Iraq and the Illuminati, facts and mysteries of the rise of Saddam Hussein's party

The growing war of guerrillas in Iraq has shown Saddam Hussein's Baath Party is much more flexible than any other Iraqi party. To understand their flexibility and fundamental force, it must be seen in the party's mystical origins. columnist Maureen Dowd says the Arabic word Baath means resurrection. But Baasha did not [...]
columnist Maureen Dowd says the Arabic word Baath means resurrection. But Baasha is not a well - translated English word. A better synonymous would be the Italian word Rysorgimeto.
In fact, the party had its origin in the small town of Assad, in western Iran. In 1839, Sayid Jamal ad-Din, a Muslim mystic sometimes known as al-afgan (Arab for Afghanistan-J, was born. T.) and “Eastern Saga. ”
Jamal ad-Din rose as a rain Muslim and, in 1845, his family enrolled him at an Islamic school in the holy city of Najafi in what is now Iraq.
Jamal was launched into <x0mesteries” by the followers of Sheik Ahmad Asai (1753-1826) and may also have had some family ties with the Babylonians, Sejed followers Ali Mohammed al-Bab, a imam heavily invested in politics, reports “Locking”, Transmission Periscope.
After years of studying Shia theology in Iraq's holy city of Nexhafi, he spent several years in India, Caucasus and Central Asia before appearing in Afghanistan as senior adviser to the pro-rus ruler.
Clearly, Yamal ad-Din was one of the Illuminati who actually set foot in Shambhala's hidden “city.
Travels and movements of Yamal ad-Dini in oculte circles led him to repeated contact with Elena Petrovna von Hahn Blavatsky during the 1850s and 1860s. He and Madame Blavatsky last met in Paris in 1884.
Through these oculta circuits, Jamali became friendly with the directors of the Doyum (Albanian Noom) regional headquarters in southern Lebanon, the sheik Meduel el-Mezrab and Lydia Paskov.
Between 1870 and 1875, the Illuminati evidently launched a project to replicate Italian carbonari in all Middle Eastern countries. Jamal began the dragon's <x0th toothpick first in Istanbul and then in Cairo, where he became a great mufti adviser.
A grandson of a Grand Mufti of Cairo on the last day is just Dr. Ayman al-Zawahiri, the second under al-Qaeda command.
In Istanbul, Jamal and Omar Pasha organised a masonic promenade, the Golden Square (from the symbols of the decoration and display of Freemasoneria-J.T.), which spread deeply into the troops of the Ottoman Turkish Army. But if the Golden Square was popular in Turkey, it caught fire in Iraq, especially in the “Sunni”, around the Ticriti region.
During World War I, the allies invaded Iraq, won a battle in Ctesiphone but crashed into Kut al-Amara, where their army was surrounded by Turks and Arabs. After their surrender, over 100,000 Allied soldiers went to a camp in western Turkey, P.O.W., and Golden Square was passing through Baghdad.
However, their success was brief. The Ottoman Empire collapsed in October 1918, and the new League of Nations gave Iraq a <x0mandat”. They created the feeling that they were deceived by their independence, tribes such as al-Bufahad and al-Bunasiri revolted and launched a guerrilla war that lasted until 1925.
During the 1920 ' s, a great captain of the Golden Square arrived in Baghdad. His name was Satya al-Housri and began organizing new plays. A former captain in the Ottoman Turkish Army, Rashid Ali al-Qaylan, now a member of the Golden Square, abandoned his legal practice to lead “national revolution”.
On October 3, 1932, the new kingdom of Iraq achieved its independence and joined the League of Nations. King Faisal had barely sat on the throne when the Golden Square struck.
General Bakr Sidqi, like Rashid Ali, was a former Turkish officer and a member of the Golden Club Square. In August 1933, he began a massacre against the Assyrian Christians, slaughtering thousands on protests by King Faisal.
On September 3, 1933, Faisal died and was followed by his son Ghazi, who, unknown to the old man, was a <x0 member of the secret brotherhood”. He ruled with concern for three years and then, in October 29, 1936, Bakr Sidqi decided to stop being polite and “destroyed the government in the first military coup of the Arab world”.
