The swindler or fraudster is usually characterized by intense intelligence and cunning to achieve his goal and deceive his victims. In our story, we tell about an extremely cunning swindler who, through deception and trickery, was able to deceive everyone and exploit human greed to dominate the place and control all the villagers.
This swindler had a donkey whose mouth he stuffed with some gold coins. He took it to the market. When the donkey brayed in the market, the gold coins fell from its mouth. Everyone in the market gathered and asked this swindler man about the secret of what was happening. He answered them that this donkey had a story; it was an enchanted donkey. When it brayed, gold coins would always fall from its mouth.
Because gold has great magic that captivates hearts and minds, when it appears, people’s minds go with it. The chief merchant of the village decided to buy this enchanted donkey at the highest price. But after buying it, he discovered it was not enchanted at all and did not bray gold or anything else. So the chief merchant went and gathered all the merchants and told them the story of this swindler who had sold him the donkey as producing gold, but this never happened.
The groups of merchants went to the swindler’s house. When he learned they were coming, he fled outside the house. When the merchants knocked on his house door, his wife opened and said to them, “Welcome.” They asked her about her husband. She said, “He is outside, but I will send the dog to bring him.” She unleashed a dog they had, and the dog went out quickly to call his owner. The merchants were amazed by the dog and said to her, “Is this dog trained and knows how to bring your husband?”
She said, “Yes, it is so.” Indeed, after a short period, the swindler man came with a dog resembling the dog they had. The merchants forgot what happened with the donkey and wanted to buy the dog at the highest price. Indeed, the swindler sold this dog to one of the merchants. When the merchant unleashed it to bring his son from the market, this dog ran and never returned. So the merchant went and gathered all the merchants with him to go to the swindler’s house to tell him that he was a deceiver and swindler.
When they entered the house, his wife said to them, “Wait until my husband comes from outside.” When the swindler entered the house, he began talking with his wife and asked her, “Did you offer anything to these nobles, the leaders of the people?” His wife said, “No, by God.” He had with him a knife whose blade entered its sheath, meaning if someone was stabbed with it, it would not harm him at all. This swindler stabbed his wife, who was wearing a bag of red color under her clothes, so blood flowed—the red color.
The merchants were astonished by what they saw and said to him in disapproval, “Do you kill your wife because she did not offer us a drink or food? What are you doing, you madman?” He said to them, “I have done this before and killed her more than once.” He took out a flute from his pocket and began playing on it. The woman stood up in perfect health and offered them coffee and drinks. The merchants forgot the subject of the dog and decided to buy the flute.
Indeed, one of them killed his wife, and when he tried to blow on the flute to make her stand, she did not stand at all because she had actually died. The matter did not stop at this limit. Some other merchants took this flute and stabbed their wives, but their wives all died. They went in a state of raging anger and revolution to this swindler man. They put him in a large bag and closed it on him to throw him in the sea and get rid of him and his lies forever.
They carried him for a long distance until they became exhausted. They put him on the ground to rest, but sleep overcame them, and they all indulged in it due to extreme fatigue and exhaustion. The swindler called for help with a loud voice. While a shepherd was passing, he heard his voice calling for help. He opened it for him and said, “Why are you imprisoned in this bag?”
The swindler said to him, “These people imprisoned me because they want to marry me to the daughter of the chief merchant of the city, who is beautiful and very rich. But I love my cousin’s daughter and want no one but her.” The shepherd released him, and the swindler escaped. The shepherd entered the bag instead of him, greedily hoping to marry the chief merchant’s daughter. When the merchants woke up, they threw the shepherd into the sea, thinking he was the swindler.
The swindler had taken the flock of sheep that was with the shepherd and returned with it to his house. When the merchants returned to the village, happy with their deed, they found the swindler before them! They said to him, “How is this? We just threw you into the sea.” He said to them, “When you threw me into the sea, a mermaid from the sea took me out and gave me gold dinars to buy whatever I wanted. I bought those sheep.
If you want the gold dinars, you must enter the depths of the sea to obtain a larger mermaid and more dinars.” Indeed, all the merchants went to the sea and entered its depths. They all drowned due to their ignorance and greed. Thus, this swindler controlled the entire village, its people, and what was in it. This swindler is the Zionist entity that deceived everyone to impose its existence.