ON THIS DAY February 22


February 22, 1295 BC – The coronation of Ramses II, on whose face the sun’s rays fall each year in Abu Simbel (Ramesses II,) temple.

Abu Simbel (Arabic أبو سنبل or أبو سمبل) is an archaeological site comprising two massive rock temples in southern Egypt on the western bank of Lake Nasser about 290 km southwest of Aswan. It is part of the UNESCO World Heritage Site known as the “Nubian Monuments” [1], which run from Abu Simbel downriver to Philae (near Aswan).

The twin temples were originally carved out of the mountainside during the reign of Pharaoh Ramesses II in the 13th century BC, as a lasting monument to himself and his queen Nefertari, to commemorate his alleged victory at the Battle of Kadesh, and to intimidate his Nubian neighbors. However, the complex was relocated in its entirety in the 1960s, on an artificial hill made from a domed structure, high above the Aswan dam reservoir.

The relocation of the temples was necessary to avoid their being submerged during the creation of Lake Nasser, the massive artificial water reservoir formed after the building of the Aswan dam on the Nile River.

(Ramesses II,)Temple remains one of Egypt’s top tourist attractions.

IT ALSO A SYMBOLIZES MOSLEM CONTEMPT OF ANY THING NON ISLAMIC

This temple was constructed nearly 2000 years before Islam ever existed, yet the cannot call it the Temple of Ramesses 11

Construction of the temple complex started in approximately 1284 BC and lasted for circa 20 years, until 1264 BC. Known as the “Temple of Ramses, beloved by Amun”, it was one of six rock temples erected in Nubia during the long reign of Ramses II. Their purpose was to impress Egypt’s southern neighbours, and also to reinforce the status of Egyptian religion in the region, and it was not Islam

With the passage of time, the temples fell into disuse and eventually became covered by sand. Already in the 6th century BC, the sand covered the statues of the main temple up to their knees. The temple was forgotten until 1813, when Swiss orientalist JL Burckhardt found the top frieze of the main temple. Burckhardt talked about his discovery with Italian explorer Giovanni Belzoni, who travelled to the site, but was unable to dig out an entry to the temple. Belzoni returned in 1817, this time succeeding in his attempt to enter the complex. He took everything valuable and portable with him. Tour guides at the site relate the legend that “Abu Simbel” was a young local boy who guided these early re-discoverers to the site of the buried temple which he had seen from time to time in the shifting sands. Eventually, they named the complex after him: Abu Simbel.

Today, thousands of tourists visit the temples daily. Guarded convoys of buses and cars depart twice a day from Aswan, the nearest city. The convoys are guarded because moslems in the area have a nasty habit of murdering tourists who wish too see this non islamic wonder

February 22, 1972: A Lufthansa jet from New Delhi to Athens and on to Aden, Yemen was hijacked by Islamic terrorists. The hostages, also known as kidnap victims, were freed after a $5 million ransom was paid to the Muslims.

All five terrorists were Palestinian Muslims who described themselves as members of the Organization for Victims of Zionist Occupation. They ordered the plane flown to Aden, Southern Yemen.

Beyond money, the demands of the group were never clear. One report said the hijackers demanded the release of three Islamic terrorists being held in Cologne for the slaying of five Jordanians . Another report said they demanded the release of four Palestinians being held in Cairo for the slaying of Jordanian Prime Minister Wasfi Tal

The hijackers released the jet, passengers, and crew on February 23. On February 25th, the West German government disclosed that it had paid $5 million in ransom. The hijackers all went free and were never arrested or prosecuted.

February 22, 1972: The Black_September Organization sabotaged the Esso oil pipeline near Hamburg, Germany claiming that the company had aided the Israelis.

February 22, 1983: In Pakistan, several French citizens were killed in a series of bomb blasts, including the French General Consul in Karachi. An explosion hit the Air France booking office in a Holiday Inn. Another bomb blasted the Air France Cargo office. One was detonated in the Alliance Francaise cultural center in Karachi.

The Iraqi Mujahideen claimed responsibility for assaulting the French targets in Pakistan and said that it would continue to attack French interests all over the world as long as France supported Iraq in its war against Iran.
February 22, 1987: Seventeen people were wounded in Israel when a grenade was detonated outside the Damascus Gate of Jerusalem’s Old City. A PLO spokesman said the attack had been carried out by a group called the Ali Abu Taouk unit.

February 22, 1988: A bomb was deployed in a hotel bathroom in Peshawar, Pakistan, killing a man.
February 22, 1989: In Israel, the Fatah Intifada, or Victorious Uprising, claimed responsibility for a bomb attack on Israeli police in Jerusalem. While Fatah was Arafat’s terrorist political party, and while it had been Arafat who had called the intifada against the Jews, the Fatah Intifada was a gang of dissident, Syrian-supported Palestinians opposed to Arafat.

