End of Days by Sylvia Browne

Nothing sums up the Islamic view of the Apocalypse more gracefully than the Final Signs of Qiyaamah (Islam), one of the most famous of the Islamic prophecies:

The Ground will cave in:

one in the east, one in the west,

and one in Hejaz, Saudi Arabia.

Fog or smoke will cover the skies for forty days.

The nonbelievers will fall unconscious,

while Muslims will be ill [develop colds].

The skies will then clear up.

A night three nights long will follow the fog.

It will occur in the month of Zil-Hajj1 after Eidul-Ahja,2 

and cause much restlessness among the people.

After the night of three nights,

the following morning the sun will rise in the west.

People’s repentance will not be accepted after this incident.

One day later, the Beast from the earth will miraculously

emerge from Mount Safaa in Makkah, causing a split in the ground.

The Beast will be able to talk to people and

mark the faces of people,

making the believers’ faces glitter, and

the nonbelievers’ faces darken.

A breeze from the south causes sores in the armpits of Muslims,

which they will die of as a result.

The Ka’aba3 will be destroyed by a non-Muslim African group.

Kufr [Godlessness] will be rampant.

Haj [the pilgrimage to Makkah] will be discontinued.

The Qur’an will be lifted from the heart of the people,

thirty years after the ruler Muquad’s death.

 

 

 

The fire will follow people to Syria, after which it will stop. Some years after the first,

Qiyaamah [Islam] begins with the Soor [trumpet] being blown.

The year is not known to any person.

Qiyaamah will come upon the worst of creation.

It’s very much worth adding that Muslims have enormous respect for Jesus and never say his name without adding the homage “Peace be upon him.” The Qur’an refers to the immaculate birth of Christ, acknowledges His miracles, and predicts his Second Coming. In fact, the Islam faith believes that in the final days both Jesus and the prophet Imam Mahdi, a descendant of Muhammad, will come to Earth to combine forces of good against evil and usher in the Apocalypse.

Hinduism

Hinduism is the third largest religion in the world, with more than 750 million followers. It is thought to have been born in northern India between 4000 and 2200 BC. There’s some disagreement about the origin of its beliefs, whether it was brought by invading Indo-Europeans who practiced a religion called Vedism or it grew from the already established Vedic culture in India.

But there is no disagreement on the many unique aspects of this ancient religion compared to the other great religions of the world. Hinduism isn’t the result of any one messiah, leader, or group of leaders. There are no prophets in its rich history and no specific sequence of events that led to its creation.

Instead, Hinduism seems to have evolved into reality, with sacred texts—the Vedas and the Upanishads—that were committed to paper between 800 and 400 BC. It worships one supreme God, the principle of Brahman, a singular divine entity who is both at one with the universe and transcends it at the same time. Brahman exists as three separate aspects:

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