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FROM JOSEPH FARAH'S G2 BULLETIN
Iran leader's messianic end-times mission
Ahmadinejad raises concerns with mystical visions
World Net Daily
Infosearch:
Máximo Tomás
Research Dept.
La Nueva Cuba
April 21, 2006
Iranian President
Mahmoud's Ahmadinejad's mystical pre-occupation with the coming
of a Shiite Islamic messiah figure the Mahdi is raising
concerns that a nuclear-armed Islamic Republic could trigger the
kind of global conflagration he envisions will set the stage for
the end of the world.
While Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad has been making headlines lately by questioning whether
the Holocaust actually happened, by suggesting Israel should be
moved to Europe and by demanding the Jewish state be wiped off the
face of the earth, his apocalyptic religious zealotry has received
less attention.
In a videotaped
meeting with Ayatollah Javadi-Amoli in Tehran, Ahmadinejad discussed
candidly a strange, paranormal experience he had while addressing
the United Nations in New York last September.
He recounts
how he found himself bathed in light throughout the speech. But
this wasn't the light directed at the podium by the U.N. and television
cameras. It was, he said, a light from heaven.
According to
a transcript of his comments, obtained and translated by Joseph
Farah's G2 Bulletin, Ahmadinejad wasn't the only one who noticed
the unearthly light. One of his aides brought it to his attention.
The Iranian
president recalled being told about it by one of his delegation:
"When you began with the words in the name of Allah,'
I saw a light coming, surrounding you and protecting you to the
end."
Ahmadinejad
agreed that he sensed the same thing.
"On the
last day when I was speaking, one of our group told me that when
I started to say 'Bismillah Muhammad,' he saw a green light come
from around me, and I was placed inside this aura," he says.
"I felt it myself. I felt that the atmosphere suddenly changed,
and for those 27 or 28 minutes, all the leaders of the world did
not blink. When I say they didn't move an eyelid, I'm not exaggerating.
They were looking as if a hand was holding them there, and had just
opened their eyes Alhamdulillah!"
Ahmadinejad's
"vision" at the U.N. is strangely reminiscent and alarmingly
similar to statements he has made about his personal role in ushering
in the return of the Shiite Muslim messiah.
He sees his
main mission, as he recounted in a Nov. 16 speech in Tehran, as
to "pave the path for the glorious reappearance of Imam Mahdi,
may Allah hasten his reappearance."
According to
Shiites, the 12th imam disappeared as a child in the year 941. When
he returns, they believe, he will reign on earth for seven years,
before bringing about a final judgment and the end of the world.
Ahmadinejad
is urging Iranians to prepare for the coming of the Mahdi by turning
the country into a mighty and advanced Islamic society and by avoiding
the corruption and excesses of the West.
All Iran is
buzzing about the Mahdi, the 12th imam and the role Iran and Ahmadinejad
are playing in his anticipated return. There's a new messiah hotline.
There are news agencies especially devoted to the latest developments.
"People
are anxious to know when and how will He rise; what they must do
to receive this worldwide salvation," says Ali Lari, a cleric
at the Bright Future Institute in Iran's religious center of Qom.
"The timing is not clear, but the conditions are more specific,"
he adds. "There is a saying: 'When the students are ready,
the teacher will come.'"
For his part,
Ahmadinejad is living up to at least part of his call to the faithful.
According to reports, he lives so modestly that declared assets
include only a 30-year-old car, an even older house and an empty
bank account.
Ahmadinejad
and others in Iran are deadly serious about the imminent return
of the 12th imam, who will prompt a global battle between good and
evil (with striking parallels to biblical accounts of "Armageddon").
An institute
set up in 2004 for the study and dissemination of information about
the Mahdi now has a staff of 160 and influence in the schools and
children's magazines.
In Iran, theologians
say endtimes beliefs appeal to one-fifth of the population. And
the Jamkaran mosque east of Qom, 60 miles south of Tehran, is where
the link between devotees and the Mahdi is closest.
Ahmadinejad's
cabinet has given $17 million to Jamkaran.
Shiite writings
describe events surrounding the return of the Mahdi in apocalyptic
terms. In one scenario, the forces of evil would come from Syria
and Iraq and clash with forces of good from Iran. The battle would
commence at Kufa the Iraqi town near the holy city of Najaf.
Even more controversial
is Ahmadinejad's repeated invocation of Imam Mahdi, known as "the
Savior of Times." According to Shiite tradition, Imam Mahdi
will appear on Judgment Day to herald a truly just government.
Missed by some
observers in Ahmadinejad's speech at the U.N. was his call to the
"mighty Lord" to hasten the emergence of "the promised
one," the one who "will fill this world with justice and
peace."
Who stands in the Mahdi's way?
A top priority
of Ahmadinejad is "to challenge America, which is trying to
impose itself as the final salvation of the human being, and insert
its unjust state [in the region]," says Hamidreza Taraghi,
head of the conservative Islamic Coalition Society.
Taraghi says
the U.S. is "trying to place itself as the new Mahdi."
This may mean no peace with Iran, he adds, "unless America
changes its hegemonic ... thinking, doesn't use nuclear weapons,
[or] impose its will on other nations."
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