Here's some more jewels of loveliness from the agents of filthy hate in the
Middle East.  I could very well be wrong, but I've yet to hear a damn thing
about anything this sickening from the other side.

>From www.memri.org  :

Ramadan TV Special: The Protocols of the Elders of Zion

During the second half of Ramadan, a number of television stations,
including Egyptian stations, will be screening the thirty-part
series "Horseman Without a Horse," starring the well-known Egyptian
actor Muhammad Subhi and a cast of 400 others from Egypt, Syria, and
France. The series, whose budget ran six to eight million Egyptian
pounds, was produced by Arab Radio and Television (ART), established
in 1993, which broadcasts to the Middle East, North America, Latin
America, Australia, and Africa.(1)

In a report on the series, the Egyptian weekly Roz Al-Youssuf(2)
described it as the "first of its kind" - both artistically, as it is
the first time a single actor plays 14 different characters, and in
the way in which it deals with the issues it raises. The following
are excerpts from a report on the series:

"For the first time, the series' writer courageously tackles the 24
Protocols of the Elders of Zion, revealing them and clarifying that
they are the central line that still, to this very day, dominates
Israel's policy, political aspirations, and racism... The series'
first scene is set in 1948, after the retreat of the four Arab armies
and the Zionist invasion of the land of Palestine. From this point,
there is a flashback to the mid-19th century."

The newspaper states that the idea of exposing the Protocols of the
Elders of Zion in a drama series took shape in Subhi's mind as the
result of two events. The first of these was the "London Convention"
[sic], which he considered the greatest single calamity ever to
affect the Arab region. This agreement, Subhi claimed, was the work
of three Zionist rabbis, promoters of the Zionist idea, who concocted
an elaborate plot according to which Palestine would be annexed to
Egypt, and Britain would subsequently conquer Egypt and hand
Palestine over to the Zionists.

Subhi stated that this is what sparked his desire to investigate the
Zionist idea, which existed years before the "London Convention," but
emerged only at the first Zionist conference in Basle Switzerland, at
which the Jews began to appear as a Zionist organization; previously,
they had been active only in associations and large institutions
throughout the world.

Also motivating him, he said, was a book by the Egyptian author Abbas
Mahmoud Al-'Aqqad on the Zionist movement. Al-'Aqqad said that, "[In
order to examine] whether the Protocols of the Elders of Zion are an
invention - as [the Jews] claim - all we have to do is to trace the
[implementation of the] 24 protocols; if we find that some of them
have come to pass, we must expect that the rest also will." Subhi
followed Al-'Aqqad's advice, and found that 19 of the 24 protocols
had [already] been put into practice. "By means of the series," Subhi
adds, "I am exposing all the Protocols of the Elders of Zion that
have been implemented to date, in a dramatic, comic, historic,
national, tragic, and romantic manner."

The weekly also offered quotes from the Protocols that the series
addresses:

"We will act to establish a state to be a superpower that will rule
the world"; "[When we rule the world], we will damage its morality
with pornography, prostitution, and drugs, and we will corrupt the
world of the Gentiles"; "We must choose someone corrupt [for the
presidency of the superpower] and when he resists us - we will expose
him." In this context, Subhi noted, "We all remember what happened to
President Clinton and to other presidents throughout history."

The series will also reveal "advice" reportedly taken from the
Protocols, such as: "Feed a dog, [but] not a Muslim or a Christian"
and "Kill a Muslim or a Christian and take his house as your house
and his lands as your lands." He also raises such questions as, "How
can a country like America collaborate with the Jews when it is
familiar with the Protocols' directives against it [America]?"

**********

Adam C. Lipscomb
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
"Don't hit at all if it is honorably possible to avoid hitting; but never
hit
soft." - Teddy Roosevelt



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