😔 A Genocide
the Carnal World Has Willfully Ignored
📦 Ethiopian Axum obelisk stargate registered a 44-hour quantum-key breach countdown initiated by the self-styled “Order of the Black Sun” remnant inside the Negev nuclear complex.
✞
The Axum Massacre: The CIA sent Ilhan Omar to Somalia and Eritrea to
Organize the Massacre of Ethiopian Christians!
Over a thousand Christian
Keepers of The Ark of The Covenant were massacred by The Forces of
The Antichrist.
From
27. to 29.
November 2020 USAID funded Muslim soldiers
from Ethiopia, Eritrea and Somalia armed by Iran, UAE and Turkey went
on the rampage in Axum, a Holy City in Ethiopia’s northern Tigray
region, whose main Church of Our Lady Mary of Zion is believed by
Ethiopian Orthodox Christians to hold The Biblical Ark of Covenant.
Over
the course of 24 hours, the Muslim soldiers went door to door
summarily shooting unarmed young men and boys. Some of the victims
were as young as 13.
The
Christians were slaughtered trying to stop real-life raiders of The
Lost Ark — a Treasure so Powerful and Holy they were forbidden from
ever seeing it.
💭 In
Ethiopia; From November 2020 till today:
❖ – 1.5
Million Orthodox Christians were
brutally Massacred
❖ – 200.000 Orthodox
Christian Women, children and nuns were Raped and abused
❖ – Over a Million
Ethiopians were forced to migrate to other countries
❖ – 4.4 million
internally displaced people severely impacted by conflict,
hostilities and climate shocks
❖ – Over a Million
female Ethiopian slaves sold to Arab countries
❖ – 20 million
Ethiopian forced to experience food insecurity
by
the UAE funded and armed terrorist and fascist Oromo Islamic army of
the Nobel Peace Laureate genocidal Prime
Minster, Abiy Ahmed Ali and his UN, Arab, Israeli, Turkish, Iranian,
European, American, Russian, Ukrainian and
African allies.
📦
Secret CIA Files Claim Ark of The Covenant Has Been Found And it
May Lie Somewhere in Ethiopia
A
Dublin-trained bishop in Ethiopia has told the Irish News how civil
war has put his country through “hell on earth.”
Bishop
Tesfasellassie Medhin, of the Ethiopian Catholic Eparchy of Adigrat
in Ethiopia, studied with the Jesuits in Dublin during the 1980s and
returned to Ireland for a visit this year.
At his office
in Adigrat Catholic Church, located in the vast mountain range in the
northern Tigray region of Ethiopia, pictures on the wall show him
shaking hands with three Popes - Benedict, Francis and Leo.
Happily
namechecking Irish placenames from Maynooth to Randalstown and
Kircubbin, he speaks fondly of the longstanding bond between his
country and Ireland, including decades of support from NGOs like
Trócaire.
With Tigray
devastated by the civil war between 2020-22, Bishop Medhin speaks
with a quiet anger at the harm the conflict is still causing.
“The Tigray
population have been through hell on earth,” he said.
“If people
can name it, it’s a genocide at best…in a country where over a
million lives are lost and a horrific number of gender violence and
mutilated young people, people destroyed as families, infrastructure,
economic resources.”
He describes
one personal experience where Eritrean soldiers came to forcibly
remove him from the church and how his priests tried to surround him
in protection.
The Tigray War
saw the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) in conflict with
the Ethiopian Federal Government and Eritrean forces, which he
describes as like a siege from all sides.
“Absolute
closure, (it) was like ‘is this really a human experience?’”
He shares a
painting from a young church member, depicting a priest standing
between civilians and soldiers while jets drop bombs overhead.
“You see all
kinds of things used on people, by land and by air. The church has to
be in the middle of all this,” he said.
“We suffered,
we couldn’t realise our plans. But still, by the grace of God and
where it was possible by our partner’s support and solidarity, that
we could be between the killers and the population.
“To try to
calm and stop further blood flow…so this image shows the double
role of the church in such crisis.”
He also calls
it “unacceptable” that half of the children in Tigray have not
been able to return to school.
“There’s
still 1.3 million children not back to school yet, including our own
Catholic schools,” he said.
“Over five
years, this is an unacceptable crime about God given rights of people
to education.”
Asking why the
world stays quiet in the face of such injustice and violence, he
adds: “It can only stop if there are pressures on policy makers. In
the Catholic church we want to stand for justice.
