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Muslims Praise Key Mideast Leader 'Like God'

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  • Muslims Praise Key Mideast Leader 'Like God'

    MUSLIMS PRAISE KEY MIDEAST LEADER 'LIKE GOD'

    World News Daily
    April 6 2015

    Supporters say he has 'all the attributes of Allah'

    Leo Hohmann

    Reports continue to pop up in Middle East publications that Turkey's
    leader, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, is seen within his ruling AK Party as
    more than just a president.

    Consider the following reports out of Turkey:

    A billboard has appeared in the GölbaÅ~_ı district of Adıyaman
    province inviting people to attend a "holy birthday" event to celebrate
    Erdogan's birthday. The negative reaction this billboard received
    on social media stems from the fact that such an event is usually
    held to celebrate the birth of the Prophet Muhammad. The billboard
    was an invitation to "a program of unity and togetherness organized
    on the occasion of the birthday of our president." The event was
    organized by the GölbaÅ~_ı Municipality, reported Today's Zaman,
    a secular Turkish newspaper. No government officials or supporters
    have objected to the billboard or the statements.

    AK Party Bursa deputy Huseyin Å~^ahin said touching Erdogan is a form
    of prayer, while AK Party Duzce deputy Fevai Arslan said Erdogan has
    "all the attributes" of God.

    Last year during a political rally, as a woman fainted, Erdogan
    gestured to the crowd to carry the woman up to the platform, where he
    touched her, causing her to shake out of her spell, shouting, "Allah
    Akbar!" The headline at Vocativ.com read: "Prime Minister 'heals'
    sick woman on campaign trail." (Watch video of the "healing" here.)

    A March 30 article for Al Monitor by columnist Mustafa Akyol notes
    that devotion to Erdogan or "Erdoganism" is "morphing into an ideology
    unto itself, disillusioning veterans of Turkey's Islamist movement."

    Akyol, whose articles also appear in the International New York Times,
    the Wall Street Journal and the Turkish Hurriyet Daily News, wrote:

    "Pro-Erdogan propaganda, to which almost half the Turkish media is now
    fully devoted, has taken the shape of a cult of personality, which is
    also not a typical Islamist phenomenon. A recent book, 'Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan: The Sun of the Age,' proudly refers to him as 'an idol for our
    youth,' which would sound bizarre, if not heretical, to the average
    Islamist. In 2011, an AKP deputy declared, 'Even touching Erdogan is
    a form of worship,' and in 2014 another AKP deputy proclaimed that
    Erdogan 'carries all the attributes of Allah in himself.' Such views,
    heretical from a traditional Islamic perspective, were criticized and
    ridiculed by Erdogan's opponents, but he conspicuously said nothing."

    Voice crying in the wilderness

    Joel Richardson, author of "The Islamic Antichrist" and director of
    the documentary film "End Times Eyewitness," does not believe Erdogan
    is the Antichrist. But he has been warning for years that something
    is going on in Turkey worth watching, and that this country of 78
    million people and home to the region's largest army could ultimately
    be more dangerous than ISIS or even Iran. In short, it is fertile
    ground for an antichrist figure to rise up and lead a large portion
    of the world's 1.5 million Muslims.

    The acclaimed documentary film "End Times Eyewitness" explores what
    Christian, Muslim and Jewish leaders in the Middle East are saying
    about the times in which we live, the prospect of rebuilding the
    Jewish Temple and the return of a messianic figure in the last days.

    It's available in the WND Superstore.

    It should be remembered that the death toll caused by ISIS, which
    has shocked the world with its brutality toward Christians and other
    religious minorities, is still miniscule compared to the genocidal
    feats of the Ottoman Empire, which slaughtered 1.5 million Armenian
    Christians and another million or so Greek Orthodox, Syriac Orthodox
    and Protestant Christians. The 100th anniversary of the Armenian
    genocide is being commemorated on April 24.

    What do YOU think? Where will the Antichrist come from? Sound off in
    the WND Poll

    More than four years ago, while being interviewed for Glenn Beck's
    documentary, "Rumors of War Part 2," Richardson made the statement
    that in Erdogan, "We have the modern-day Adolf Hitler of the Middle
    East emerging right before our eyes."

