جميل جدااا تجمع ❤️🔥 صراحة ما كنت اتوقع انو كل هاي القصص بزمن واحد بس كل القصص كانت شوية مبهمة ولما ربطناها كلها طلعت هيك قصة النبي ابراهيم قصة كاوا الحداد حقيقة عيد النوروز حرب المييدين والحصار على البابل (المديين=الكرد) النمرود رائع 🤩 شكرا ليك بجد ❤️🔥
انا كردي من اقليم العراق كردستان عندنا في اسم مشهور جدا ولي هو كاوا و بسببه لما قتل الضحاك صار عندنا التاريخ الكردي و عيد كردي خاص فينا بس والله توني اعرف القصة الحقيقية و والله انا للحين في صدمة عجيبة يرجل شكرا لك والله 🤯❤️❤️
اخيرا بعد عناء طويل 🎉🎉 كل يوم ادخل على القناة اقول بلكي الله نزل الفيديو والحمدلله اليوم نزل ❤ شكرا قاسم على هالابداع والتوعيه الموجوه بالفيد وشكرا عالتعب المبذول ✨
ما شاء الله كنتُ قد قرأت الرواية سابقاً لكن شرحك جميل وسلس انا حقا متحمس لأرى رأي الناس بالبطاقات والقصص الخاصة بها وخاصة البارت الأخير من الرواية " سيدنا.. وابن سيدنا.. "❤❤❤❤ شكراً على الفيديو.. وأستمر
ارفعو التعليق بدنا قصه او روايه مثل هاي كل اسبوع ابدعت يا صديقي محتواك رائع وختمت كل الفيديوهات وتمنيت لو في قصص و روايات مثل انتخريستو اسلوب خيالي مع اني اعرف القصه ، طريقه السرد والمونتاج والكلام مدهش وممتع ، احسنت استمر
قاسم انتبه وانا بقرا وصلت لصفحة 100 بس انتبه من االمعلومات الدينية ....كل اشي بتقراءه يدخل بالدين توخى الحذر بس هيك عشان الضرورة❤ لاني سمعت ان هناك ناس تقول انه يوجد اخطء تتعلق بالدين .....انا سمعت .... فاقرا بهدوء والقصص لقدام روعة رح تشعر لقدام بمتعة بالقراءة
خطأ بسيط يا اخوي قاسم اتمني تتفهمه انت قلت 🚫🚫🚫🚫🚫🚫🛑🛑 النمرود تمرد علي اوبه و حليفه ابليس و اتمرد علي" الله " و هذا خطأ لا يوجد بشري يستطيع التمرد علي رب العالمين لكنه اتمرد علي منهجيت الله وليس الله لأن الله عز وجل خير الانسان ان يتمرد علي منهجيته التي اتاح للأنسان الاختيار فيها سواء الايمان او الكفر لكن الله عز وجل لااحد يستطيع التمرد عليه لأنه هو الممنهج فأذا اردت ان تقول شخص تمرد علي الله فيعني انه تمرد علي امر الله و امر الله لا يخير الانسان فيها مثل ا(الموت او المرض) هو فقط تمرد علي المنهجيه التي خيره الله فيها و واصل السترد حفظك الله علي المعلومات
ترا النمرود اسمه ضُحاك 😅 والحداد اسمه كاوة 🙂 اليوم الي انتصروا فيه على النمرود هو ٢١ اذار (عيد نَوروز) او (عيد الربيع) يحتفل به الاكراد كل عام وهو عطلة رسمية في كردستان العراق
يقال ان النار التي اوقدهاا النمرود لأجل ان يحرق سيدنا ابراهيم الاكبر ولاعظم بلتاريخ ورغم انها النار الاقوى بلعالم قالى تعالى وقلنا يا نار كوني برا تقول الروايات لولا ان الايه لم تكمل وتقول سلام ان برد النار احرق ابراهيم ❤
زاهاك هو نفسو المشهور عند العرب ب أسم ضحاك وهو قائد ضااللمم جداا وكل الناس تشتكي منه وفي يوم من الأيام كان هنالك شخص اسمه كاوه الحداد(من الجنسيه الكورديه) قتل زاهاك وبهذا انتصر الخير على الشر وسميت هذا اليوم ب نوروز و تعني يوم الجديد وهي رأس السنه الكورديه نحتفل فيها لليوم وهذا اليوم لها معاني كثيره بالأضافة إلى انه نحن لليوم نسمي أولادنا شميران ونحن من الشعوب الآريه الي انت ذكرتها معبد آرو يوجد روايات عند بعض العلماء يقولون ب ان نمرود كوردي بالأضافة إلى انه اصلا اسم كوردي و تعني الخالد الذي لا يموت ونحن نسمي جيشنا (الپێشمەرگە) ب نمر او نمرود لان الشهيد عند الله لا يموت بالأضافة إلى ذالك نحن التاريخ يشهد لنا بأننا اولاد الشمس وهذا الحقيقة رح تشوف على علمنا صورة الشمس بوضوح ليومنا هذا☀️☀️☀️
الغاية من التركيز على الاية التي يقول الله تعالى( الم ترى الذي حاج ابراهيم في ربه ان اته الله الملك اذا قال ابراهيم ربي الذي يحي ويميت قال انا احي واميت قال ابراهيم انى الله ياتي بالشمس من المشرق فاتى بها من المغرب فبهت الذي كفر والله لايهدي قوم الظالمين ) سورة البقرة صفحة ٤٣ انو الشمس هي التي تتحرك وليس الارض تدور لذلك عرف النمرود ذلك لهيك بدو يحتل السماء هاد رد على من يدعي انو الارض كروية وتدور