But Bakr Sidqi was very friendly with the Socialist Party Ahali, so on August 11th 1937, he was killed by “the housesmen's” of the Golden Square. Six military coups successfully followed, paving the way for Rashid Ali's rise in 1940.
During October 1932, the Golden Square received help from a sudden source of German Mystiques of the Thule Society. The new German ambassador to Baghdad, Fritz Grobe, was a member of Thule at a long time.
A year later, in October 1933, Grobe purchased an Iraqi daily newspaper, al-Alym al-Arab, where he began performing Arabic translations of Adolf Hitler's book Mein Kampf (German for My War) and numbers grew slightly. But when the staff began running the Protocols of Zion's Non - Apostles, the circulation number was cast into millions. All in Iraq were reading al-Alim al-Arab, including unreasonable shepherds such as Hussein al-Mayid, Saddam Hussein's future stepfather.
This led to “Iraq's” newspaper battle of 1930s, with al-Alym al-Arab and the Jewish daily al-Hasad, constantly teasing each other. Meanwhile, the Golden Square was building its “national revolution”, creating ideological organisations such as the Arab Culture and Society Mutana Beanha.
One of Rashid Ali's most fervent disciples was an Iraqi officer named Khayrallah al-Tulfah. His articles and his book Al-Madaris, El-Yahudiya wa al-Iraniya firak (To give a free translation goes like this: Against Iran and the Jews-J.T.) became the <x0ndre of the national revolution”.
But the best host of the Golden Square was Yunnis es-Sabai, who founded a massive movement for young Iraqis, Al-Fuillea, whom he modeled after Hitler of Germany (Hitler Youth). By 1939, Al-Futuwwa had grown to 63,000 members, complete in uniforms, battalions, daily lectures and military exercises, all fanatically loyal to Rashid Ali.
On April 1, 1941, marked the Golden Square. Four colonels organised a coup in Baghdad and declared Rashid Ali the new prime minister. He organised a <x0 government national defence” and opened negotiations for a military alliance with Hitler's Third Reich.
Partly because of the riots in Palestine, there had been anti-Hebrew violence in Iraq. In September 1936, three herbs were killed on a street in Baghdad.
In October 1937 an Iraqi nationalist bombed a Baghdad synagogue in Yom Kippur. But Rashid Ali's rise led to new riots. Anti-Hebrew demonstrations were held in Baghdad, Mosul, Kirkuk, Irbil and Amara, often ending the violence.
Unaware of losing Iraq and its Winston S oil. Churchill-ed British Army to bring down Rashid Ali. British troops sat down and took Basran on May 16, 1941. In sharp contrast with the invasion of 1915, the British quickly moved to Tiger and took Baghdad on May 30, 1941. Rashid Ali and his assistants fled to Iran.
Standing behind were Khayrallah al-Tulfah, who was immediately arrested and Yunnis es-Sabai, who had not been unemployed during Rashid Ali's brief rule.
Sabai had chosen the best fighters in Al-Futuwwa and had organized them into a new guerrilla army, al-Kataib a-Sabab (Arab for Youth Battalions), for attacks on the <x0-seat enemies of Iraq”.
The result was Al-Farhud, anti-Hebrew riots that took place throughout Baghdad. In all, 179 people were killed during the riots, and 2,18 were injured. The number of people whose property was robbed was placed at 48,584.
Undesirable brutality was carried out in Pegrom - rape, murder, and destruction of the bodies of children, women and men, young and old. The synagogues were profaned, and the letters of the Torah were polluted.
The Allies ' occupational authorities lashed out. Members of Ketaib a-Shabab were arrested and deported to Iran. The Golden Square went underground once more. But not for long. Sporadic attacks on Jews continued during World War II. On December 17th 1942, al-Keteib a-Shabab activists slit the throats of eight Jews in Sadur, northern Iraq.
On July 24, 1943, ten Iraqis met at a hotel in Damascus, Syria's capital, to find a new order, Al-Baath (Risorgimen i O - JT) almost four years later, in April 1947, the first Batath party meeting was held in Fallujah, Iraq. /Periscopi/