Saturday, April 12, 2014

EGYPTIAN COLUMNIST MUST HAVE SMOKED SOME POTENT HASHISH BEFORE DEMANDING THAT ISRAEL PAY RESTITUTION FOR THE BIBLICAL 10 PLAGUES

Egyptian columnist Ahmad Al-Gamal must have smoked a shitload of hash before making his absurd demand for Israel to compensate Egypt for the biblical 10 plagues.

EGYPT DEMANDS COMPENSATION FOR 10 PLAGUES

Israel Today
April 11, 2014

“We demand that the State of Israel pay compensation for the ten plagues that our forefathers in Egypt suffered thousands of years ago as a result of the curses of the Jewish forefathers.” So wrote prominent Egyptian columnist Ahmad Al-Gamal shortly before the Jewish Passover, causing a great stir.

“What is written in the Torah is that Pharaoh discriminated against the children of Israel. What have we to do with it? We therefore need not suffer!” exclaimed Al-Gamal, drawing a clear difference between the Egyptian kingdom of the Pharaohs and Islamic Egypt of today. Islam accepts the biblical narrative as historical evidence.

The columnist suggested that the government in Cairo press charges against Israel: “The Jews caused the land to be stricken with locusts and all agriculture destroyed, turned the Nile red with blood so that one could drink its waters, sent darkness, frogs and killed the firstborn.”

Al-Gamal continued: “During 40 years of wandering in the desert, the Children of Israel enjoyed our goods, which they stole before abandoning us.” He also recommended that Egypt bring charges against France, Great Britain and Turkey for those nations’ historical conquests of Egypt.

The Egyptian column was picked up by the Israeli press, especially religious news outlets, which readily acknowledged all that Al-Gamal wrote as historical fact. Some Israeli columnists retorted that Egypt need first compensate Israel for keeping the Jewish forefathers as slaves and for killing all male Jewish babies in the generation prior to the Exodus.

1 comment:

bob walsh said...

Personally I think they should blame George Bush. It has worked so far.