@@AmmArAzQ مافي جاذبية اذا راحت سالت هنن مابيعرف اش هي الجاذبية بالاصل كل علوم الفضاء والجاذبية عبارة عن فلسفات مافي دليل واقعي على ان الجاذبية هي التي تسحبنه ثقل جسمك هو البسحبك اكبر اكتب ليش البخارات ما بتغرق لانو معدمتين على كثافة المياه لانو كثافة المياه اكبر لو كان في جاذبية كان غرقو
@@AmmArAzQ يا حبيبي فالاصل اذا طلعت القدماء المسلمين كلن بقولوا الارض المسطحة حتى الرسول كان يومن بالارض المسطحة وتاني شي انت مفكر كل شي واحد عامل عالم بحث هة فالاصل اذا سالت يعمول تجربة يثبت الجاذبية او شي ما راح يقدرو وتالت شي انت مفكر انو الدول العربية مستقلة كلن تحت اشراف الغرب يعني اما الشخص بقلك هاد شي منافق او عميل متل ماعم بتشوف العملاء للغرب وحتى اهل الهيئة لقلو ارض كروية قالو انه ثابته لاتتحرك وقالو فوق سموات الهدف من كل كذبة الفضاء خداعهم نفسيين بانه الله بعيد وايهم المغفلين بعدم وجود اله حتى اذا طلعت على ابحاث الملحدين اش كتبوا نتجية أبحاثهم انو توصل لايوجد الها فالاصل بدن يك تكفر من الاخير وتشكيك بدينك
يقصد بـ نحن ملوك الدنيا هي تعبير للعظمة مثل الرب الي يقول في كتابه الكريم أنا خلقناكم الرب واحد بس يتكلم بصيغة الجمع و تعني لعظمتة كذلك النمرود يقصد ان هو عظيم
ياخي ليش ما حكيت القصة متل ما هي موجودة بل كتاب يعني ليش ما ذكرت انو كاوة الحداد كان اصله كردي وانو يوم موت النمرود هو عيد النوروز اتمنى تحكي القصة متل ما هي موجدة بل كتاب
Kawa and the story of Newroz A long time ago in between the two great rivers Euphrates and Tigris there was a land called Mesopotamia. Above a small town and tucked into the side of the Zagros Mountains, there was an enormous stone castle with tall turrets and dark high walls. The castle was cut out of the mountain rock. The castle gates were made from the wood of the cedar tree and carved into the shapes of winged warriors. Deep inside the castle lived a cruel Assyrian king called Dehak. His armies terrorized all the people of the land. All had been well before Dehak”s rule in Mesopotamia. Previous kings had been good and kind and had encouraged the people to irrigate the land and keep their fields fertile. They ate food consisting only of bread, herbs, fruit and nuts. It was during the reign of a king called Jemshid that things started to go wrong. He thought himself above the sun gods and began to lose favour with his people. A spirit called Ahriman the Evil, seized the chance to take control. He chose Dehak to take over the throne, who then killed Jemshid and cut him in two. The evil spirit, disguised as a cook, fed Dehak with blood and the flesh of animals and one day as Dehak complimented him on his meat dishes, he thanked him and asked to kiss the king’s shoulders. As he did so there was a great flash of light and two giant black snakes appeared on either side of his shoulders. Dehak was terrified and tried everything he could to get rid of them. Ahriman the Evil disguised himself again, this time as a physician and told Dehak that he would never be able to rid himself of the snakes and that when the snakes became hungry Dehak would feel a terrible pain, which would only be alleviated when the snakes were fed with the brains of young boys and girls. So from that dark day onwards two children were chosen from the towns and villages that lay below the castle. They were killed and their brains were taken to the castle gates and placed into a large wooden bucket made from the wood of a walnut tree and held firmly together by three thin bands of gold. The bucket of brains was then lifted by two strong guards and taken to the wicked Dehak and the brains fed to the hungry snakes. Since the snake king began his rule over the kingdom, the sun refused to shine. The farmer’s crops, trees and flowers withered. The giant watermelons that had grown there for centuries