☪ Egypt head
coach Hossam Hassan's decision to make FIFA's anti-racism gesture
during his side's dramatic World Cup defeat to Argentina has become
one of the most talked-about moments from the Round of 16 clash.
Hassan crossed
his forearms in an "X" shape while protesting refereeing
decisions following Argentina's late winner in Tuesday's 3-2 victory
over Egypt. Moments earlier, the Egyptian coach had received a yellow
card after confronting French referee François Letexier.
The gesture
came as Egypt's bench reacted angrily to several key decisions,
including the VAR review that ruled out an Egyptian goal and other
incidents Hassan later said had denied his side a fair result.
Following the
match, Hassan accused officials of favouring the defending champions.
„You will recognize them by their fruits. Are grapes gathered from
thornbushes, or figs from thistles?„
Even in
something as fraternal as international sports, Egypt simply can't
help but expose its Islamic credentials.
What you see
and hear is the Egyptian soccer team engaged in a pregame prayer. Is
it something like, "Dear Allah, please make sure no one gets
hurt and may the best team win." No. Their prayer begins by
cursing Christians and Jews, and culminates by repeating three times,
no less, a special condemnation against Christians for their grave
sin in believing that Jesus Christ is the son of God. It gets worse.
The Egyptian soccer team recited these curses not because it happens
to be radical, but because Islam is radical.
👉 Selected
comments:
• What
a sad part of humanity, brainwashed into rabid and irrational hatred
of fellow human beings.
• The christian players are banned from the team, old Ajax player
Mido spoke out against that injustice
• They
are worse than cancer I'm Assyrian Christian and my people have been
suffering in Islamic hands since this cult started.
• Unsurprisingly
an evil ideology brings evil outcomes!
• First
Egypt and now Morocco knocked out, classic
• They
cannot win wars, cannot build functioning societies and cannot win
soccer games.
• And...that
"prayer" still didn't help them! They lost in spectacular
fashion!
• "Allahu
Akbar" turned into "It was rigged"...
• As
an Egyptian, I was pretty sad when Egypt lost, but as a Christian I’m
kind of glad they did. Maybe they’ll realize one day that their
Allah can’t help them.
♰ The
best part is when Messi scored his goal he did the sign of the cross
and pointed to the heavens. Suck on that Egypt soccer team.
👹 Egypt
is 100% Ruled by Satan and Its 'Human' Agents
👹 The
following nations are 100% Ruled by Satan and Its 'Human' Agents
☆ France
☆ Britain
☆ Italy
☆ Switzerland
☆ Australia
+ New Zealand
☆ China
☆ India
☆ South
Africa
☆ Kenya
☆ Nigeria
☆ Ghana
☆ Haiti
☆ Argentina
+ Colombia + Paraguay
☆ Brazil
☆ All
57 Islamic Countries
Many others are on their way to
be fully controlled by Satan.·
⚽ In Egypt, Football Is
Everything, Unless You're Christian.
As millions around the
world watch the FIFA World Cup this summer, a video of the Egyptian
team that circulated on social media drew attention: In it, Egypt’s
national team gathered in a group Islamic prayer before its match. It
was not just a moment of prayer; it was also a moment that starkly
illustrates the exclusion of Egyptians who do not share the Muslim
faith, particularly Christians.
Despite making up a
significant portion of Egypt’s population, Copts, the indigenous
Christians of Egypt, have virtually no representation in Egypt’s
top football clubs, and zero representation on the national team.
The organization Coptic
Solidarity has been seeking to end this virtual sports apartheid
in Egypt since it first filed formal complaints with FIFA and the
International Olympic Committee in 2016. The organization has since
pressured global sports bodies to uphold their own
anti-discrimination standards.
Yet despite years of
discrimination, young Copts continue to face barriers based not on
ability, discipline, or merit, but solely because of their Christian
faith.
Egypt has multiple
professional national sports leagues, including football, basketball,
volleyball, handball, and other Olympic sports federations. However,
despite Coptic Christians making up an estimated 10–15% of Egypt’s
population, they are almost entirely absent from elite professional
sports.
The
2018 Coptic Solidarity report “Discrimination Against Copts in
Egyptian Sports Clubs” documented how Coptic athletes are routinely
excluded from elite development programs and professional
opportunities. Some reported being pressured to conceal their
Christian identity — or even change their names — simply for the
chance to advance in their careers.
