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Khalid Bin Walid Mosque/Shrine completely destroyed in Syria!

if F$A terrorists really cared about the mosque and the shrine, they would have not used it for their terrorism... Syrian army will follow them no matter where they are at...

in addition F$A terrorists destroyed many mosques and churches.... a stone can be rebuilt but a live can't be restored, thus we are willing to sacrifice a stone that can be rebuilt, now about the tomb, it is not damaged or anything...

F$A terrorists are nothing but bunch of cowards who hide in worship houses to destroy them...

btw I thought that Sunnis do not like shrines?

Also everything in Syria was peaceful, the mosques have never been destroyed, till "democratic" F$A terrorists came to Syria, everything turned into ruins... if F$A cared about Syrians and the cities they would fight away from people, in the deserts and etc. not between people to use them as human shields..
 
if F$A terrorists really cared about the mosque and the shrine, they would have not used it for their terrorism... Syrian army will follow them no matter where they are at...

in addition F$A terrorists destroyed many mosques and churches.... a stone can be rebuilt but a live can't be restored, thus we are willing to sacrifice a stone that can be rebuilt, now about the tomb, it is not damaged or anything...

F$A terrorists are nothing but bunch of cowards who hide in worship houses to destroy them...

btw I thought that Sunnis do not like shrines?

Also everything in Syria was peaceful, the mosques have never been destroyed, till "democratic" F$A terrorists came to Syria, everything turned into ruins... if F$A cared about Syrians and the cities they would fight away from people, in the deserts and etc. not between people to use them as human shields..






history is simply repeated but at worst turn...like father like son...crude ways how unpopular dictators involved in wide spread civilian massacre justify themseves



History of Syria - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The government was not without its critics, though open dissent was repressed. A serious challenge arose in the late 1970s, however, from fundamentalist Sunni Muslims, who rejected the secular values of the Ba'ath program and objected to rule by the Shia Alawis. After the Islamic Revolution in Iran, Muslim groups instigated uprisings and riots in Aleppo, Homs and Hama and attempted to assassinate Assad in 1980. In response, Assad began to stress Syria's adherence to Islam. At the start of Iran-Iraq war, in September 1980, Syria supported Iran, in keeping with the traditional rivalry between Ba'athist leaderships in Iraq and Syria. The arch-conservative Muslim Brotherhood, centered in the city of Hama, was finally crushed in February 1982 when parts of the city were hit by artillery fire and leaving between 10,000 and 25,000 people, mostly civilians, dead or wounded (see Hama massacre).[33] The government's actions at Hama have been described as possibly being "the single deadliest act by any Arab government against its own people in the modern Middle East".[34] Since then, public manifestations of anti-government activity have been limited.[12]
 
history is simply repeated but at worst turn...like father like son...crude ways how unpopular dictators involved in wide spread civilian massacre justify themseves



History of Syria - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The government was not without its critics, though open dissent was repressed. A serious challenge arose in the late 1970s, however, from fundamentalist Sunni Muslims, who rejected the secular values of the Ba'ath program and objected to rule by the Shia Alawis. After the Islamic Revolution in Iran, Muslim groups instigated uprisings and riots in Aleppo, Homs and Hama and attempted to assassinate Assad in 1980. In response, Assad began to stress Syria's adherence to Islam. At the start of Iran-Iraq war, in September 1980, Syria supported Iran, in keeping with the traditional rivalry between Ba'athist leaderships in Iraq and Syria. The arch-conservative Muslim Brotherhood, centered in the city of Hama, was finally crushed in February 1982 when parts of the city were hit by artillery fire and leaving between 10,000 and 25,000 people, mostly civilians, dead or wounded (see Hama massacre).[33] The government's actions at Hama have been described as possibly being "the single deadliest act by any Arab government against its own people in the modern Middle East".[34] Since then, public manifestations of anti-government activity have been limited.[12]
look up MB terrorism in Syria...
 
actually i wanted to give my opinions on shia sunni conflict from a non muslim perspective without trying to hurt either of them but pdf doesnt allow such discussions.i feel pdf shld allow such discussions as long as it doesnt go over board.

Both of them get emotional because they tend to stupid. They still have not learned that they have to co exist or they would continue to fight and serve the purpose of some powers who benefit arming both sides.

when was the current mosque build.

It was a shrine that might have been build around the late 7th century. not sure though, but it seems to be very old.
 

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