rotted. The peacocks and partridges that used to strut around the giant pomegranate trees had left. Even the eagles that had flown high in the mountain winds had gone. Now all was dark, cold and bleak. The people all over the land were very sad. Everyone became terrified of Dehak. They sang sad and sorrowful laments that expressed their pain and plight. And the haunting sound of a long wooden flute could always be heard echoing throughout the valleys. Now there lived below the king’s castle a blacksmith who made iron shoes for the famous wild horses of Mesopotamia and pots and pans for the people of the town. His name was Kawa. He and his wife were weakened by grief and hated Dehak as he had already taken 16 of their 17 children. Every day, sweating hot from the oven, Kawa banged his hammer on the anvil and dreamed of getting rid of the evil king. And as he banged the red hot metal, harder and harder, the red and yellow sparks flew up into the dark sky like fireworks and could be seen for miles around. One day the order came from the castle that Kawa’s last daughter was to be killed and her brain was to be brought to the castle gate the very next day. Kawa lay all night on the roof of his house, under the bright stars and rays of the shining full moon thinking how to save his last daughter from Dehak’s snakes. As a shooting star curved through the night sky he had an idea. The next morning he rode on the bare back of his horse, slowly pulling the heavy iron cart with two metal buckets rattling on the back. The cart climbed up the steep cobbled road and arrived outside the castle. He nervously emptied the contents of the metal buckets into the large wooden bucket outside the enormous castle gates. As he turned to leave he heard the gates unbolt, shudder and slowly started to creak open. He took one last look and hurried away. The wooden bucket was then slowly lifted by two guards and taken into the castle. The brains were fed to the two hungry giant snakes that grew from Dehak’s shoulders. When Kawa got home he found his wife kneeling in front of a roaring log fire. He knelt down and gently lifted her large velvet cloak. There, under the cloak, was their daughter. Kawa swept back her long thick black hair from her face and kissed her warm cheek. Instead of sacrificing his own daughter, Kawa had sacrificed a sheep and had put the sheep’s brain into the wooden bucket. And no one had noticed. Soon all the townspeople heard of this. So when Dehak demanded from them a child sacrifice, they all did the same. Like this, many hundreds of children were saved. Then all the saved children went, under darkness, to the very furthest and highest mountains where no one would find them. Here, high up in the safety of the Zagros Mountains, the children grew in freedom. They learnt how to survive on their own. They learnt how to ride wild horses, how to hunt, fish, sing and dance. From Kawa they learnt how to fight. One day soon they would return to their homeland and save their people from the tyrant king. Time went by and Kawa’s army was ready to begin their march on the castle. On the way they passed through villages and hamlets. The village dogs barked and the people came out of their houses to cheer them and give them bread, water, yogurt and olives As Kawa and the children drew near Dehak’s castle both men and women left their fields to join them. By the time they were approaching the castle Kawa’s army had grown to many thousands. They paused outside the castle