The report
further documented that among roughly 540 players in Egypt’s
top-flight football leagues, there was only one known Coptic player,
and historically fewer than a dozen Coptic footballers have reached
first-division clubs over the past several decades. Similar patterns
of exclusion have been observed across other professional sports and
Olympic delegations.
Discrimination
often begins at the youth level, where coaches and club officials act
as gatekeepers to professional advancement.
According to
the report, young Christian athletes were rejected after coaches
learned their names were Christian, excluded because of visible cross
tattoos, pressured to hide or change their Christian identity, or
even asked to adopt Muslim names in order to advance professionally.
Some players who reached higher levels reported harassment from
teammates, including being ostracized because of their faith. There
is overwhelming evidence that religious discrimination against Coptic
athletes is systemic in Egyptian sports, particularly football.
The famous art
critic Tariq al-Shennawi raised a question in his column at Al-Masry
Al-Youm newspaper about the reasons for Coptic absence in soccer,
stating, “The undeniable fact is that there is a distinct Coptic
absence in soccer. Are Muslim families no longer willing to let their
children play soccer with the children of their Coptic neighbors?
There are
currently no known Coptic players on Egypt’s national football
team, including the senior squad, reserve team, or youth national
teams. This has been the case for years despite Egypt’s large
Christian minority population.
The descendants
of ancient Egyptians, Copts have lived in their homeland for several
millennia. Copts became some of the earliest followers of
Christianity after St. Mark brought the Gospel to Egypt. They are the
largest Christian and largest non-Muslim community in the Middle
East.
Egypt was
predominantly Christian until Muslim Arabs invaded and took over in
the seventh century. Copts have survived centuries of persecution
since the first Arab invasion to the Ottoman Turks. They lost
countless lives to rulers that were intent on forcing them to convert
to Islam through torture, imprisonment, unbearable taxation,
starvation, and cruelty.
Centuries
later, the Egyptian government and Muslim society still subject Copts
to systematic discrimination.
It is
statistically implausible for a community comprising over 10% of the
population to have virtually zero representation at the highest
levels of football, unless systematic exclusion is taking place. The
same pattern has extended to international competitions, where
Egypt’s World Cup and Olympic delegations have historically
included either no Copts or, at most, one token athlete.
Lindsay
Rodriguez, the Director of Development and Advocacy of Coptic
Solidarity, told me:
The result is
what many describe as a pipeline of exclusion: talented Coptic
children are filtered out early, ensuring they never reach
professional clubs or the national team.
This pattern
reflects broader religious discrimination in Egyptian society and the
increasing Islamization of public institutions, including sports.
International
sporting bodies such as FIFA and the International Olympic Committee
have both the authority and responsibility to address discrimination
within member organizations. Silence allows discrimination to
continue unchecked.
Coptic
Solidarity has urged these organizations to launch independent
investigations into religious discrimination in Egyptian sports,
require Egypt to establish transparent reporting mechanisms for
athletes facing discrimination, remove religion-based barriers in
club registration processes, and enforce anti-discrimination
standards as a condition for participation in international
competitions.
Historically,
international pressure has played an important role in ending
discrimination in sport globally, including racial segregation in
South Africa. The same principle should apply here: Egypt should not
be allowed to benefit from the prestige of international competition
while systematically excluding Christian athletes from equal
participation.
⚽ A verbal altercation
broke out between Egypt national football team director Ibrahim
Hassan and a member of the US security staff at the Pharaohs' team
hotel in Dallas, United States.
♰ All Good Things
Come In Threes
In yesterday's
match against Argentina, Egypt conceded 3 goals in 13 minutes and was
kicked out of the World Cup.
☪ Don't Go to Egypt
The accursed, rudest and
most ungrateful country in the world, Egypt, hates Ethiopia,
Israel and tourists, specially women, but loves Ethiopia's Holy Water
(Nile) and mineral-rich volcanic soil + Western money, which she gets
for free. Meanwhile, over 90% of Egypt is uninhabited desert. This is
Because the Nile River has always been the
overpopulated (110 million) Egypt's lifeline. As you hear and
see it in the video, almost all Egyptians hate Israel and Ethiopia,
yet. Israel (Israel according to The Flesh) + Trump and co. love
Egypt, work for the Islamic Republic. On the other hand, they
conspire and go as far as genocide against Christian Ethiopia (Israel
according to The Spirit). Ishmaelite Egyptians hate the Edomites,
yet, they are allies,
and Jacobite Ethiopians love them all, yet, they made them enemies.
