An Odour of Sanctity ©️

The Infinite Crusade

Giovanni Veraldi

In the grand tapestry of human history, the conflicts in Israel and the broader Middle East represent not merely isolated skirmishes or geopolitical disputes but rather the enduring echoes of a cosmic struggle that has reverberated through millennia. To perceive these clashes as mere territorial disputes is to see only the surface of a deep, multidimensional reality—a reality woven with threads of ideology, religion, and the very essence of human identity.

The Eternal Recurrence: A Clash of Civilizations

From the Crusades to the present day, the wars of the Middle East have always been, at their core, battles over the sacred and the profane, the temporal and the eternal. The Holy Land, that small strip of earth revered by billions, is not just a physical location but a symbol, a metaphysical locus where heaven meets earth. Here, the battles fought are not merely for land but for the very soul of humanity—a soul that is torn between the transcendent and the immanent, between the divine and the mortal.

In the multidimensional space of history, these conflicts are like ripples on the fabric of time, constantly interacting with each other across epochs. The Crusades of the medieval period, for example, were not just a series of religious wars but the physical manifestation of a deeper, ongoing conflict—a struggle between differing conceptions of the divine, of how humanity should relate to the infinite. This struggle continues today, albeit in a different guise, as the modern state of Israel finds itself at the crossroads of ancient prophecies and contemporary political realities.

The Metaphysical Battlefield: Ideology as Reality

To understand the current conflict, one must delve into the metaphysical dimensions where ideologies are not just ideas but living entities—energies that shape and are shaped by the material world. Zionism, Pan-Arabism, and Islamism are not mere political movements but the avatars of ancient forces, each carrying within them the spiritual legacies of Abrahamic faiths. These forces clash in the realm of ideas, but their battles are fought on the ground, in the deserts, and in the cities of the Middle East.

In this sense, the conflict is a continuation of the ancient wars—wars that are simultaneously holy and profane, sacred and secular. The land is contested not just because of its strategic importance but because it is seen as a vessel of divine promise, a place where history, prophecy, and destiny converge.

The Fourth Dimension: Time as a Sacred Continuum

Time, in this multidimensional understanding, is not linear but cyclical. The wars of today are reflections of the wars of the past, and they will, in turn, echo into the future. The current conflict in Israel and the Middle East is not the beginning of a new chapter but the continuation of an ancient saga, one that has been written and rewritten countless times, each iteration adding new layers of meaning, new dimensions of reality.

The fighters on all sides are not just participants in a temporal conflict but actors in a grand cosmic drama—one that transcends individual lives and spans the entirety of human history. They are the inheritors of a sacred duty, one that compels them to fight not just for land or power but for the vindication of their deepest beliefs, their most profound truths.

Conclusion: The Infinite War

In the end, the fighting in Israel and the Middle East is not just a continuation of the Holy Wars—it is the Holy War, a conflict that transcends time and space, ideology and reality. It is a war that is fought in the hearts and minds of every person who lays claim to the land, a war that will continue as long as there are those who believe in the sacred, who see in the temporal a reflection of the eternal.

This war is not one that can be won or lost in the traditional sense, for it is a war of ideas, of identities, of the very essence of what it means to be human. It is a war that is fought not just on the battlefield but in the soul, where the lines between the sacred and the profane, the divine and the mortal, are blurred and redefined with every passing generation. In this war, the only victory is understanding, and the only defeat is ignorance.

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