    This seemed like an extreme statement to make at the time. But in
    light of recent developments, Richardson's assessment of Erdogan now
    appears less controversial.

    "He is a megalomaniacal dictator of the worst stripe, in a nation
    where nationalism is a religion, and that celebrates excessive exalted
    leadership like their Sultans of the past," Richardson told WND.

    It is nearly impossible for most Americans to grasp the degree of
    nationalism that exists in Turkey, he said.

    That's why he tried to provide a taste of the leader-worship during a
    rally he filmed for "End Times Eyewitness." Richardson gives viewers
    of this documentary a front-row seat at an AKP rally in which a sea of
    adoring fans wave flags and chant songs to exult their leader, Erdogan.

    Watch clip of Nazi-like rally in Turkey captured by the documentary
    "End Times Eyewithness."

    "When we look back at the Nazi rallies, we recoil at the way Germans
    had an almost religious devotion to their nation and to their leader,
    Adolf Hitler," Richardson says. "Although there is a strong contingency
    of those who do not support Erdogan in Turkey, for those of the AK
    party who do, their support for him is nearly religious."

    Man of the hour?

    Not only is Erdogan the embodiment of Turkish success over the past
    decade, but more importantly, he is the embodiment of Turkey's future
    aspirations, specifically at a time when many Muslims believe Islam
    is rising up to take its rightful place in the world.

    It remains to be seen whether Erdogan's god-like appeal among his
    own party in Turkey will translate beyond his borders. Right now
    he is just one of several international Muslim leaders competing
    for influence among the wider "uma" of Muslim believers. Abu Bakr
    Al-Baghdadi, the leaver of the ISIS caliphate, would surely have
    something to say about who leads the restored Ottoman Empire.

    "As so much of the Muslim world now believes that we are on the very
    cusp of the messianic age or the age of the Mahdi, Erdogan is looked to
    (by his followers) as the chosen one, poised to lead the Turks into a
    position of exalted leadership over the Islamic community, and thus
    the world," Richardson said. "In the eyes of many religious Turks,
    Erdogan is the one who will forever enshrine the Turkish people as
    divinely ones, the race called by Allah to lead the world."

    Some Christian prophecy watchers, such as Walid Shoebat, believe
    Erdogan is essentially claiming to be God by not rebuking those who
    have anointed him with such lofty status.

    Richardson doesn't go this far.

    "This isn't really true, although he is most certainly pushing the
    boundaries of orthodox Islam and upsetting some imams in the process,"
    he said. "In the same way that President Obama imbibed upon and played
    up the messianic devotion that swirled around him during his candidacy,
    so also is Erdogan playing the Mahdi card."

    The similarities between Nazi Germany and present-day Turkey can be
    seen in numerous ways.

    It is plainly evident in the philosophy of Turkey's prime minister,
    Ahmet Davutoglu, who is the architect of the Islamist party of Turkey's
    rise to success over the past decade.

    In his 2001 book, "Strategic Depth," Davutoglu draws upon the political
    philosophy of German Karl Haushofer, who popularized the idea of
    Lebensraum, or living space, a phrase employed by Germany during
    the 1920s and 1930s to emphasize the need to expand its borders into
    Austria, Poland, Czechoslovakia and beyond.

    Davutoglu believes the nations established after the breakup of the
    Ottoman Empire are artificial Western creations.

    "Turkey must reclaim these nations in order to carve out its own
    Lebensraum - a phrase he uses unapologetically throughout his book,"
    Richardson said. "Davutoglu argues that reclaiming the nations that
    comprise the former Ottoman Empire is an act of saving them. He
    believes it would bring about the cultural and economic unification
    of the Islamic world, which Turkey will lead into the messianic era."

    And every messianic era needs a messiah.

    "In the imagination of many Turks, Erdogan is the man to fill this
    role," Richardson said.

    "In the years ahead, the world must keep its eyes on the profoundly
    dangerous combination of Islamism and messianic nationalism that has
    arisen in Turkey," he said. "Never before have we seen a moment where
    so many dangerous trends are all emerging at the same time."

    http://www.wnd.com/2015/04/muslims-praise-key-mideast-leader-like-god/#azZP5WmUgs44KyXq.99


    From: Baghdasarian
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