Just unbelievably twisted – the
world upside down, isn't it?!
Egypt is on my top,
never visit list!!!
❖ [Isaiah 31:1]❖
“Woe to those who go
down to Egypt for help, who rely on horses, who trust in the
multitude of their chariots and in the great strength of their
horsemen, but do not look to the Holy One of Israel, or seek help
from the Lord.”
👹 Egypt
is 100% Ruled by Satan and Its 'Human' Agents
👹 The
following nations are 100% Ruled by Satan and Its 'Human' Agents
☆ France
☆ Britain
☆ Italy
☆ Switzerland
☆ Australia
+ New Zealand
☆ China
☆ India
☆ South
Africa
☆ Kenya
☆ Nigeria
☆ Ghana
☆ Haiti
☆ Argentina
+ Colombia + Paraguay
☆ Brazil
☆ All
57 Islamic Countries
Many others are on their way to
be fully controlled by Satan.
We saw them marching
in formation on Axum Zion, didn't we?! And today, aren't they
plundering the gold and silver of Axumite Ethiopia through the
Babylonian Arab Emirates?
“And he will pitch his
royal tent between the sea and the glorious holy mountain”
Isn't the place between
the sea (Mediterranean) and the glorious holy mountain (Mount
Moriah/Mount Zion) the 'Gaza' that the Antichrists, Dollar
Trump, Jared Kushner, Elon Musk and Peter Thiel,
want to build it and make their Antichrist
center today?
'Gaza' is the territory of
the Ethiopians!
📦 Zion's
Captivity, Zion's Ark;
In
1 Samuel 5:6: “The hand of the LORD was heavy against the
people of Ashdod, and he terrified and afflicted them with tumors,
both Ashdod and its territory. When they brought The
Ark of The Covenant to Ashkelon, he struck
the Ashkelonites with boils. And their land was infested with rats.
There was a great outcry and a great cry. When they saw that The
Ark of The Covenant had brought great
plagues upon the Philistines, the anger of the Lord was kindled
against them. So the five kings of the Philistines (Ashdod, Ashkelon,
Ekron, Gath, and Gaza) consulted with the idolatrous priests and the
diviners, saying, “They said, “If you send away the ark of the
God of Israel, do not send it empty, but by all means return him a
guilt offering. Then you will be healed, and it will be known to you
why his hand does not turn away from you.” (1 Sam. 6:3)
They agreed to this and
made five golden mice and five golden calves, according to the five
provinces of the Philistines. They tied two unyoked donkeys to the
cart and loaded TheArk
of The Covenant with the gold that was
prepared. They pulled the cart out of the Philistines and went to
Beth Shemesh. When the cart came to the field of Joshua the Beth
Shemeshite, it stopped there. When the people of that place brought
down the Ark and the box in which the gold
was, seventy men were killed because they had seen The
Ark of God. The people of Kiriath Jeari
took The Ark of
The Covenant to the house of Amminadab, and
Eleazar the son of Amminadab was appointed to minister to the ark.
The ark of Zion remained there for twenty years.
😇 The evangelist
Saint Philip went down to Gaza and baptized the Ethiopian eunuch
Bacchus (Acts 8:26:40).
❖[Daniel 11:40-45]❖
“At the time of the end,
the king of the south shall attack him, but the king of the north
shall rush upon him like a whirlwind, with chariots and horsemen, and
with many ships. And he shall come into countries and shall overflow
and pass through. He shall come into the glorious land. And tens of
thousands shall fall, but these shall be delivered out of his hand:
Edom and Moab and the main part of the Ammonites. He shall stretch
out his hand against the countries, and the land of Egypt shall not
escape. He shall become ruler of the treasures of gold and of silver,
and all the precious things of Egypt, and the Libyans and the
Ethiopians shall follow in his train. But
news from the east and the north shall alarm him, and he shall go out
with great fury to destroy and devote many to destruction. And he
shall pitch his palatial tents between the sea and the glorious holy
mountain. Yet he shall come to his end, with none to help him.”
🛑 Donald Trump's
Trouble is Linked to The Biblical Ark of The Covenant and Ethiopia
Each time US President
Donald Trump raises the issue of the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance
Dam/GERD, we are reminded of a passage from
his book, “The
Art of the Deal”, in which he advises novice investors to
“maximize your options.”