“A wounded
society cannot get healing unless there’s a recognition of what has
happened.
“If that’s
blocked, people can only carry their pain…we are trembling to live
like this.”
🚨
International Christian Concern has issued a stark warning: while
global attention shifts elsewhere, Tigrayan Christians continue to
bleed.
Even as the
U.S. designated Nigeria a Country of Particular Concern, Christian
communities in Ethiopia remain trapped in a crisis that did not end
with the November 2022 peace agreement — it only went quiet.
Reports now
confirm what many feared:
The genocide
never stopped. It simply went dark.
A United
Nations investigation (2023) documented crimes against humanity long
after the Tigray War was declared over. In 2024, the New Lines
Institute released a 120-page report concluding that attacks against
the Tigrayan people meet the legal definition of genocide — naming
military and regional forces involved.
According to
the report, Tigrayan Christians have endured:
• Mass
killing
• Intentional
starvation and destruction of communities
• Systematic
bodily and psychological harm
• Measures
aimed at preventing births and erasing an entire people
These acts
violate the Genocide Convention of 1949 — signed by Ethiopia
itself. The world once swore Never Again. Yet here we are.
And the
suffering is not only human — it is spiritual.
Tigray is home
to 1,500 years of Christian history — ancient monasteries,
rock-hewn churches, relics, Scripture, and sacred heritage.
❖ Now, Monks,
Nuns and Priests are being murdered and raped.
❖ Worshipers
attacked.
❖ Churches
and Monasteries burned.
❖ Artifacts
looted — some already turning up for sale online.
A Christian
civilization — one of the oldest on Earth — stands on the brink
of erasure while the nations are silent.
This is not
only war. It is the attempted destruction of a people and their
Christian faith.
“Open your mouth for the mute,
for the rights of all who are destitute. Open your mouth, judge
righteously, defend the rights of the poor and needy.”
Human rights
groups say the world must pay more attention to the assault on one of
Africa’s oldest Christian communities.
In a shocking
escalation of violence that has reportedly claimed more than 144
lives in just one district since September, Ethiopia’s ancient
Christian heartland is under siege. Orthodox believers have been
massacred in their homes and churches razed in a surge of ethnic and
religious attacks that rights groups warn could unravel the Horn of
Africa’s stability.
For centuries,
Ethiopia has been a sanctuary of ancient Christianity, a place where
faith traditions trace back to the fourth century and the rock-hewn
churches of Lalibela stand as testaments to one of the world’s
oldest Christian civilizations.
It is a nation
where Christianity has long been intertwined with national identity —
surviving invasions, famine, and political upheaval. Today, that
legacy faces its most serious threat in generations.
In multiple
regions, Christians are being displaced, murdered, and targeted in
attacks that cut across denominational lines. Islamic extremist
violence, schisms within the Ethiopian Orthodox Church, and simmering
regional conflicts have converged into a three-front crisis — one
that rights monitors warn is accelerating but overlooked.
Open Doors, an
NGO that advocates for persecuted Christians worldwide, ranks
Ethiopia in its 2025 World Watch List among the most dangerous
countries for Christians due to pressures from extremist groups,
political instability, and attacks on churches and clergy.
While Ethiopia
remains a key American ally in the region, analysts say the
escalating threats to Christian communities expose a widening human
rights emergency and a deeper unraveling of the country’s fragile
social fabric.
“Three
factors are converging to create an especially dangerous environment
for Christians in Ethiopia. First, ethnic nationalism is increasingly
weaponizing religious identity,” Open Doors’ CEO in America, Ryan
Brown, tells The New York Sun.
“In eastern
regions, ethnic Somali militias target Christians as part of broader
ethnic conflicts, while in Oromia, ethnic Oromo militants conflate
Christianity with rival ethnic groups. This has resulted in
systematic church attacks and forced displacement of entire Christian
villages.”
The second
factor, Mr. Brown said, is that ultra-conservative factions within
the Ethiopian Orthodox Church portray Protestant and evangelical
Christians as foreign and unpatriotic. “This stigmatization creates
social pressure that can escalate violence, especially against
converts from Orthodoxy,” he said.
“Third,
converts from Islam face severe hostility in Muslim-majority regions
like the Somali state and parts of Oromia. They experience family
rejection, mob attacks, church burnings, and systemic
discrimination.”
