Al-Azhar: The Zionist enemy is a ferocious wolf possessed by murderous madness

The Al-Azhar religious institute in Egypt has announced that: "The Zionist enemy has turned into a fierce and thirsty wolf that kills children, women and innocent people, and enjoys eating their flesh and drinking their blood without any restrictions."

Al-Azhar: The Zionist enemy is a ferocious wolf possessed by murderous madness
Al-Azhar: The Zionist enemy is a ferocious wolf possessed by murderous madness

The message was given in a strongly worded statement by Al-Azhar, indicating the killing of Jabalia carried out by the army of the aggressive Israeli regime yesterday Tuesday in Gaza, which has killed more than 200 martyrs and injured hundreds of others. The statement added that: "The Zionist regime of Israel is being forced to commit these crimes and silence like the silence of the dead at their graves, which has afflicted our international world, and weakened its will and ability to prevent it from eating and drinking the blood of children, women, the elderly and the youth of Gaza." The Grand Sheikh of al Azhar, Ahmed El-Tayeb The statement said: "The Al-Azhar Institute seeks refuge in Almighty God to manage and protect Gaza and its people with His glory, power and authority, break the power of the enemy, and show us the wonders of His power by dealing with the evil killers as well as the people who help them and support them." Al Azhar has also asked Muslims around the world to pray for the people who continue to be brutally killed in Gaza in all their prayers. Al-Azhar's statement was issued after the "terrible massacre" carried out by the Israeli army by attacking a residential neighborhood near the Indonesian Hospital in Jabalia, northern Gaza, killing hundreds of innocent people. The Ministry of Health in Gaza has announced that the attacks have killed and wounded more than 400 people, according to preliminary figures, stressing that the number may be higher, surpassing that of the killings carried out by the Israeli army at the Baptist Hospital, because the area that was attacked was "highly crowded."