated Aramco to launch the world’s largest IPO as early as 2017, the move was repeatedly delayed until the end of 2019.
Crown prince
Mohammed was appointed crown prince in June 2017 and wasted no time pursuing his audacious goals. Just days later he spearheaded a multicountry blockade against Qatar, not only for its friendly stance toward Iran but also for its support for rival non-state actors in the region, such as the Muslim Brotherhood. Though the three-year blockade led to a crisis for Qatar in the short-term, the country used its wealth to reorient its economy away from reliance on its fellow Gulf countries.
At times his assertiveness abroad backfired and led to international backlash. In November 2017 Lebanese Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri resigned suddenly under suspicious circumstances while on a visit to Riyadh. Only after significant international pressure was Hariri allowed to return to Lebanon, where he immediately suspended his resignation. The circumstances behind the bizarre episode remained unspoken, but the world’s suspicions were reflected by Mohammed at an investment conference a year later when he cracked a joke about kidnapping Hariri.
About the same time as Hariri’s peculiar resignation, dozens of Saudi princes, business leaders, and senior officials were arrested. The maneuver was billed as an anti-corruption sweep. But because the detained individuals were some of the wealthiest and most powerful figures in the country—including mega-billionaire Prince al-Waleed bin Talal—many observers suspected the true purpose of the sweep was to secure power in Mohammed’s hands. Many were released only after relinquishing partial control of their businesses to the state or paying billions of dollars. The Saudi government was believed to have collected more than $100 billion from the move.
Despite the apparent shakedown, Mohammed had initially been hailed abroad as a reformer at home. Often to the chagrin of conservative Saudis and the Wahhābī religious establishment, his policies began to relax many of the strict social restrictions for which Saudi Arabia was known. In line with his effort to boost tourism in the kingdom, a ban on cinemas was reversed, and women were allowed to attend sporting events. In 2018 he loosened the public dress code slightly by stating that women do not need to wear an ʿabāyah, a long black cloak, in public. Later that year women were allowed to obtain driver’s licenses, enabling women to go to work or school or perform errands without accompaniment. Still, these steps toward liberalization appeared motivated by economic gain and not by a desire for freedom. While women were offered new choices that would allow them to earn and spend money without requiring their male guardians to provide constant consent and transportation, the government also cracked down on women activists who continued to press for more freedoms.
In October 2018 Mohammed orchestrated the extrajudicial killing abroad of Jamal Khashoggi, a prominent journalist and exiled government critic who once served as an adviser and aide to a Saudi ambassador. On Mohammed’s orders, Saudi operatives lured Khashoggi into the Saudi consulate in Istanbul, where they tortured and dismembered him. Turkey’s Pres. Recep Tayyip Erdoğan led the outcry against the killing; committed on Turkish soil against a dissident living in exile, it raised international concerns over both state sovereignty and human rights. The fallout was contained, as the royal family continually deflected responsibility for the incident, but Mohammed’s image abroad had been tarnished.
In March 2020, as the world began grappling with the COVID-19 pandemic, Mohammed once again detained fellow members of the Saudi royal family. Said to be under investigation for treason, the detainees included princes much closer to the throne, including Ahmad, King Salman’s brother, and Muhammad bin Nayef, the former crown prince whom Mohammed bin Salman had replaced.
Meanwhile, the economic fallout from the pandemic and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine revitalized Mohammed’s stature as a global economic player in 2022. As high oil prices and inflation plagued the economy the world over, Erdoğan warmly received Mohammed in Turkey in June. And despite U.S. Pres. Joe Biden’s earlier resolve to sideline Mohammed in U.S.-Saudi relations, Biden met Mohammed face-to-face in July during a high-profile trip to Saudi Arabia.
In September 2022 Mohammed was appointed prime minister, an office traditionally held by the king that oversees the Council of Ministers. His younger brother Khalid took his place as defense minister.
