@aaa1uu:

🤍مهدويه313🤍
🤍مهدويه313🤍
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Saturday 06 December 2025 15:30:42 GMT
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user15117817472467
جلنار💕 :
السلام عليك ياسيدي ومولاي ياابا الحسنين ياعلي ورحمة الله وبركاتة 😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭
2025-12-07 16:39:03
0
dy5hwlkhd7c3
dy5hwlkhd7c3 :
زيارة مقبولة أن شاء الله 🤲🤲🤲🤲
2025-12-06 21:21:17
2
aboghadeeraliraqi0
Mahdi Aliraqi :
زيارة مقبولة ان شاء الله
2025-12-08 04:42:30
0
iquy56
أبن الجنوب (العراقي) :
تقبل الله زيارتكم -
2025-12-07 20:42:04
0
khvvvgglhvhhgvkhjig
زهرت الكاردينيه :
اخ اخ اخ اخ اخ 😭😭😭😭😭😭😭
2025-12-07 11:25:31
0
au_704
. :
السلام عليك يا أبا الحسن ياعلي
2025-12-07 07:16:45
1
user2059218116845
دكہتہوٌرهہ هہآنہآ 🌹 :
السلام عليك يا ابا الحسن علي 😭💔
2025-12-07 13:04:22
0
najm631
Najem Ajam :
زياره مقبوله
2025-12-06 22:50:16
1
asuo154
كفيلي ابا الفضل ع :
زياره مقبوله ان شاءالله
2025-12-07 10:55:20
0
hvh.jsi
يا زهراء :
اي والله 😭😭
2025-12-07 12:16:19
0
asx_jdkk
عماد الحيدري ديوانيه :
أي والله صحح 🥺🥺
2025-12-07 11:17:19
0
user8607196388028
سيد علي هيال الموسوي :
تقبل الله طاعتكم
2025-12-07 20:27:04
0
07722202932sah
07722202932 :
زياره مقبوله
2025-12-07 07:15:45
1
user8558145857351
زهراء جواد :
اي والله 😭
2025-12-07 12:20:34
0
user5915227698181
المصور زكي زعو :
👑👑👑👑👑
2025-12-06 22:07:57
2
ikg396
Zainab :
🤲🤲🤲
2025-12-07 09:28:32
1
user4885984875534
احمد شدهان :
😔😔😔😔😔😔😔
2025-12-07 09:28:04
2
fofo11.fm19
كــبّـريّـآء مِـلَـكــهِ🕊🌹👑 :
🤲🤲🤲
2025-12-06 21:49:40
1
fofo11.fm19
كــبّـريّـآء مِـلَـكــهِ🕊🌹👑 :
💔💔
2025-12-06 21:49:35
1
user10753747957027
فاكده وليدي.. 😔💔، :
😭😭😭🤲🤲🤲🤲🤲
2025-12-08 03:53:44
0
dysv7c0ktnn7
كاظم هادي الزبيدي :
🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
2025-12-08 03:42:35
0
dysn1aiiqrrc
خادمه فاطمه الزهراء³¹³ :
💔💔💔
2025-12-07 22:13:19
0
z12_o
عسل 🤍🕊️ :
💔😔
2025-12-07 22:00:03
0
anzlawlkpp
صـــدريـــــــّهِ313 :
💔💔💔💔
2025-12-07 20:27:58
0
ao_tg0
مصطفى الشمري :
❤️❤️❤️
2025-12-07 17:30:17
0
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There is a dark truth behind the phrase: “Carthago delenda est.” Carthage must be destroyed. It wasn’t just a call for conquest. It was Rome’s justification for annihilation—not of a city, but of a culture. And at the heart of that justification was a god with burning hands. In the shadowed temples of Carthage, among columns wreathed in incense and stone altars blackened by time, stood the bronze idol of Baal Hammon. To him, the Carthaginians—so claimed Roman sources—offered their most innocent possessions: their children. Ancient historians wrote of infants laid into the red-hot arms of Baal, slipping into a furnace below while drums pounded to drown the screams. According to these accounts, the city’s nobility sacrificed their heirs to buy divine favor. The ritual site was called the Tophet—a graveyard of charred bone and scorched urns, where ash covered the sins of a civilization. “To conquer a people, you must break their gods.” — Tacitus Whether Rome told the truth or manipulated it, the effect was the same: Carthage became not just a rival, but a moral abomination. The Punic Wars were reframed not as battles over trade and territory—but as a holy war against inhumanity. By 146 BC, as Scipio Aemilianus besieged the city, the narrative had done its work. This wasn’t just strategy. It was righteous destruction. Carthage burned for days, its temples pulled down, its culture scattered to dust. Survivors were enslaved. The Tophet—if real—was silenced forever. Modern scholars still debate the truth. Were the sacrifices literal, or propaganda? Was the Tophet a cemetery or a killing field? But to Rome, the distinction didn’t matter. They had their reason. And they had their fire. Carthago delenda est. #carthage #baal #rome #punicwars #History #darkhistory
There is a dark truth behind the phrase: “Carthago delenda est.” Carthage must be destroyed. It wasn’t just a call for conquest. It was Rome’s justification for annihilation—not of a city, but of a culture. And at the heart of that justification was a god with burning hands. In the shadowed temples of Carthage, among columns wreathed in incense and stone altars blackened by time, stood the bronze idol of Baal Hammon. To him, the Carthaginians—so claimed Roman sources—offered their most innocent possessions: their children. Ancient historians wrote of infants laid into the red-hot arms of Baal, slipping into a furnace below while drums pounded to drown the screams. According to these accounts, the city’s nobility sacrificed their heirs to buy divine favor. The ritual site was called the Tophet—a graveyard of charred bone and scorched urns, where ash covered the sins of a civilization. “To conquer a people, you must break their gods.” — Tacitus Whether Rome told the truth or manipulated it, the effect was the same: Carthage became not just a rival, but a moral abomination. The Punic Wars were reframed not as battles over trade and territory—but as a holy war against inhumanity. By 146 BC, as Scipio Aemilianus besieged the city, the narrative had done its work. This wasn’t just strategy. It was righteous destruction. Carthage burned for days, its temples pulled down, its culture scattered to dust. Survivors were enslaved. The Tophet—if real—was silenced forever. Modern scholars still debate the truth. Were the sacrifices literal, or propaganda? Was the Tophet a cemetery or a killing field? But to Rome, the distinction didn’t matter. They had their reason. And they had their fire. Carthago delenda est. #carthage #baal #rome #punicwars #History #darkhistory

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