Today's useless fact

by dmouse 1 Replies latest watchtower beliefs

  • dmouse
    dmouse

    In my wanderings around the net yesterday I came across this interesting piece about childrens' involvment in the Crusades. I often think there are historical parallels between certain events and the way that the WBTS treat the youths under their influence, for example the Hilter Youth movement. The part that the Churches played in encouraging youths to sacrifice themselves during the middle ages also reminds me of the way that youths are encouraged to sacrifice their lives on the alter of pioneer or Bethel service.

    What do you think?

    The article:

    What happened to the kids who went on the Children's Crusade?

    The Crusades of medieval western Europe became progressively
    uglier as centuries passed; gold and lives were squandered, and
    yet the Crusaders were no closer to wresting the Holy Land from
    the infidel Muslims. In 1202, Crusaders ransacked Christian
    churches and Eastern European villages, much to the embarrassment
    of the Church and their communities back home. Morale in western
    Europe was at an all-time low.

    It was in this atmosphere that two young boys emerged from the
    countryside of western Europe to act as God's warriors. Stephen
    was a young shepherd boy from Cloyes, France. Devout and eager,
    he claimed to have received a message from Jesus that he was to
    walk to Jerusalem and crush the infidels. Stephen soon managed to
    attract thousands of French boys to his cause, all hoping to
    change the world and right the wrongs of the Crusaders before
    them. Parents cried and begged them not to go, but church
    officials, by many accounts, fully encouraged these youths in
    their quest.

    At the same time, a similar scene was being played out in
    Germany. Nicholas, a local peasant boy from Cologne, said he had
    received specific instructions from a cross of lights in the sky.
    He manageji to gather at least 7,000 young people to his cause.
    Like lambs to slaughter, the two groups of unarmed children
    marched off to reclaim the Holy Sepulcher.

    It's a toss-up for which group fared worse. Most of the German
    children either froze to death or slid off the mountains trying
    to get through the Alps. The French children suffered from
    disease and hunger during their long march. When they reached the
    Mediterranean Sea, they were disappointed to discover that the
    sea did not part and let them walk across, as Stephen had
    prophesied. Finally, seven ships were supplied by two rich
    merchants to carry the boys across the the Mediterranean. Two of
    them sank in storms with 1,400 children aboard. The other five
    reached land on the other side but nowhere near the Holy Land,
    alas. The sailors had changed course to Egypt where they sold the
    boys into slavery. Many of them were put to death when they
    refused to convert to Islam.

    Meanwhile, the German children who survived passage over the Alps
    split into smaller groups, each looking for the passage to
    Palestine. Some arrived at the Italian port of Genoa with no
    means of transportation. Others just disappeared into the
    countryside to fates unknown. Of the thousands that set out from
    France and Germany, only a hundred or two were ever heard from
    again. Some historians theorize that the tale of the Pied Piper
    of Hamelin - who magically led an entire German village of
    children away, never to be seen again-was an allegorical history
    of the parents' and villagers' deep sense of loss over their
    children who went off to the Children's Crusade.

    ~source used: "Just Curious, Jeeves"
    by Erin Barrett & Jack Mingo

  • Odrade
    Odrade

    very interesting. bump.

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