Having strengthened his de facto status as the premier policy maker of Saudi Arabia, Mohammed sought to foster more cordial and stable relations internationally. In October he reportedly indicated that he would normalize Saudi Arabia’s ties with Israel, as the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, and other Arab countries had done in recent years. But the offer was conditioned on the restoration of the United States’ commitments to the country’s security and to helping it develop a nuclear program for civilian purposes. The United States was unswayed, however, so Mohammed looked elsewhere. In March 2023, after days of talks in which China served as mediator, Saudi Arabia and Iran reached a deal to restore ties after years of competition between them had devastated the region. The deal suggested that an end was in sight for the civil war in Yemen, which, as a proxy war between Saudi Arabia and Iran, had turned into a costly and harmful quagmire for Mohammed’s agenda. The diplomatic breakthrough also strengthened Saudi ties with China, a powerful alternative and counterweight to the United States that Mohammed could leverage in his dealings with the North American superpower. Indeed, just hours after the deal was announced, the offer to normalize ties with Israel in exchange for U.S. commitments on security and nuclear technology was reiterated. In a matter of months Mohammed launched an aggressive military intervention in Yemen’s civil war. Known as Operation Decisive Storm, the campaign intended to give the government of Yemeni Pres. Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi a decisive advantage against the Shiʿi Houthi insurgency in the north of the country. It was thought that a Houthi victory might give Iran, Saudi Arabia’s main regional rival, a foothold along Saudi Arabia’s southern border. The campaign, however, failed to turn the tide in the war and led to little more than a prolonged stalemate and one of the worst humanitarian crises in modern history.
In October 2018 Mohammed orchestrated the extrajudicial killing abroad of Jamal Khashoggi, a prominent journalist and exiled government critic who once served as an adviser and aide to a Saudi ambassador. On Mohammed’s orders, Saudi operatives lured Khashoggi into the Saudi consulate in Istanbul, where they tortured and dismembered him. Turkey’s Pres. Recep Tayyip Erdoğan led the outcry against the killing; committed on Turkish soil against a dissident living in exile, it raised international concerns over both state sovereignty and human rights. The fallout was contained, as the royal family continually deflected responsibility for the incident, but Mohammed’s image abroad had been tarnished.
In March 2020, as the world began grappling with the COVID-19 pandemic, Mohammed once again detained fellow members of the Saudi royal family. Said to be under investigation for treason, the detainees included princes much closer to the throne, including Ahmad, King Salman’s brother, and Muhammad bin Nayef, the former crown prince whom Mohammed bin Salman had replaced.
.
Meanwhile, the economic fallout from the pandemic and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine revitalized Mohammed’s stature as a global economic player in 2022. As high oil prices and inflation plagued the economy the world over, Erdoğan warmly received Mohammed in Turkey in June. And despite U.S. Pres. Joe Biden’s earlier resolve to sideline Mohammed in U.S.-Saudi relations, Biden met Mohammed face-to-face in July during a high-profile trip to Saudi Arabia.
https://www.britannica.com/place/Saudi-Arabia/Climate
Mohammed bin Salman
The son of Salman ibn Abdulaziz, Mohammed bin Salman, became the de facto ruler of Saudi Arabia during his father's reign and, as crown prince, became poised to be the first member of his generation to lead Saudi Arabia.
Mohammed bin Salman also known as: MBS, Muḥammad ibn Salmān ibn ʿAbd al-ʿAzīz Āl Saʿūd
Written and fact-checked by
Last Updated: May 14, 2025
Mohammed bin Salman (born August 31, 1985) is the de facto ruler of Saudi Arabia, known for his aggressive foreign policy, ambitious economic vision, and controversial social reforms. He formally serves as crown prince (2017– ) and prime minister (2022– ) and has previously served as minister of defense (2015–22). He is the son of Saudi King Salman bin Abdulaziz and his third wife Fahdah bint Falāḥ ibn Sulṭān.
