Page 799 - Atlas of Creation Volume 1
P. 799
Harun Yahya
perfect timing, and creep between the bricks to
clamp them to each other. While all this is happen-
ing, iron ore under the ground is shaped under "nat-
ural conditions" and lays the foundations of a
building that is to be formed with these bricks. At the
end of this process, a complete building rises with all
its materials, carpentry, and installations intact.
Of course, a building does not only consist of
foundations, bricks, and cement. How, then, are the
other missing materials to be obtained? The answer
is simple: all kinds of materials that are needed for
the construction of the building exist in the earth on
which it is erected. Silicon for the glass, copper for
the electric cables, iron for the columns, beams,
water pipes, etc. all exist under the ground in abun-
dant quantities. It takes only the skill of "natural con-
ditions" to shape and place these materials inside the
building. All the installations, carpentry, and acces-
sories are placed among the bricks with the help of
the blowing wind, rain, and earthquakes.
Everything has gone so well that the bricks are
arranged so as to leave the necessary window spaces
as if they knew that something called glass would be
formed later on by natural conditions. Moreover,
they have not forgotten to leave some space to allow
the installation of water, electricity and heating sys-
tems, which are also later to be formed by coinci-
dence. Everything has gone so well that
"coincidences" and "natural conditions" produce a
perfect design.
If you have managed to sustain your belief in
this story so far, then you should have no trouble
surmising how the town's other buildings, plants,
highways, sidewalks, substructures, communica-
tions, and transportation systems came about. If you
possess technical knowledge and are fairly conver-
sant with the subject, you can even write an ex-
tremely "scientific" book of a few volumes stating
your theories about "the evolutionary process of a
sewage system and its uniformity with the present
structures". You may well be honoured with acade-
mic awards for your clever studies, and may con-
sider yourself a genius, shedding light on the nature
of humanity.
The theory of evolution, which claims that life
came into existence by chance, is no less absurd than
our story, for, with all its operational systems, and
systems of communication, transportation and man-
agement, a cell is no less complex than a city.
Adnan Oktar 797

