Contents of the Albooq
The purpose of this site is to share with you parallels between J.R.R. Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings Cycle and Islamic Eschatology. To show you the many parallels between Tolkien’s narratives of Middle Earth and its history, and the history of Greater Arabia and the Middle East in general. In particular, and in particular focusing on the history of his Third Age.
Further, to expose a hidden truth; that Tolkien appropriated from Islamic Prophetic material concerning Endtime Prophecies, the Mahdi/Frodo, the Messiah/Aragorn, and the enemy of the Free Peoples of Middle Earth/Middle-East — the Dajjal/Antichrist/Saruman.
Tolkien researchers and scholars have long been aware that Tolkien freely borrowed themes, narratives, and ideas from a variety of sources in building his stories of Middle Earth. The idea that Tolkien had not only acknowledged sources, but unacknowledged sources and inspirations that he didn’t speak directly of is not a new idea. Every Tolkien scholar is aware of hosts of literary parallels in Tolkien’s work.
However, one source of Tolkien’s borrowing has been studiously ignored. The omission is blindingly obvious, it is Islamic Lore. When you finish reading this site it will become obvious to you that not only are there hosts of parallels in Tolkien’s work to Islamic lore and particularly Endtime prophecies, but that the entire framework of Tolkien’s story is based on the framework of Islam’s Messianic story. That characters in Tolkein’s work specifically represent the Islamic understanding of Jesus son of Mary, al-Khidr the Green Wanderer, the Mahdi, the Abdal (Substitutes) of Syria, the vanguard warriors of the Mahdi, the Dajjal, and the Sufyani.
Finally, you will see that not only must Tolkien have had access to Islamic Prophecies, in Arabic, but that he was able to understand them well enough to depict them in a way that shockingly reflects the world around us.
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