How Al Jazeera And News Arabia would have reported the fall of Jericho 3,400 years ago. [ Title: The Fall of Jericho: A Devastation . ] By: Ahmed Baby Oyell Kazim Saud bin Abd Shakalakatula bin 2PacMosaMos, Son of Abdollar Bin 4Q
The fall of Jericho is traditionally dated to around 1400 BCE, based on biblical accounts, particularly in the Book of Joshua. This places it approximately 3,400 years ago. Archaeological evidence suggests that Jericho experienced a significant destruction layer during the Late Bronze Age, which aligns with the biblical timeline, it remains a subject of debate among scholars regarding the exact dates and historical context.
How Al Jazeera And News Arabia would have reported the fall of Jericho 3,400 years ago.
Al Jazeera: The Canaanite Chronicles
Date: [Fictional 1400 BCE]
Title: The Fall of Jericho: A Devastation
By: Ahmed Baby Oyell Kazim Saud bin Abd Shakalakatula bin 2PacMosaMos, Son of Abdollar Bin 4Q
As the dust settles on the ancient ruins of Jericho, the echoes of a tragic past remind us of the human cost buried in tales of conquest. This once-thriving city, revered in the archives of history, now serves as a symbol of unspeakable suffering. According to an eye witness called Mr Shin zen ZIn of the Chinese National Bank, the Israelites were under a certain warlord called Sergeant Major Joshua's command, he executed what they believed to be a divine edict not from Alat but from a new god called Yahweh.
Yet, the consequences of this mandate resonate deeply within Canaanite society, a not so pleasant story often obscured by the victors' triumphalism.
A City Under Siege
The fall of Jericho started with a strategic operation, with the Israelites encircling the city for seven harrowing days. The fateful moment arrived when the city’s walls crumbled, paving the way for an invasion that would lead to the decimation of its inhabitants.
Every man, woman, and child were killed, leaving only Rahab and her family to escape.
For the citizens of Jericho, this siege was not merely a military maneuver but a cataclysmic event that shattered their lives. Eyewitness accounts describe a city engulfed in terror and chaos as families were torn apart. "We could only watch as our world crumbled around us," said an elder Mr Osama Bin Kassim Dalen, whose family had called Jericho home for generations. "The streets that once echoed with laughter now covered in blood and with despair and grief."
The Aftermath: Displacement and Loss
With the dust of destruction settling, survivors faced the brutal reality of displacement as refugees and forced migrants.
Those who managed to escape the initial assault were left grappling with a landscape forever altered by violence. Many fled to the surrounding hills, looking for refuge in neighboring territories, only to come across the ancestors and progenitors of Elon musk, Farage ETC, the usual anti refugee people who treated already toxicated people with more toxi-cism, xenophobia, racism, suspicion and hostility.
"Our lives were shattered; we lost everything," shared another survivor Mrs Ishmel, a young mother clutching her child who was on vacation, originally from Paris but she was visiting loved ones who are now deceased during the strike.
"We are now wanderers, desperately searching for a place to call home." The plight of these individuals raises serious questions about the humanitarian ramifications of and their enduring impact on cultures and communities.
It's becomes essential to amplify the voices of those who suffered. The destruction of Jericho goes way beyond a story of military brutality and genocide/ conquest; it is a harrowing reminder of the human toll exacted by war.
The Canaanite experience, often overshadowed by the victorious narrative of the Israelites, stands as a powerful reminder that these peoples must be honored and remembered and reconciliation over division and violence is the only tool we currently have at least in my opinion to pave way for a future where history does not repeat its tragic mistakes.
By: Ahmed Baby Oyell Kazim Saud bin Abd Shakalakatula bin 2PacMosaMos, Son of Abdollar Bin 4Q
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