Extremist
Violence Targets Converts and Churches
In rural
pockets of Ethiopia, particularly in the Oromia and Somali regions,
Christians — especially converts from Islam — have been singled
out by extremist groups operating largely beyond the control of the
central government.
An Ethiopian
worker for the America-based human rights group International
Christian Concern, who requested their name not be used for security
reasons, tells the Sun that the violence is driven by religious and
political factors as well as poor governance.
“In the
Somali Region, which is predominantly Muslim, local authorities have
directly targeted Christian believers, and many are now imprisoned
because of their faith. In Oromia, the regional government has
hesitated to protect Christians from armed groups, leaving many
believers killed even now,” the insider said. “And in Amhara,
where the government system is largely Orthodox, officials routinely
oppress those outside the dominant tradition.”
According to
Open Doors UK, converts describe being ostracized, threatened, or
assaulted by relatives and community members, with entire Protestant
and Orthodox congregations facing harassment and raids by militants.
One convert, Jemal, told the organization that extremists warned him
his “faith is not welcome here,” forcing him and his family to
flee their home.
Attacks on
churches continue in areas where local authorities struggle to
contain armed groups. In October, five people were killed in attacks
targeting Orthodox Christians in Arsui Zone amid tensions between
ethnic militias and government security forces.
Church leaders
have repeatedly urged the federal government to strengthen
protections in vulnerable districts. Ethiopia’s Catholic bishops
condemned a deadly attack on a parish in the Oromia region earlier
this year, calling the violence “an assault on the right to
worship” and pleading for authorities to safeguard religious
institutions.
The Department
of State’s annual human rights report on Ethiopia documented
similar patterns of abuse, citing targeted killings, harassment of
religious minorities, and the destruction of churches across several
regions.
For many
Christian families, simply gathering for worship has become a risk
calculation.
An Orthodox
Schism Turns Violent
Alongside
extremist attacks, a schism within Ethiopia’s most significant
Christian body — the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church — has
spilled into violence.
According to
Mr. Brown, the Ethiopian Orthodox Church is facing an unprecedented
split, deeply rooted in Oromo nationalism and political power
struggles rather than theology. Both extremists and political actors
are exploiting this fracture, severely weakening the entire Christian
community in Ethiopia.
In early 2023,
disputes over ecclesiastical authority led to rival synods forming
within the church, a rupture that played out along ethnic and
regional lines. While efforts were made to resolve the crisis,
tensions have lingered, with breakaway groups creating competing
structures in parts of Oromia and Amhara.
When local
authorities support one church faction over another based on
political calculations, it traps Christian communities in ethnic
conflicts and compromises religious freedom principles.
Historically,
the church’s institutional strength offered protection for all
Christians; now that it’s divided, every Christian denomination
faces increased vulnerability and scrutiny, while the schism itself
complicates broader efforts toward national reconciliation.
Attacks against
Orthodox Christians spread across Oromia this year, with clergy
beaten, churches vandalized, and worshippers threatened amid disputes
over who controls local parishes.
Non-traditional
Christian denominations have also come under pressure in districts
where local Orthodox leaders and militants accuse them of undermining
Ethiopia’s religious traditions. Open Doors US found that
Protestant converts and evangelical churches have faced some of the
highest levels of hostility, including arson attacks and the
confiscation of church property.
The conflict
has strained relations between communities that once coexisted
peacefully. In areas with contested church leadership, clashes have
broken out between local security forces, Orthodox factions, and
residents attempting to defend their parishes from takeover.
For younger
Christians, the schism has reshaped daily life. Youth groups and
choirs have fractured along political and ethnic lines. In some
districts, believers say they have stopped attending services
altogether for fear of being caught in clashes that are more about
identity than theology.
Regional
Conflicts That Weaponize Religion
Beyond
extremist attacks and denominational conflict, Ethiopia’s broader
civil strife continues to fuel religious persecution, especially in
the country’s north, where the Tigray conflict has left profound
physical and cultural devastation.
Human rights
organizations estimate hundreds of thousands were killed in the
two-year war between Ethiopian federal forces, Eritrean troops, and
the Tigray People’s Liberation Front. Many of the world’s oldest
churches, some dating back more than a millennium, were shelled,
looted, or burned.
While figures
remain difficult to verify due to restricted access, humanitarian
monitors agree that the destruction of religious sites was widespread
and systematic.