February 22, 1989: In London, AMAL Shia terrorists firebombed a Sunni mosque. While Shiites were rioting around the world in protest of Salman Rushdie’s Satanic Verses, Sunnis were less irritated initially. So pro-Ayatollah Iranian terrorists attacked these Sunni Muslims to demonstrate that they weren’t intolerant or violent enough.February 22, 1993: In the Islamic hell hole of Somalia, an Irish nurse serving the humanitarian charity Concern was shot and killed by gunmen in Afgoi.

February 22, 2000: Just nine years after the imposition of atheism, Muslims in Chechnya had managed to sufficiently corrupt minds and souls to convert godless socialists into killing machines for Allah. Only one problem, they weren’t very good at Allah’s craft yet. Today in Russian, a blast was avoided when Stavropol police found a cluster of grenades and fuses in the luggage section of a passenger bus on its way from Krasnodar to Makhachkala. The bus was evacuated and the grenades were rendered harmless. The involvement of Islam was suspected, given the Arab writing found on the bottom of an explosive box nearby.

A second explosive device was found and defused at a waste processing facility in Podolskiye Kursanty Street.

February 22, 2000: A firebomb was thrown at the Cemevi house of prayer by unidentified assailants in Turkey. The chairperson for Cemevi stated that this attack is, “an action aimed to provoke the existing atmosphere in this country.”.

Over the next three days there were three more bombs detonated in Turkey. The targets were a bank, a store owned by a democracy supporter, and a beer distributor.

February 22, 2001: An Israeli was wounded in a drive-by shooting attack while in his car at northern Jerusalem’s French Hill junction. Mortar shells were fired at the Gaza Strip settlement of Elei Sinai. Shots were fired at a bulletproof bus near the West Bank settlement of Migdalim. Mortar shells were lobbed into the Gaza Strip settlement of Dugit.

On This Day Since 9/11
February 22, 2002: Aragam, India. The Mujahideen attack four civilians, killing two of them.
February 22, 2002: Jerusalem, Israel. A 59-year-old man is murdered by a Palestinian terrorist while driving home from work
February 22, 2002: Karachi, Pakistan. Jewish journalist Daniel Pearl is kidnapped, held for several weeks, then killed by five Islamics. Videotape shows throat being cut.
February 22, 2003: Karachi, Pakistan. Nine Shi’ite worshippers are killed in a terrorist shooting attack outside a mosque. At least eight others are wounded.
February 22, 2003: Bandipore, India. The Mujahideen kill a young boy with a landmine
February 22, 2003: Draa El Mizan, Algeria. Two policeman are killed and one civilian is injured in a Muslim terrorist attack.February 22, 2004: Baghdad, Iraq. Two members of the Communist party are killed by a bomb in their office
February 22, 2004: Narathiwat, Thailand. A Buddhist monk is murdered by Islamic extremists.February 22, 2005: Afghanistan, Sangin. The Taliban stop a vehicle carrying two humanitarian aid workers then execute each with a shot to the back of the head
February 22, 2005: Baghdad, Iraq. Suicide bomber rams his car into a police convoy, killing four and injuring about thirty.

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February 22, 2006: Tashkent, Uzbekistan. A local Jewish leader and father of four is beaten to death.
February 22, 2006: Wana, Pakistan. al-Qaeda supported militants kill a village chief and injure three of his family members.

