The book Return to Mecca by Israeli writer Dennis Avi Lipkin is a controversial ideological work. Available in English, the author adopts a radical Zionist biblical perspective, claiming that the Hijaz and Tabuk regions are Jewish lands, and the book relies on biblical and Talmudic interpretations to reread Islamic history and geography.The author of the book says: We must invade the Arabian Peninsula, occupy the Hijaz and Tabuk, and demolish the Kaaba, which is more important to us than demolishing Al-Aqsa and building the temple, and we have the right to inherit our grandfather Ibrahim.
Dr. Ibrahim Awad, professor of English at the Faculty of Arts, Ain Shams University, believes in his book "Responding to a Zionist rabbi who calls for the erasure of Islam from existence" that some may be astonished; after the majority of Arab regimes are in Israel's embrace, and even geography is intertwined with politics thanks to the positions of many Arabs who are racingamong themselves to prove their loyalty to Israel in various ways.
Awad confirms that the nights of time are pregnant and give birth to every wonder, and it is worth watching amid Arab subservience, which history has not witnessed except in the time of barbarians and Tatars. Every Arab watches with his own eyes the stones of his Arab homeland fall and sees the cracking of its falling walls. In general, the Arab world is living these days a wide activity in the market of selling homelands and moving from one disaster to another as if outside banana plantations, in what we can call the era of the "great Arab apostasy".The loyalty of Israel has become publicly announced, and the game is now open.
His wide door. And Israel's demand for Khaybar and the areas of Qinqaa and Bani Nadir and Bani Qurayzah is not a joke. This is what the Arab thinker Abdul Wahab Al-Masiri drew attention to early in the mid-1970s when he said: We may reach a stage where the Arab man becomes a functional Zionist who performs the same functions as the original Zionist.Certainly, the road to Mecca is now open to Israel, and the book "Return to Mecca" represents a remarkable development of the Israeli dreams of restoring the Promised Land that the Torah texts talked about, as they say.













