Muslims Go To the Moon
By Bernie on 06 Jul 2010
There are two kinds of people in the world:
- Those who know we went to the moon.
- Those who believe the moon-landing was a hoax 1.
Interestingly, in a 2009 poll conducted by the British Engineering & Technology magazine found that 25% of Britons do not believe that humans have walked on the Moon 2, with an incredible 1% who believe the first man on the Moon was Buzz Lightyear. That certainly does explain why so many Britons are completely clueless to the threat that Islam poses to their own country.
Among the young in our country, 25% of Americans between the age of 18 and 25 are not sure the landings happened 3. And that explains why so many youngsters on the left are clueless about the same threat that Islam poses to America.
But I digress.
Of those who know that going to the moon is possible, there is a small subset who believe that Muslims will one day land on the moon. One of these is Canadian Astrophysicist and Cosmologist Dr Redouane Al Fakir who last week in Qatar announced plans for a historic mission to place Islam once again at the forefront of scientific knowledge by landing a scientific station bearing the name of the Prophet Muhammed (PBUH) on the surface of the moon in 2013 4.
Dr Al Fakir is asking Muslims to donate $1 each for the project. Since there are over a billion Muslims, that comes out to mucho dinero. That's a lot of money for a guy named Al Fakir. Me, I smell a scam.
As well is the scam that the Prophet Muhammed (PBUH) had some role in the scientific discoveries during the golden era of Islamic civilization. It was the Golden Era of Arab civilization that made those advances and it was Islam that ultimately smothered it.
I will still be writing this blog in 2013, Inshaa'Allaah, and I have no doubt there will be no Muhammed Moon Station I on the moon. Not in 2013, not ever. I write this because by the time any country in the Middle East has the technology to send a scientific station to the moon, there will no longer be practicing Muslims on Earth, Inshaa'Allaah.
This article available in Danish here.
Notes
(1):
Krishna.org, 20 Jan 2010, Man On The Moon–A Colossal Hoax that Cost Billions of Dollars
Although many believe man first reached the moon in July, 1969, we have information from a very reliable source, the Sanskrit Vedic scriptures, that the astronauts never actually went to the moon. The manned moon landing was a colossal hoax.
(2):
The Institution of Engineering and Technology, Britons question Apollo 11 Moon landings, survey reveals
Twenty-five per cent of the British public refuse to believe man has walked on the Moon, a survey conducted on behalf of E&T magazine has revealed.
...
Further revelations concerning the British public’s perception of the historic event include 11 per cent who believe the Moon-landing occurred during the 1980s and 1 per cent who believe the first man on the Moon was Buzz Lightyear.
(3):
Astronomy Magazine, Dec. 2009, p. 62
"The Cosmic Grid", by Liz Kruesi.
(4):
The Penisula, 23 Jun 2010, Mission to revive Islam’s science heritage
To give the Muslim world a space programme of its own, the Vancouver-based Muhammed Institute for Space Science will announce here a space mission that will land a scientific station bearing the name of the Prophet Muhammed (PBUH) on the surface of the moon in 2013.
“A space programme is something that is inevitable for all the nations today. It gives countries a voice and also brings in foreign investment. That is why countries like India invest so much in space programmes despite having millions in poverty. However, the Muslim nations are today lagging behind in space programmes,” said Dr Al Fakir, Director and CEO of the institute.
...
Through the project, Muhammed Institute aims to honour Prophet Muhammed (PBUH) for his role in the birth of rational scientific explanation that led to scientific discoveries during the golden era of Islamic civilization and ultimately to modern science as we know it today.
...
We just ask each Muslim to donate $ 1 for the noble cause,” said Dr Al Fakir.

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