The last link below is a report by Gilber Doktorow on the concert held a
few days ago in Palmyra, the city liberated from ISIS by Russia and the Syrian
army. But the main take-away is the amazing way the entire Western press managed
to belittle this earth-shaking reconquest of Palmyra and the bravery of the
participants in this concert.
The religious war on Russia is completely ignored everywhere but it is
real. I am constantly hearing from people who have bought the old myth that
Russia is mentioned in the Bible as an adversary of Israel. This is pure
Russophobic fantasy going back almost a century to the beginnings of the Cold
War. It has been skilfully debunked, for example, here: http://www.wnd.com/2012/06/ the-truth-about-gog-and-magog/ .
BTW, a while back I found and downloaded a translation of the ancient Assyrian
court records containing the mention of Magog, which has been identified as a
place in Turkey, nowhere near Russia.
The arguments presented when this myth first surfaced in fundamentalist
circles were all material, not spiritual. The argument was that Magog must be
Russia because many years after the prophecy was made, the Scythians supposedly
settled there and centuries later, they migrated to the Caucasus and the region
around the Caspian Sea, which today are mostly Muslim: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ Islam_in_Russia.
The material (as opposed to spiritual) argument is that the Scythians
suggest a Russian identity.
The probem is, they were not Slavic peoples. They were Iranic peoples, ie,
of Persian ethnicity and language. And although they later settled in what is
today Russia, they are not nor ever were Russians, nor are the people living in
that region of Russia majority Russians. It is hard to say who the descendants
of the Scythians were because they were largely absorbed by the Proto-Slavs.
However, no historian, archeologist, anthropologist, archeologist or ethnologist
would state that Russians are descended from Scythians or that there ever was a
known relationship between the inhabitants of Magog and today's Russians.
Therefore, even if Magog was inhabited by Scythians (which is not known), there
is no ethnic, cultural, historical or linguistic tie between them and today's
Russians.
Thus, the whole material foundation of this myth is shattered and it is
time for Christians to acknowledge this and stop hating on Russians.
Don Hank
Doktorow's article on the remarkable Palmyra concert:
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