and turned to Kawa. Kawa stood on a rock. He wore his blacksmith’s leather apron and clenched his hammer in his hand. He turned and faced the castle and raised his hammer towards the castle gates. The large crowd surged forwards and smashed down the castle gates that were shaped like winged warriors and quickly overpowered Dehak’s men. Kawa raced straight to Dehak’s chambers, down the winding stone stairs, and with his blacksmiths hammer killed the evil snake king and cut off his head. The two serpents withered. He then climbed to the top of the mountain above the castle and lit a large bonfire to tell all the people of Mesopotamia that they were free. Soon, hundreds of fires all over the land were lit to spread the message and the flames leapt high into the night sky, lighting it up and cleansing the air of the smell of Dehak and his evil deeds. The darkness was gone. With the light of dawn, the sun came from behind the dark clouds and warmed the mountainous land once more. The flowers slowly began to open and the buds on the fig trees burst into bloom. The watermelons began to grow, as they had for centuries before. The eagles returned and flew on the warm winds amongst the mountain peaks. The peacocks fanned their beautiful plumes that glinted in the hot spring sun. Wild horses with long black manes galloped over the dusty flat plains. Partridges perched and sang on the branches of the pear trees. Small children ate ripe walnuts wrapped in fresh figs and the smell of freshly baked bread from the stone ovens reached their noses with the help of a light breeze. The fires burned higher and higher and the people sang and danced around in circles holding hands with their shoulders bobbing up and down in rhythm with the flute and drum. The women in bright coloured sequined dresses sang love songs and the men replied as they all moved around the flames as one. Some of the youngsters hovered over the flute, drunk with the sound of the music, their arms outstretched like eagles soaring the skies. Now they were free. To this day, on the same Spring day every year, March 21st, (which is also Spring Equinox) Kurdish, Persian, Afghan and other people of the Middle East dance and leap through fires to remember Kawa and how he freed his people from tyranny and oppression and to celebrate the coming of the New Year. This day is called Newroz or New Day. It is one of the few ‘peoples celebrations’ that has survived and predates all the major religious festivals. Although celebrated by others, it is especially important for the Kurds as it is also the start of the Kurdish calendar and celebrates the Kurds own long struggle for freedom.
﴿فَاسْأَلُوا أَهْلَ الذِّكْرِ إِن كُنتُمْ لَا تَعْلَمُونَ﴾ في امور ما ممكن تفهمها من القرآن، فجيب ان تسأل أهل الذكر. وإياك يا صاح ان تقطع ثقة الناس بأهل الذكر الي بالآية. لا تعطي صورة مشهوة عنهم.
ياخي انت ملغط بلطريق بتمنى تقرأ تعليقي للآخر وتحكم بنفسك وما قصدي سيئ لأي شخص بس ما الكتاب الا اخت منو الحديث كلو على بعضو كزبة كبيرة هذا خاطأ مسلم وليس صحيح مسلم اي كتاب يصور النبي على انه مريض نفسي وحاول الإنتحار ويقول احاديث لا اصل لها من المنطق مثلا حديث ان الله في الثلث الأخير من اليل ينزل الى السماء الدنيا هلق بشرفك انت يا قاسم بتأمن انو رب العلمين الي بس عرشو اكبر من الكون رح تساعو سمأ الأرض فكر فيها بشرفك واذا بعدك ما مقتنع رجاع للصفحو ٧٧٩ ج٣ تفسيرة اياة قل اعوز برب الناس وشوف الجرصة😂
من بديت اتابعك حرفيا تغيرت هوااااي حيث حتى مقترحات اليوتيوب تغيرت يعني قبل جنت اتابع العاب و ميمز و هسه كله كتب صوتيه و بودكاست و اكيد انت حرفيا انت أرقى شخص