Early life
From a young age Mohammed was interested in government, shadowing his father and remaining conscious about his image. Along the way he learned how to communicate with a wide variety of dignitaries and to avoid indiscretions. He attended King Saud University in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, where he graduated with a bachelor’s degree in law in 2007. He afterward founded a number of firms and a nonprofit organization intended to promote entrepreneurship in the kingdom. In 2009 he became a formal adviser to his father, who was then governor of Riyadh. As Salman rose in rank and influence, eventually becoming crown prince in 2012, his trusted son Mohammed rose with him.
In charge of defense and economic policy
In January 2015 Saudi Arabia’s King Abdullah died and Salman became king. He immediately appointed Mohammed as his defense minister. In a matter of months Mohammed launched an aggressive military intervention in Yemen’s civil war. Known as Operation Decisive Storm, the campaign intended to give the government of Yemeni Pres. Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi a decisive advantage against the Shiʿi Houthi insurgency in the north of the country. It was thought that a Houthi victory might give Iran, Saudi Arabia’s main regional rival, a foothold along Saudi Arabia’s southern border. The campaign, however, failed to turn the tide in the war and led to little more than a prolonged stalemate and one of the worst humanitarian crises in modern history.
Mohammed was also placed in charge of the state oil company Aramco and the Council of Economic and Developmental Affairs, the country’s primary policy-making body for economic development. He sought to open up Aramco for an initial public offering (IPO) and set out on bold development initiatives, such as his Vision 2030 plan designed to attract foreign investment for industries outside its energy sector. Some of these policies proved too ambitious, however. Though he anticipated Aramco to launch the world’s largest IPO as early as 2017, the move was repeatedly delayed until the end of 2019.
Crown prince
Mohammed was appointed crown prince in June 2017 and wasted no time pursuing his audacious goals. Just days later he spearheaded a multicountry blockade against Qatar, not only for its friendly stance toward Iran but also for its support for rival non-state actors in the region, such as the Muslim Brotherhood. Though the three-year blockade led to a crisis for Qatar in the short-term, the country used its wealth to reorient its economy away from reliance on its fellow Gulf countries.
At times his assertiveness abroad backfired and led to international backlash. In November 2017 Lebanese Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri resigned suddenly under suspicious circumstances while on a visit to Riyadh. Only after significant international pressure was Hariri allowed to return to Lebanon, where he immediately suspended his resignation. The circumstances behind the bizarre episode remained unspoken, but the world’s suspicions were reflected by Mohammed at an investment conference a year later when he cracked a joke about kidnapping Hariri.
About the same time as Hariri’s peculiar resignation, dozens of Saudi princes, business leaders, and senior officials were arrested. The maneuver was billed as an anti-corruption sweep. But because the detained individuals were some of the wealthiest and most powerful figures in the country—including mega-billionaire Prince al-Waleed bin Talal—many observers suspected the true purpose of the sweep was to secure power in Mohammed’s hands. Many were released only after relinquishing partial control of their businesses to the state or paying billions of dollars. The Saudi government was believed to have collected more than $100 billion from the move.
Despite the apparent shakedown, Mohammed had initially been hailed abroad as a reformer at home. Often to the chagrin of conservative Saudis and the Wahhābī religious establishment, his policies began to relax many of the strict social restrictions for which Saudi Arabia was known. In line with his effort to boost tourism in the kingdom, a ban on cinemas was reversed, and women were allowed to attend sporting events. In 2018 he loosened the public dress code slightly by stating that women do not need to wear an ʿabāyah, a long black cloak, in public. Later that year women were allowed to obtain driver’s licenses, enabling women to go to work or school or perform errands without accompaniment. Still, these steps toward liberalization appeared motivated by economic gain and not by a desire for freedom. While women were offered new choices that would allow them to earn and spend money without requiring their male guardians to provide constant consent and transportation, the government also cracked down on women activists who continued to press for more freedoms.
