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The arch was a pagan Roman structure that stood in front of the Temple of Ba’al 2,000 years ago to honor the god of orgies and child sacrifice. The model cited by the artist was a 28-meter tall 3-D printed model created by the Institute for Digital Archeology representing the famous arch of the original Temple of Palmyra in Syria that was displayed in London as part of the UNESCO World Heritage Week. The Iranian-born, Montreal-based artist Abbas Akhavan came up with the idea of this colonnade when he saw an image of then-Mayor of London Boris Johnson unveiling a replica of the Palmyra Arch in London’s Trafalgar Square in 2016. It is interesting to note that Jeremiah’s Syria prophecy is appearing just as an art exhibit in London’s Chisenhale Gallery recreates a colonnade from the pagan temple of Palmyra, Syria. “The simple message is to make Hashem one and his name one,” Rabbi Berger said. People see the drought but miss the meaning which could actually contain the solution.”
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People are focusing on the pandemic and the vaccine but missing the message implicit in the plague. As we are seeing more and more signs of geula (redemption) appearing precisely as prophesied, it is important to remember the prophecies and not get distracted by our own interpretations. In this case, Syria has much to repent for. “God loves all of creation but nations are judged on how they relate to Israel. “It is clear that what is happening in Syria is the prophecy of Jeremiah,” Rabbi Berger said. Rabbi Yosef Berger, the rabbi of King David’s Tomb on Mount Zion, emphasized that it is precisely during the holiday of Sukkoth that the world is judged on how much rain it will receive in the upcoming year. Assuredly, Wildcats and hyenas shall dwell, And ostriches shall dwell there It shall never be settled again, Nor inhabited throughout the ages. The prophet Jeremiah described how the waters of Babylon, the region currently including Syria and Iraq, would dry up as a punishment for their idolatrous practices, the devastation being so complete as to render the region, once part of the so-called ‘fertile crescent’, uninhabitable.Ī drought against its waters, that they be dried up! For it is a land of idols They are besotted by their dread images. On that day Hashem made a covenant with Avram, saying, “To your offspring I assign this land, from the river of Egypt to the great river, the river Euphrates: Genesis 15:18 It was also named as one of the borders of the land God granted to Abraham’s descendants. The name of the third river is Tigris, the one that flows east of Assyria.
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The water level at the Tishrin Dam, the first into which the river falls inside Syria, has dropped five meters and is currently about ten centimeters above “dead level” when the turbines stop producing electricity. Two dams in northern Syria face imminent closure which would leave about three million people without any access to electricity. The 1,700 mile-long Euphrates is the main source of drinking water as well as powering three hydroelectric plants that produce electricity for about three million people in Syria. Syria is currently facing its worst drought in 70 years. This year, rainfall in southern Turkey where the Euphrates begins was the lowest in 30 years and for the past two years, the region has received only 50-70 percent of normal rainfall. Originating in Turkey, the Euphrates flows through Sy ria and Iraq to join the Tigris in the Shatt al-Arab, which empties into the Persian Gulf. According to one rabbi, this is the realization of a prophecy from the Book of Jeremiah.