A November 2022
peace deal halted major fighting, but residual clashes, famine
conditions, and the presence of irregular militias continue to
endanger Christian populations across Tigray, Amhara, and Afar.
In these
regions, religion often intersects with ethnicity. Tigrayans —
predominantly Orthodox Christians — were targeted not only for
political reasons but also for their cultural and religious identity,
according to humanitarian groups operating in northern Ethiopia.
Beyond the
north, the spread of local conflicts in Oromia, Benishangul-Gumuz,
and the Southern Nations region has left Christian minorities exposed
as well. Communal militias and insurgent groups frequently target
churches as symbols of rival ethnic or political alignment.
Faith-based
organizations operating inside the country report ongoing
displacement, with thousands of Christian families forced from their
homes and many shelters overwhelmed. The Global Prayer Guide, a
publication of the non-profit international ministry The Voice of the
Martyrs, summarized Ethiopia’s situation as “volatile,” citing
repeated church attacks, pressure on converts, and severe
restrictions in conflict zones.
A Forgotten
Crisis at a Strategic Crossroads
Despite the
scale of the violence, Ethiopia’s Christian persecution crisis
rarely commands sustained international attention. Aid groups note
that humanitarian access remains limited in parts of the country,
complicating assessments and leaving many incidents undocumented.
Bible
shortages, destroyed churches, and insecurity have left many rural
Christians without basic resources, compounding the impact of
violence.
Analysts
warn that Ethiopia’s instability has broader implications.
“We are
seeing a rise in internally displaced people, and humanitarian
support is becoming increasingly difficult. All of this is unfolding
against the backdrop of a wider geopolitical crisis in the Horn of
Africa,” noted the International Christian Concern worker.
“The
Ethiopian government needs to reform and strengthen regional bodies
and police forces, guarantee religious freedom, and create stronger
mechanisms for inter-religious dialogue. International partners
should support these efforts and help the country build lasting
inter-religious peace.”
Located near
the Red Sea and the Bab al-Mandab Strait, through which a significant
share of global trade passes, the country sits at the center of
regional power competition. Foreign governments have supplied arms or
political backing to various factions, raising concerns that
religious persecution may escalate alongside shifting alliances.
“As Africa’s
second-most populous nation, what happens in Ethiopia affects the
entire region. Continued persecution contributes to displacement,
adding to refugee flows in an already strained humanitarian system.
When Christians flee persecution in Ethiopia, it creates pressure on
neighboring countries already dealing with their own challenges,”
Mr. Brown said.
“Additionally,
extremist groups operating across borders see successful persecution
as encouraging their own tactics. What happens in Ethiopia doesn’t
stay in Ethiopia — it influences patterns of violence throughout
the Horn.”
For Ethiopia’s
Christians, however, the consequences are deeply personal.
Generations who once lived side by side across denominations now face
an uncertain future marked by displacement, fear, and the destruction
of cultural heritage.
As pressure
grows on Ethiopia’s government to protect religious communities,
faith leaders urge international partners not to overlook a crisis
unfolding within one of Africa’s oldest Christian homelands. The
belief shared across denominations is simple: Safeguarding Ethiopia’s
Christian legacy is not only a matter of human rights but also a
matter of preserving a foundational pillar of the country’s
identity.
“The
Ethiopian government can ensure equal legal protection by
investigating and prosecuting attacks on Christian communities with
the same vigor applied to other crimes and engage Christian leaders
across denominations in national reconciliation efforts they are
already trying to make happen,” Mr. Brown said.
“International
partners can be most helpful by supporting locally led initiatives
and amplifying voices of Christian leaders already working for peace
and reconciliation in their communities.”
👉 Courtesy: The
Washington Post, by Robert Wilkie -
Monday, November 10, 2025
The Honorable Robert Wilkie
served as the 10th secretary of veterans affairs and undersecretary
of defense for personnel and readiness in the first Trump
administration.
The world said “Never again”
after Rwanda, yet we’re watching in silence as ancient Christianity
is erased in Ethiopia. America risks its soul and security by doing
nothing.
In northern Ethiopia’s Tigray
region, more than 1 million people have been slaughtered since 2020.
Women and children are starved to death. Entire villages have been
erased. Soldiers have told rape victims, “A Tigray womb should
never give birth.” That statement alone should remove any doubt
about what this is. It is not a civil conflict. It is genocide: a
state-sponsored attempt to destroy a Christian people and their
culture.
