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View Full Version : The esoteric world of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad


CTZonEdit
02-13-2006, 05:47 PM
According to Shi'ite Muslim teaching, Abul-Qassem Mohammad, the 12th leader whom Shi'ites consider descended from the Prophet Mohammed, disappeared in 941 but will return at the end of time to lead an era of Islamic justice. "Our revolution's main mission is to pave the way for the reappearance of the 12th Imam, the Mahdi," Ahmadinejad said in the speech to Friday Prayers leaders from across the country.
"Therefore, Iran should become a powerful, developed and model Islamic society."
"Today, we should define our economic, cultural and political policies based on the policy of Imam Mahdi's return. We should avoid copying the West's policies and systems," he added, newspapers and local news agencies reported.
Ahmadinejad refers to the return of the 12th Imam, also known as the Mahdi, in almost all his major speeches since he took office in August.
A September address to the U.N. General Assembly contained long passages on the Mahdi which confused Western diplomats and irked those from Sunni Muslim countries who believe in a different line of succession from Mohammed.
This fascination has prompted wild stories to circulate.
Presidential aides have denied a popular rumor that he ordered his cabinet to write a letter to the 12th Imam and throw it down a well near the holy city of Qom where thousands of pilgrims come each week to pray and drop messages to the Imam.
But what really has tongues wagging is the possibility that Ahmadinejad's belief in the 12th Imam's return may be linked to the supposed growing influence of a secretive society devoted to the Mahdi which was banned in the early 1980s.
Founded in 1953 and used by the Shah of Iran to try to eradicate followers of the Bahai faith, the Hojjatieh Society is governed by the conviction that the 12th Imam's return will be hastened by the creation of chaos on earth.
Ahmadinejad, who is only the second non-cleric to become president since the revolution, has made clear his immense respect for Ayatollah Mohammad Taghi Mesbah-Yazdi, a deeply conservative cleric with close ties to the Hojjatieh-founded Haqqani theological school in Qom.
Conspiracy theorists, never in short supply in Iran (http://www.jihadwatch.org/dhimmiwatch/archives/009017.php), allege that many members of Ahmadinejad's cabinet and other key appointees are Haqqani graduates and Hojjatieh followers.
"It seems that they (Hojjatieh members) have recently become more active and are spread through the government," said a political analyst who declined to be named.
"The president has repeatedly said his government will pave the way for the Imam's return."




Link here (http://jihadwatch.org/archives/009044.php)

Its interesting that in the news you hear nothing about this man wanting to accelerate the Apocalypse in order for his messiah to return. Not a word.

CoreIssue
02-13-2006, 07:35 PM
Wonder why not?

Dismissal, fear or not having a clue what to say?

CTZonEdit
02-13-2006, 11:00 PM
I have not heard it talked about in any of the major new outlets.

The guy is going to make a bomb, and going to do it as fast as possible. Having him go thru the legal-ese of the UN and such is what he wants to bide his time. Its a joke.

20 years ago Israel took the upper hand and blew Saddam's nuke program to smithereens. Now they are so liberal and it would cause such an outrage if Israel did it to Iran I don't see it happening.

So they will have a bomb. People need to wake up, threatening them with sanctions is a joke. It shows a clear lack of understanding of the jihad they intend wage on the world. In fact they are waging it already and winning. :(