1 | People! There is no other deity but Allah! |
2 | The Compassionate, the Beneficent, the Gracious; |
3 | All praise and worship be to Allah and no other! |
4 | Let the truth be revealed concerning that city of ghosts; |
5 | A city borne from treachery and blood; |
6 | From which a great and terrible force did spring; |
7 | Only to be consumed itself by its own perfidy and hatred of Allah. |
8 | Lo! Behold! The once mighty center of the world, in ruins by the hand of its own northern legions. |
9 | Let it be said: Do not forget the lesson of Rome. |
10 | Whereas Philadelphia (Ravenna) commands the north and centre of the land of Italia; |
11 | Rome once ruled the known world. |
12 | The Sabia and Umay-Yad are ignorant of such history; |
13 | They speak of the ruins as if it were ancient Greek or Persian Kings; |
14 | Yet the Persians never forget. |
15 | Behold! For Persia did stretch out its tentacles and suffocate the rule of Just men; |
16 | That poisonous scribes and greedy merchants might claim some false right. |
17 | Verily, this is the truth of the proud birth of Rome; |
18 | That has been since abandoned and mere ruins for more than seven generations. |
19 | It be the sea peoples of the Island of Greece they called AtiAntis meaning the Magical Horse who created Rome. |
20 | These be most ancient descendents of the Yahudah who came to the Island the Romans called Pegasus after the fall of Ur-Garit to the Egyptians. |
21 | Two cities they did build, the first they called Sum-Ur, which the Greeks called Chalcis, but which the Romans called Remus; |
22 | The other city upon the island of Atlantis the Yahuda called Sulum-Ur, which the Greeks called Eretria and the Romans called Romulus. |
23 | Upon the time of Jeremiah and the great uniting of the sea peoples under the law of Tara as a new covenant, the Yahudah refused unite and instead fought against the Hibiru tribes. |
24 | To the Persians, the men of Atlantis did appeal and with the might of Darius of Persia did conquer southern Italy and found a new city they first called Satan-Ur. |
25 | Then upon the might of Xerxes, the men of Atlantis did rename their city Roma as a curse against the Hiburu, the law of Tara and the one true Divine Creator. |
26 | Where there be light, the men of Atlantis swore in hatred against the Divine to put it out. |
27 | Where there be knowledge and science, the Romans swore against Heaven to destroy all culture. |
28 | Where there be harmony, the men of the city of Satan brought bloodshed and war. |
29 | Many generations and wars did pass, with the Romans true to their curse conquering the world and bringing only misery and bloodshed. |
30 | Until Allah saw fit to bring plague after plague upon the Romans until they grew fearful in their hubris. |
31 | Thus the scorpions fell upon each other, with each Roman house killing the other; |
32 | Roman brother against Roman brother, Son against Father, Mother against child, till Roman was in turmoil. |
33 | One by one, the superstitions and false magic of the Romans failed. |
34 | The false Persian religion of Mithra to whom all the legions swore was destroyed upon the destruction of the Temple of Mithra at Jerusalem by the Nazarenes. |
35 | The false Persian religion of Judaism in which Emperor Vespasian made himself savior and Lucifer the lightbringer failed upon the destruction of Heliopolis. |
36 | Even upon the arrival of Constantine, the Roman families could not control themselves, killing their own in the hope of appeasing the great Holly Emperor. |
37 | Thus Rome destroyed itself, it devoured itself until in the end, the legions of Christian Rome from Antioch swept down and destroyed the den of serpents forever. |
38 | To their old home of Tunis and North Africa, upon the ruins of Carthage the Roman families did escape, to hid and plot their revenge. |
39 | Now, these have become the merchants and cheats that seek to corrupt the wisdom of the people of Arabia; |
40 | These once noble families have become petty robbers to try and gain the Frankincense trade. |
41 | This is the story of Rome. |