Saturday, March 26, 2016

Indian connection to Baalbek, Lebanon & Alleppo, Syria cities

🌸 Phoenician Temple, Baalbek



".... In Lebanon, there is a place called Baalbek, where there is a Phoenician temple a few thousand years old. It is a huge, massive temple where some of the foundation stones weigh three hundred tons. Indian engineers of that time transported it up the mountain and built this. There are sculpted lotus flowers hanging from the ceiling. Obviously there are no lotuses in Lebanon, it was sculpted by Indian sculptors. And above all, in the museum at Baalbek, there is a stone with 16 corners called a Guru Pooja stone. ...."



🌋 How did our ancestors move 300 ton stones up that hill when there were no great Western technologies around?

🌋 Why do Parangi historians & religionists hide/remove any reference to Indians in those times?

🌋 Why aren't we studying about such amazing fetes of our ancestors?

(Forget such ancient past. Take Jallianwala bagh massacre. We know about the son of the Parangi-B???? General Dyer. But, we don't know about Uttam Singh who spent 20 years roaming around in different disguises to locate Dyer and shot him dead. This heroic fete is hidden from us. Why? 🌋🌋)

Because the inferior native & black population shouldn't even think of standing up against the superior White trashes. 😡

🌺 Alleppo City, Syria



"It used to be a major taxation city for Indian traders for thousands of years."

Before the barbarians inhabiting that land learned to tax our traders and flourish, they were robbing them (looks like robbing is Parangis' staple job)!! Then, our traders must have taught them to rob legally (ie. tax) instead of illegal means. (நாங்க யாரு! 😉)

Legal robbing is perennial!! Illegal robbing is one time or limited!!! 😂😂

Like Baalbek, internet is full of info about this city. As usual, no reference to Indians! Thank the Parangi historians!! 😁

☀Source: Based on Bha-Ra-Ta, a book published by Isha Foundation

posted from Bloggeroid

5 comments:

  1. You have a nice way of putting it "Parangis". Ha ha. But I agree with you. Our History books were written by British and Leftists. They hate anything that gives pride to Indians. When we were in school, we studied about Aryan Invasion Theory, which we now know was a hoax and was part of Divide-and-Rule policy.

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  2. All History is in praise and glorification of the mighty of the Victor. Regardless of the means, dubious and craftiness or monetised brute strength by show of power! Women were victims not by choice as depicted in movies but often temptation and duress! How often do we rationally analyse and study causes of failure? And we all by now know well A lie repeated a 100 times sounds like truth!

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  3. Stop with the fake news. No it was not built by Indians at all.

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    1. Well there are many scholars who have stated that this was a Hindu construction. For example, Geoffrey Higgins say that the Hebrew god Baal was none other than Balrama, the elder brother of Krishna. That's one. Second, Max Mueller had stated that the whole persona of Baal is mix of the personality of the Hindu God's Sri Rama and Krishna. H.P. Blavatsky and Pococke are other writers who have put the same view. It will take a while for the truth to come out. Even Aristotle had said that the Jews and their god's had the origins in the Hindu Pantheon. This is stated in the writings of his disciple by the name Clearchus in his first book called 'Sleep'. You can check this information at https://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/articles/1774-aristotle-in-jewish-legend and the rest of the links at https://vediccafe.blogspot.com/2023/05/ancient-lebanon-indic-link-to-temple-of.html

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  4. If not Indian then people who believed in the culture and belief system still prevelant in India, of which has been colonised and converted by Arab and European religious crusaders throughout the rest of the world. So the culture and belief of those who built the temple where closer in ideology to India than that of the current people of lebanon who are Arabic Islamic and theoloigcally reject such belief and history.

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