February 22, 2006: Sopore, India. The Mujahideen murder a woman outside her village
February 22, 2006: Kunduz, Afghanistan. Religious extremists set off a bicycle bomb, killing one civilian and injuring twelve.
February 22, 2006: al-Mashrugiya, Iraq. Two children and a woman are killed when terrorists set off a bomb near a primary school.
February 22, 2006: Baqubah, Iraq. Two brothers are among six people gunned down in two separate attacks by radical Sunnis.
February 22, 2006: Baghdad, Iraq. Three Sunni clerics are assassinated as Shias go on a mosque-burning rampage. Three guards are also killed.
February 22, 2007: Allah Bux Brohi, Pakistan. Two girls are hacked to death by their families for premarital sex.
February 22, 2007: Narathiwat, Thailand. A civilian is shot to death in a drive-by shooting by Muslim gunmen
February 22, 2007: Wahipora, India. A man is abducted by the Mujahideen, who kill him in captivity.
February 22, 2007:
Damhal Khushipora, India. Terrorists shoot a civilian to death
February 22, 2007: Kirkuk, Iraq. Five people are kidnapped, tortured and shot to death by sectarian rivalsFebruary 22, 2008: Tikrit, Iraq. Three people are killed when a suicide bomber rams his vehicle into a police station.
February 22, 2008: Garma, Iraq. A Fedayeen suicide bomber murders two Iraqis at a checkpoint.
February 22, 2008: Khost, Afghanistan. A suicide attack kills three Afghans
February 22, 2008: Swat, Pakistan. Bombers kill thirteen members of a wedding party traveling in a minibus.
February 22, 2008: Narathiwat, Thailand. Twenty-two migrant workers are injured when Islamists set off a bomb at a garbage dump.
February 22, 2008: Baghdad, Iraq. Various Jihad attacks leave at least eight Iraqis dead, including three children.
February 22, 2008: Fallujah, Iraq. Six people at a mosque are blown to bits by a suicide bomber.
February 22, 2008 Amsterdam, Holland – Fortis Bank will no longer give children a piggy-bank if they open an account. The company apparently is afraid of offending Muslims.

Fortis clients that open a EuroKids account for their children are given a present of a piggy-bank called Knorbert. But the bank is stopping this because “Knorbert does not meet the requirements that the multicultural society imposes on us,” yesterday’s De Telegraaf quoted a spokesman as saying.

Pigs are considered unclean animals by Jews and Muslims. An Internet campaign in which Knorbert played a leading role has also been halted by Fortis.

According to a spokeswoman, there have been “a number of reactions to the pig” and a new present is being worked on that is “fun for children of any persuasion whatever.” As an interim solution, the bank is currently offering a children’s encyclopaedia.

Later yesterday, Fortis tried to quash the suggestion that it was influenced by Islam. “The real story is a bit more balanced. “The Knorbert product has reached the end of its life-cycle,” was spokeswoman Marianne Honkoop’s attempt.


February 22, 2009 Yala, Thailand. A married couple were shot dead by separatist rebels in Thailand’s far south on Sunday, who then beheaded the husband and left his corpse in a rubber plantation, police said. The Thai man and wife, both in their late 30s, were on their way to tap rubber in Yala province at dawn on Sunday when they were ambushed by the militants. When security forces arrived to investigate, insurgents used a mobile phone signal to detonate explosives at the scene, injuring one policeman, officers in the province said. It was the third decapitation in the insurgency-hit far south in three days after militants beheaded two soldiers on Friday
February 22, 2009: London, Britain
Those of us who have been forced over just a few short years to become almost experts on the Cult of the Dead Paedophile have known for a long time that in fairness to Moslems, they do not just hate white people, they also hate each other,
Warnings of a “race war” between gangs of Somali and Afghan thugs have been sounded in London as the Third World colonisation of Britain increases. As details of the latest stabbing deaths in London unfolds, it appears that they are part of what locals have described as a “race war” between Afghan and Somali youths.

In the latest incident, 19-year-old Somali-born Kul Hawadleh was stabbed to death in Wealdstone, north-west London. He was knifed in the chest by a group of Afghanis who confronted him at a service station.A friend of Hawadlet, Abdul Hassan, 22, told a newspaper that he had been attacked “in a race gang war by Afghanis.” He said: ‘I’m sure the guys who killed Hassan didn’t know him; they are just targeting any Somalis.

Only a few hours later, yet another black youth was stabbed to death in Leytonstone Road, opposite Maryland rail station in east London. Bleir Xhana, 26, who runs a bar yards from where the second incident happened, said: “A customer walked in and said they saw a black guy just lying there on the zebra crossing near the station. I didn’t know what had happened to the boy but I was horrified and afraid. To be honest it is quite dangerous round here.”

Febuary 22 2009: Spas, Algeria. Islamic fundamentalists machine-gun nine local guards to death in an ambush.
Febuary 22 2009: Zaranj, Afghanistan. A local guard is taken down by suicide bombers.
Febuary 22 2009: Karachi, Pakistan. A man chops his 60-year-old sister into pieces on suspicion that she was having unmarried sex.
Febuary 22 2009: Mogadishu, Somalia. al-Shabaab suicide bombers take out eleven Burundi peacekeepers on their base.

Febuary 22 2009: Cairo, Egypt. Egyptian police said on Monday they have arrested three suspects over the bombing of a famed Cairo bazaar that killed a French teenager and wounded 25 people, most of them tourists.
People gather at one of the entrances of the Khan al-Khalili tourist area as security personnel cordon off the site of a bomb blast in Cairo.

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Published in: on February 22, 2009 at 12:08 am  Leave a Comment