Anybody have any articles/information/links about who St. George was, and the crimes he committed against muslims?
You know the Jewish joke about the Jewish scientist who produces a three volume set on the history of the Elephant? Volume 1 The Origins and Evolution of the Elephant, Volume 2 The Distribution and Threats to the Elephant, Volume 3 The Elephant and the Jewish Question.
St George, if he did commit crimes against Muslims, was awfully quick off the mark,
Anybody have any articles/information/links about who St. George was, and the crimes he committed against muslims ?
St George was a Christian martyr in the Roman empire. He died in 303 AD - long before the beginning of Islam. So I don't think he committed any crimes against Muslims.
However, the St George's cross (red cross on white flag) was carried as a symbol in the crusades against Islam.
Perhaps that's the connection.
Peace.
Peace glo
Here I stand.
I can do no other.
May God help me.
Amen.
Come, let us worship and bow down •
and kneel before the Lord our Maker
[Psalm 95]
I thougt the red cross on the white background had something to do with the Knights templars. After all it wasn't a 't' shaped cross. it was symmetrical wasn't it?
St George was a Christian martyr in the Roman empire. He died in 303 AD - long before the beginning of Islam. So I don't think he committed any crimes against Muslims.
However, the St George's cross (red cross on white flag) was carried as a symbol in the crusades against Islam.
Perhaps that's the connection.
People may be getting confused as the red cross (English flag) is called the Cross of St. George, which was flown during the Crusades.
True. To try to turn this to something more productive, I noticed Wikipedia says,
In Islamic cultures, the figure of al-Khadr (or al-Khidr; according to the Qur'an a companion of the prophet Moses), is associated with St.George, who is also venerated under that name by Christians among mainly Muslim people, especially Palestinian people, and mainly around Jerusalem, where according to tradition he lived and often prayed near the Temple Mount, and is venerated as a protector in times of crisis. His main monument is the elongated mosque Qubbat al-Khadr ('The Dome of al-Khadr') which stands isolated from any close neighbors on the northwest corner of the Dome of the Rock terrace in Jerusalem.
Is there such a mosque and what is the Quranic basis for a belief in al-Khadr? It looks, umm, odd to me.
Le coeur a ses raisons, que la raison ne connait pas. - Blaise Pascal
Hey there! Looks like you're enjoying the discussion, but you're not signed up for an account.
When you create an account, we remember exactly what you've read, so you always come right back where you left off. You also get notifications, here and via email, whenever new posts are made. And you can like posts and share your thoughts.
Sign Up
Bookmarks