Tigray is not a footnote in
history. It is the cradle of African Christianity, the land of the
Queen of Sheba, the Kingdom of Axum and the Ark of the Covenant. Its
rock-hewn churches, older than many European cathedrals, are among
the holiest sites in the world. Today, those sanctuaries lie in
ruins, deliberately shelled by Ethiopian and Eritrean forces. Priests
and worshippers have been executed, and ancient manuscripts and
crosses, stolen from monasteries, have been surfacing on online
marketplaces.
If we lose Ethiopia, we lose one
of Christianity’s oldest strongholds and a vital partner for the
West in a region already teetering between tyranny and terrorism.
This is not just a moral
catastrophe; it is a strategic one as well. Ethiopia is situated on
the Horn of Africa, a region that borders the Red Sea and the Bab
al-Mandab Strait, through which 12% of global trade passes. Whoever
controls this corridor controls the arteries of global commerce and
energy. Today, that control is slipping off to a dangerous coalition
of adversaries.
China, Iran, Russia and other
countries have armed and financed Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s
regime, using drones and munitions to carry out the campaign against
Tigray. Iran, through a formal defense pact signed earlier this year,
now has an operational foothold in the Horn of Africa, within
striking distance of global shipping lanes and Israel’s southern
flank. China, meanwhile, continues its Belt and Road Initiative
encirclement of East Africa, Koering ports and mineral routes
critical to its military and economic dominance.
His alignment of autocratic
powers represents a new “Islamo-Marxist axis” that threatens
regional stability and the broader interests of the United States and
its allies. By refusing to acknowledge the true nature of the Tigray
crisis, we embolden those who perceive Western hesitation as a sign
of weakness.
The Tigrayan people are no
strangers to the fight for freedom. They led the effort to overthrow
Ethiopia’s Marxist Derg dictatorship three decades ago and outlawed
communism in its aftermath. They share with Americans a belief in
faith, self-determination and resistance to tyranny. They are natural
allies, abandoned in their hour of greatest need.
William Wilberforce, the man who
ended the British slave trade, once said, “You may choose to look
away, but you can never again say that you did not know.” We now
know. The question is: What will we do?
The United States should act
immediately and decisively. First, it must formally recognize the
genocide in Tigray. Language matters; to call this a “civil war”
is to excuse barbarism. Second, the Trump-Vance administration should
impose targeted sanctions on Ethiopian, Eritrean and foreign
officials responsible for the atrocities and on those supplying the
weapons. Third, we must establish secure humanitarian corridors that
deliver aid to the starving. Finally, the U.S. should lead a
coalition of democratic nations to protect Ethiopia’s remaining
Christian heritage and stabilize the Horn of Africa.
America does not need to send
troops, but it must send a message: Faith, freedom and human dignity
are nonnegotiable both at home and abroad. Silence in the face of
genocide is not neutrality; it is complicity.
The moral case for action is
clear. So is the strategic one. Allowing this genocide to continue
will deepen regional instability, fuel another refugee crisis and
hand China and Iran permanent leverage over one of the world’s most
vital trade routes.
The people of Tigray are not
asking for American soldiers. They are asking for America’s voice.
We should raise it now before one of the oldest Christian
civilizations on earth vanishes, and with it a cornerstone of faith
and freedom.
❖[Proverbs 31:8-9 ]❖
“Open your mouth for the mute,
for the rights of all who are destitute. Open your mouth, judge
righteously, defend the rights of the poor and needy.”
* The Deadliest country no one wants to report truthfully about is
Ethiopia.
* Since the beginning of the genocidal Jihad in the Northern
Ethiopian regions of Tigray, Amhara and Afar in November 2020 till
today:
❖ – 1.5
Million Orthodox Christians brutally Massacred
❖ – 200.000
Orthodox Christian Women, children and nuns were Raped and abused
❖ – Over a
Million Ethiopians were forced to migrate to other countries
❖ – 4.4
million internally displaced people severely impacted by conflict,
hostilities and climate shocks
❖ – Over a
Million female Ethiopian slaves sold to Arab countries
❖ – 20
million Ethiopian forced to experience food insecurity
by the fascist
Islamo-Protestant, Oromo army of the prosperity gospel heretic and
Nobel Peace Laureate genocidal PM Abiy Ahmed Ali and his UN, Arab,
Israeli, Turkish, Iranian, European, American, Russian, Ukrainian and
African allies.