A
Saudi cleric has publicly claimed that the Earth is a static object
which is orbited by the sun, adding that centuries of evidence to the
contrary is little more than fabrication.
Sheikh
Bandar al-Khaibari is believed to have been speaking at a university
lecture in the United Arab Emirates when a student asked him whether the
Earth rotates or is stationary.
The
Islamic scholar quickly replies 'stationary and does not move', before
launching into a long-winded and confusing explanation that appears to
the suggest that if the Earth was moving, airliners would never be able
to reach their destination.
Bizarre: Saudi cleric Sheikh Bandar al-Khaibari has publicly claimed that the Earth is a static object
After
telling the student that the Earth does not rotate, Sheikh al-Khaibari
attempts to back up his argument with religious statements and quotes
from other Islamic clerics.
Perhaps
struggling to make his argument understood, the religious lecturer then
attempts to use a visual aid to illustrate how difficult it would be
for airliners to travel if the Earth is spinning.
Beginning
his bizarre summary, Sheikh al-Khaibari 'First of all, where are we
now? We go to Sharjah airport [in the United Arab Emirates] to travel to
China by plane, clear?'
holding a cup of water aloft, the cleric adds: 'Focus with me, this is Earth'.
Over
the next 30 seconds, Sheikh al-Khaibari enters into a baffling
explanation of his point of view, claiming that if the Earth truly was
rotating, then airliners could just stop in the air and wait for the
country to arrive beneath them, rather than waste time actually flying.
'China would be coming towards it,' he argues.
On
the other hand, he said, if the Earth was moving in the opposite
direction the plane would never be able to reach its destination because
'China is also rotating'.
On
concluding his baffling explanation, Sheikh al-Khaibari went on to claim
the NASA lunar mission was Hollywood fabrication and that humans have
never been to the moon, according to Al Arabiya.
Video
of the incident has inevitably proved a hit on social media, where
users started an Arab-language hashtag that translates
as #cleric_rejects_rotation_of_Earth.
One
user pointed out that the footage first appeared February 15 - the
451th anniversary of Galileo Galilei's birth. Galileo was famously twice
accused of heresy by the Catholic Church after publicly supporting
the Copernican theory that the Earth and other planets rotate around the
sun.
While
many are using the hashtag to mock Sheikh al-Khaibari's views, others
said it should be turned into a way to educate young people about the
universe .
To watch the video click on the link below
source; dailymailuk
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