120-year-old apocalyptic prophecy written by a controversial religious figure is exploding back into public view — and many say its predictions sound disturbingly close to what the world is facing under President Donald Trump’s second term.

The prophecy comes from Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad, a 19th-century Indian spiritual leader whose followers believed he was the “Promised Messiah.” In 1905, Ahmad wrote a poem describing a coming worldwide catastrophe marked by violent earthquakes, mass death, and a mysterious assault from the sky.

Today, the language reads like a preview of a modern global conflict.

Ahmad warned that a sign would appear suddenly, overturning “villages, cities and fields.” He described an instant where the land would be “rolled over” and “streams of blood” would pour like water.

One line in particular is fueling online panic:

“The sky shall draw its dagger to attack.”

To modern readers, that imagery feels eerily close to a missile launch or nuclear strike.

“These words were written before airplanes even existed,” said Dr. Samira Kahn, a religious historian. “The description aligns shockingly well with today’s weapons of war.”

Ahmad wrote that even the Czar of Russia would be plunged into unbearable distress during the coming disaster. Though Russia has no czar in 2026, many see a connection to escalating U.S.–Russia tensions and ongoing military confrontations abroad.

“It’s impossible to ignore the parallels,” said defense analyst Mark Ellis. “Every global flashpoint right now has Russia’s fingerprints on it.”

Ahmad described a massive quake shaking “mortals, trees, mountains and seas.” His followers historically tied the prophecy to early 20th-century disasters — but 2026 brings its own grim context.

This year alone, major quakes have hit Asia, the Middle East, and the Pacific. Scientists are also warning of unusual solar activity that could disrupt communications across North America.

“These descriptions match modern natural and atmospheric threats with unsettling accuracy,” said astrophysicist Dr. Brian Mercer.

Ahmad believed he had been divinely appointed, claiming in his writings that humanity would face destruction for ignoring a spiritual “warner.”

“A warner came unto the world, but the world accepted him not.”

His movement later split over whether he was a prophet or merely a reformer, but both factions preserve the poem — and both acknowledge it predicted some form of global cataclysm.

The revival of Ahmad’s prophecy comes as U.S. scientists prepare to update the Doomsday Clock, currently set at 89 seconds to midnight — the closest in history to a man-made global catastrophe.

With nuclear threats rising, conflicts intensifying, and world powers trading warnings on live TV, the timing has many Americans uneasy.

“People feel like something big is coming,” said retired Pentagon strategist Col. James Tully. “When an old prophecy lines up with modern headlines, it hits a nerve.”

Ahmad ended his prophecy with a stark prediction:

“Those days are near… when the world shall witness the spectacle of a doomsday.”

Whether seen as poetry, prophecy, or coincidence, the resurfaced warning has become one of 2026’s most talked-about—and feared—mysteries.

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