In October 2018 Mohammed orchestrated the extrajudicial killing abroad of Jamal Khashoggi, a prominent journalist and exiled government critic who once served as an adviser and aide to a Saudi ambassador. On Mohammed’s orders, Saudi operatives lured Khashoggi into the Saudi consulate in Istanbul, where they tortured and dismembered him. Turkey’s Pres. Recep Tayyip Erdoğan led the outcry against the killing; committed on Turkish soil against a dissident living in exile, it raised international concerns over both state sovereignty and human rights. The fallout was contained, as the royal family continually deflected responsibility for the incident, but Mohammed’s image abroad had been tarnished.
In March 2020, as the world began grappling with the COVID-19 pandemic, Mohammed once again detained fellow members of the Saudi royal family. Said to be under investigation for treason, the detainees included princes much closer to the throne, including Ahmad, King Salman’s brother, and Muhammad bin Nayef, the former crown prince whom Mohammed bin Salman had replaced.
Meanwhile, the economic fallout from the pandemic and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine revitalized Mohammed’s stature as a global economic player in 2022. As high oil prices and inflation plagued the economy the world over, Erdoğan warmly received Mohammed in Turkey in June. And despite U.S. Pres. Joe Biden’s earlier resolve to sideline Mohammed in U.S.-Saudi relations, Biden met Mohammed face-to-face in July during a high-profile trip to Saudi Arabia.
In September 2022 Mohammed was appointed prime minister, an office traditionally held by the king that oversees the Council of Ministers. His younger brother Khalid took his place as defense minister.
Having strengthened his de facto status as the premier policy maker of Saudi Arabia, Mohammed sought to foster more cordial and stable relations internationally. In October he reportedly indicated that he would normalize Saudi Arabia’s ties with Israel, as the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, and other Arab countries had done in recent years. But the offer was conditioned on the restoration of the United States’ commitments to the country’s security and to helping it develop a nuclear program for civilian purposes. The United States was unswayed, however, so Mohammed looked elsewhere. In March 2023, after days of talks in which China served as mediator, Saudi Arabia and Iran reached a deal to restore ties after years of competition between them had devastated the region. The deal suggested that an end was in sight for the civil war in Yemen, which, as a proxy war between Saudi Arabia and Iran, had turned into a costly and harmful quagmire for Mohammed’s agenda. The diplomatic breakthrough also strengthened Saudi ties with China, a powerful alternative and counterweight to the United States that Mohammed could leverage in his dealings with the North American superpower. Indeed, just hours after the deal was announced, the offer to normalize ties with Israel in exchange for U.S. commitments on security and nuclear technology was reiterated. In a matter of months Mohammed launched an aggressive military intervention in Yemen’s civil war. Known as Operation Decisive Storm, the campaign intended to give the government of Yemeni Pres. Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi a decisive advantage against the Shiʿi Houthi insurgency in the north of the country. It was thought that a Houthi victory might give Iran, Saudi Arabia’s main regional rival, a foothold along Saudi Arabia’s southern border. The campaign, however, failed to turn the tide in the war and led to little more than a prolonged stalemate and one of the worst humanitarian crises in modern history.
In October 2018 Mohammed orchestrated the extrajudicial killing abroad of Jamal Khashoggi, a prominent journalist and exiled government critic who once served as an adviser and aide to a Saudi ambassador. On Mohammed’s orders, Saudi operatives lured Khashoggi into the Saudi consulate in Istanbul, where they tortured and dismembered him. Turkey’s Pres. Recep Tayyip Erdoğan led the outcry against the killing; committed on Turkish soil against a dissident living in exile, it raised international concerns over both state sovereignty and human rights. The fallout was contained, as the royal family continually deflected responsibility for the incident, but Mohammed’s image abroad had been tarnished.
In March 2020, as the world began grappling with the COVID-19 pandemic, Mohammed once again detained fellow members of the Saudi royal family. Said to be under investigation for treason, the detainees included princes much closer to the throne, including Ahmad, King Salman’s brother, and Muhammad bin Nayef, the former crown prince whom Mohammed bin Salman had replaced.
.