Trump argues that even the
most promising deals tend to fail, so success requires preparing at
least half a dozen fallback strategies—because, as he puts it,
anything is possible.
Trump addressed
the Renaissance Dam dispute for the fourth
time in less than a month. Reiterating his concern that the dam poses
a significant threat to Egypt’s water security, he blamed the
previous Democratic administration for having financed and enabled
the project. He claimed coordination with Cairo was underway and
spoke vaguely of a “pretty long-term” solution—without
providing further details.
The Nile and
Gaza: A transactional bargain?
Against this
backdrop, it is not unreasonable to connect Trump’s comments on the
dam to broader regional developments—most notably, Gaza. The issue
had not featured on his public agenda during his second term until it
became relevant to a potential ceasefire deal between Israel and
Iran. That moment was soon followed by Israeli PM Benjamin
Netanyahu’s visit to Washington, the public resurfacing of
proposals for a so-called humanitarian city, and renewed media
advocacy from pro-Israel outlets promoting longstanding ideas to
either relocate the Palestinian population of Gaza into Egypt’s
Sinai Peninsula or place the territory under Egyptian control.
Trump appeared
to be laying the groundwork for a perilous trade-off: Nile water
security in exchange for Egypt’s complicity—whether in the form
of accepting the displacement of Palestinians into Sinai, assuming
administrative control over Gaza, or, at a minimum, becoming further
entangled in a resolution favorable to Netanyahu.
Such a
resolution would aim to eliminate resistance, subdue Gaza
permanently, or facilitate its incremental absorption by Israel,
mirroring developments in the West Bank. These scenarios, while
alarming, remain within the realm of political imagination embraced
by Israel’s most influential supporters.
Trump’s
recent posture is not an aberration—it reflects the worldview
captured in his book: plan for success across multiple fronts,
knowing that only some options will come to fruition.
A
Longstanding position
To understand
Trump’s stance, it is important to recall his consistent opposition
to the dam project during his first term. In 2020, as Ethiopia
commenced its first unilateral filling of the dam, Trump ordered a
reduction of $130 million in US aid to Addis Ababa. This was viewed
as a rare instance of Washington penalizing an African state over
Nile-related negotiations.
Trump’s
interest in African affairs had previously seemed minimal. Thus, his
open warning shortly afterwards was all the more surprising. Speaking
publicly about Sudan’s prospective normalization with Israel, Trump
remarked—almost in passing—that “Egypt will end up blowing up
the dam,” adding “I said it and I say it loud and clear …
they’ll blow up that dam. And they have to do something.”
It’s highly
probable that Trump solely blamed Addis Ababa for the failure of the
Washington negotiations. At the time, Trump was personally overseeing
the US-brokered negotiations, with Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin
and World Bank officials taking part. Ethiopia eventually withdrew,
accusing the US of abandoning its role as mediator and aligning with
Egypt’s legal and diplomatic framing of the dispute.
What more Trump
could have done to influence Ethiopia remains unclear. His
administration’s aggressive stance only reinforced Ethiopian
skepticism, validating a nationalist narrative that painted US
involvement as neocolonial interference. In Addis Ababa’s telling,
historical water rights treaties—dating back to the colonial
era—were skewed in favor of Egypt and must now be corrected.
Such arguments
have gained traction in Western academic and policy circles,
including in the US and Europe. They were also reflected in the Biden
administration’s more conciliatory approach. Upon taking office,
Biden lifted the aid freeze, and disengaged from the dam
negotiations, refocusing instead on Ethiopia’s civil war in Tigray.
His administration issued only vague diplomatic statements, and Egypt
had to turn to the failed African Union–led mediation.
The net result
was to create space for Ethiopia to complete construction and
successive fillings of the dam, effectively removing international
constraints.
A broader
agenda?
When Trump
claims that the US funded the project, he is not referring to direct
financial support. Rather, he is pointing to a broader context: the
Biden administration’s disengagement and its implicit signaling
that the US would not obstruct Ethiopia’s efforts. Since Egypt’s
appeal to the UN Security Council in July 2021, the diplomatic track
has cooled. The genocidal war against Christians of Northern Ethiopia
(Tigray) that lasted for two years absorbed most US attention, and
Egypt found itself navigating the crisis alone.
But Trump’s
comments may also reflect deeper ambitions. One plausible
interpretation is that he is using the dam dispute as leverage in
other negotiations, such as his broader Middle East policy, or his
desire to present himself once again as a candidate for the Nobel
Peace Prize.
