Musab El-Hahdjar Analysis

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Character lore/history The story Musab El-Hahdjar, Musab was a young boy when his father died as so he had to start living with his eighty year old grandfather who was remarkably fit and young looking for his age. He was a man of few words as so they didn 't speak much to eachother but when he did you could definetly hear that he wasn 't born here. Even tho Musab loved to go to the village of Al-Kahir he almost never came there as his grandfather hated to go to the village as he was seen as an outsider by the villagers. Musab 's childhood wasn 't the easiest one as his grandfather refused to go to the village for supply 's as so they had to do everything themselves from farming to butchering to milking simply everything. When Musab got older he got a job in the village as a smith 's trainee and after years of study he finally became a smith and a very good one. It was time to open his own smithy and so he did, but it didn 't take long before his workshop got destroyed by gondorian soldiers. Musab managed to flee the village, he ran to his grandfathers house as fast as he could. But when he arrived there was no one there, though there was an remarkable object on …show more content…

They split into three separate cultures, in the southern jungles, there were the Tauredain. They were forest folk, living in little stone houses. North of them were the Moredain, men with dark skin who lived in the vast savanas of Far Harad. They lived in small huts and never advanced to the level of the other tribes. Finally, north of them, in the desert, lived the Near Haradrim. They worshipped an entity known as the great serpent and lived in vast sandstone villages and towns scattered across the riverbanks and deserts. While for long they were not united, they came together over their united hatred of the imperialist Numenoreans and Gondorians. They readied for war on the side of

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