Meanwhile, the economic fallout from the pandemic and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine revitalized Mohammed’s stature as a global economic player in 2022. As high oil prices and inflation plagued the economy the world over, Erdoğan warmly received Mohammed in Turkey in June. And despite U.S. Pres. Joe Biden’s earlier resolve to sideline Mohammed in U.S.-Saudi relations, Biden met Mohammed face-to-face in July during a high-profile trip to Saudi Arabia.
https://www.britannica.com/place/Saudi-Arabia/Climate
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Re: IS MOTHER OF MUHAMMAD BIN SALMAN 'MBS' A JEWISH WOMAN ?
In news media images, Saw young teenage girls in white attire, swinging their hair up-down, right-left and dancing while receiption of President Trump in Abu Dahbi royal palace. Also I saw Grand Masjid of Abu Dahbi was shut for prayers all day while Trump was visiting mosque. I wander does Islam allows such kind of things. Where are so called Muslim scholars, and Mullahs, they just keep talking of Sharia? In one year and eight months, Israel kept killing Gazans, so far total 54000 thousands killed and 75000 wounded but these 57 coward puppets Muslim governments are silent. They are unable to send a tank of drinking water or food and medicines inside Gaza. What a shame! At same time some Arab countries are purchasing 500 Billion dollars worth of arms, ammunition, tanks, airplanes to run Trump's economy, and at same time these Arab countries are doing business with Israel providing gasoline and drinking water, where Gazan children, women and general population is deprived of water. What a shame on those 57 puppet governments. In my opinion Islam came with Prophet and went back with Prophet after his demise.
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Re: IS MOTHER OF MUHAMMAD BIN SALMAN 'MBS' A JEWISH WOMAN ?
By JERUSALEM POST STAFF
JANUARY 15, 2022 10:58
Updated: JANUARY 15, 2022 18:16
The commander of Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Navy said on January 7 that the ruling royal family of Saudi Arabia were actually Jewish, and that their conflict with Iran harkens back to 7th century battles between Muslim and Jewish tribes.
The speech was aired on Iran's Bushehr TV and translated by MEMRI, the Middle East Media Research Institute.
“We cannot bear to see injustice in a Muslim country that is perpetrated by the Zionists and the seed of the Jews,” the commander, Gen. Alireza Tangsiri, says in a video recording of the speech.
“These are the very same Jews — and I’d better say Zionists — whose hearts have never aligned with Islam, and even with the Prophet in his time,” he then said, probably in reference to Saudi Arabia.
The House of Saud is the ruling royal family of Saudi Arabia since 1744, composed of the descendants of Muhammad bin Saud and his brothers.
Iranian rhetoric against the US and Israel has been more fiery than usual in recent weeks due in part to the two-year anniversary of the January 3, 2020 killing of Soleimani in a US drone strike in Iraq.
https://www.jpost.com/middle-east/iran- ... cle-692595
JANUARY 15, 2022 10:58
Updated: JANUARY 15, 2022 18:16
The commander of Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Navy said on January 7 that the ruling royal family of Saudi Arabia were actually Jewish, and that their conflict with Iran harkens back to 7th century battles between Muslim and Jewish tribes.
The speech was aired on Iran's Bushehr TV and translated by MEMRI, the Middle East Media Research Institute.
“We cannot bear to see injustice in a Muslim country that is perpetrated by the Zionists and the seed of the Jews,” the commander, Gen. Alireza Tangsiri, says in a video recording of the speech.
“These are the very same Jews — and I’d better say Zionists — whose hearts have never aligned with Islam, and even with the Prophet in his time,” he then said, probably in reference to Saudi Arabia.
The House of Saud is the ruling royal family of Saudi Arabia since 1744, composed of the descendants of Muhammad bin Saud and his brothers.
Iranian rhetoric against the US and Israel has been more fiery than usual in recent weeks due in part to the two-year anniversary of the January 3, 2020 killing of Soleimani in a US drone strike in Iraq.
https://www.jpost.com/middle-east/iran- ... cle-692595