The
redirection of Nile waters to Israel: The Nile-to-Israel pipeline:
From fantasy to folly
The idea of
diverting Nile water to Israel is not a recent invention. In 1903,
during a visit to Egypt, Theodor Herzl proposed to the British
colonial authorities and the government of Khedive Abbas Helmy II the
creation of a Jewish homeland in northern Sinai, to be designated
“The Egyptian Province of Judea,” under a 99-year concession.
This proposal
included full sovereign rights for Herzl over the designated
territory, with future negotiations anticipated regarding the
delivery of Nile water—a prospect that Egypt rejected outright on
the grounds that it would entail altering the natural course of the
river.
The late
renowned journalist Kamel Zoheiry devoted a chapter of his book The
Nile in Danger to documenting this episode.
The concept resurfaced
during the early phase of Egyptian-Israeli normalization. In
September 1979, during a visit to Haifa, President Anwar Sadat
reportedly told Begin, “Why not send you some fresh water to the
Negev? You are good neighbors.” Israeli and American newspapers
interpreted the remark as a breakthrough. But the comment was omitted
from Egyptian coverage.
The alarm only truly
sounded when Egypt began digging the Peace Canal in November 1979. A
month later, in December, October magazine published a report titled
“The New Zamzam Project,” citing Sadat’s directives to deliver
Nile water to Jerusalem, to be accessible to worshipers visiting the
Al-Aqsa Mosque, the Dome of the Rock, the Church of the Holy
Sepulchre, and the Western Wall.
He was quoted as saying,
“We will make this water a contribution from the Egyptian people,
in the name of hundreds of millions of Muslims, in commemoration of
the peace initiative.”
The backlash was immediate
and fierce. Parliamentarians, newspapers, and political parties
condemned the idea. Dr. Naemat Ahmed Fouad, writing in Al-Shaab
newspaper, called it “a matter of life and death,” warning
against “the cultivation and prosperity of the Negev, the
qualitative imbalance, the entrenchment of Israel and its expansion
towards Sinai and into Arab oil locations, and the encirclement of
Egypt and Saudi Arabia.”
Israel expressed
support for increased Nile water shares from Ethiopia. Widely viewed
MBC anchor Amr Adib said in his show “The
Story” that if the Israelis swore
that they have nothing to do with the Nile water, he would not
believe them. However, while the prevailing tone in Cairo is to
remain suspicious of Israel when it comes to the Nile, former
Egyptian diplomat and current president of Alexandria Library Mustafa
el-Feki nevertheless expressed a different opinion, arguing
instead that Cairo should utilize its regional influence to open
direct channels with Israel and seek assistance to maximize leverage
over Ethiopia.
Historically,
Egyptian elite circles have been obsessed with the idea that Israel
is trying to “steal” the Nile water. Proponents of this narrative
argue the Torah identifies Israel’s correct borders as between the
Nile River and the Euphrates River. A popular, but unsubstantiated
justification for this argument claims the entrance to the Knesset
bears an inscription with this specific Torah excerpt. In 2021, a
report by General Hamdy al-Batran published
by Dostor newspaper explained that Israeli interest in the Nile can
be linked back to 1903, when Theodore Herzl proposed to the British
government a plan for the transferal of water from the Nile through
Suez Canal and then into Palestine.
Notably, there was
an offer made by President Anwar Sadat to the Israelis back during
1979 talks when Sadat suggested that Egypt “pipe fresh water from
the Nile River across the Sinai Peninsula to the Negev Desert”,
according to this archived Washington
Post article. Indeed, this issue has
proven to crop up periodically as former President Hosni Mubarak
grappled with supposed Israeli interest in the Nile. In 1997, during
the opening ceremony of the El Salam Canal, Mubarak announced
it is purely an Egyptian project and water is too scarce to be shared
with others. It was an indirect answer to his domestic critics who
were claiming that he would sell the Nile water to Israel through the
Sinai based project.
Setting aside
Israeli interests, Trump may see the GERD dispute as yet another
opportunity to bolster his case for a Nobel Peace Prize, or as a
pressure point to extract quick diplomatic wins for his
administration. He may also view it as a convenient flashpoint for
stirring tensions within the BRICS bloc, to which both Egypt and
Ethiopia belong, particularly amid concerns about their potential
future cooperation in ways that could diminish US influence in favor
of China.