Ria_Longhorn
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- Apr 2, 2017
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There was no bias, in fact, it is the translation of the French text that was written contemporaneously with the film. As far as mosques in Ottoman Palestine circa 1900s, here are some photos of a few of the hundreds of mosques in Ottoman Palestine. You see, the Hasbara propaganda you read and are trying to spread is bullshit. Propaganda is all the Zionists have, and you have been brainwashed to believe and propagate it. In 1900 there were about 700,000 people only 70,000 were Jews after many decades of European Jew migration, the rest were Muslim and Christians. Do you really believe there were no mosques. LOL
Famous Mosques in the Palestinian Territories
Is English your second language? I said "especially the Muslim calls to prayer" in the audio to refer to the bias of your film.
You must still be stinging from the nerves I am hitting since you still have to include your usual names when cornered. Also when cornered, you put words into others mouths. I NEVER said there were no mosques, I am simply asking how many?
Which brings me to your link. Wow. 15. Granted they are the most famous, but again, where is the Al Aqsa in that list?
Where in this link is there more than just a passing mention of any mosque in Israel?:
Mosque - Wikipedia
There were hundreds of mosques in what is now Israel. As far as Al Aqsa, built in 705 AD.
Al-Aqsa Mosque, also known as Al-Aqsa and Bayt al-Muqaddas, is the third holiest site in Sunni Islam and is located in the Old City of Jerusalem. Wikipedia
Address: Jerusalem
Opened: 705 AD
Minaret height: 121′ 0″
Give it up, you are trying to support Zionist propaganda, essentially lies.
Greco-Roman historian Cassius Dio (164-c.235) does not mention any mosques in Jerusalem but he does mention the Jewish Temple: "At Jerusalem, Hadrian founded a city in place of the one which had been razed to the ground, naming it Aelia Capitolina, and on the site of the TEMPLE ... he raised a new temple to Jupiter.
This brought on a war of no slight importance nor of brief duration, for the JEWS deemed it intolerable that foreign races should be settled in THEIR city and foreign religious rites planted there." [All emphases mine] (From Cassius Dio, Roman history 69.12.1)