No one knows exactly when the first war on Earth began. One thing is certain: not when man was still an animal, cowering in his cave out of fear. Nature has not created any living creature other than man who would be able to gather an army, take up arms and go to war against his own kind to kill, enslave, torture and, in the end, take away their homeland, their land, their dignity. Perhaps it wasn't until he emerged from the cave and became a man that he felt a thirst for power and a desire to seize territory beyond the neighboring valley, taking it from the weaker tribe.
No one knows exactly why people invented many religions and different gods. But there was one God who showed His children the path they had to follow. They did not wonder why He had chosen such a difficult path for them, they just believed and walked. When they made mistakes or strayed from the Path, He punished them like children. Those who chose other gods could not walk the Path without access to it, so they chose the road of war and killing. They simply destroyed the Path that the children of God were following so that no one else could have it. The poor people did not know where to go and cried out to their God to show them the Way, and He sent them His son to lead them, but mankind destroyed him too.
Throughout Earth's history, there have been many different civilizations on the planet, each with its own legends, culture, and religion. Nascent civilizations began to build beautiful cities, establish ties with other nations for trade, so that their people would live in prosperity, and so that art and science would flourish in their states. There have also been many ruined civilizations in the history of the Earth, wiped off the face of the planet with no hope of rebirth. This book highlights the most beautiful beginning of a culture blessed by the Creator himself, and the most tragic end of an enslaved people who managed to revive their state only 18 centuries later.