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=> Re: To Dalale

Re: To Dalale
Posted by Tiglath (Guest) davidchibo@hotmail.com - Monday, August 16 2004, 13:08:06 (CEST)
from Australia - Windows XP - Internet Explorer
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Dear Dalale,

>I'm glad you found something you are willing to read!
>
....I am willing to read everyhting that comes from the hands of our ancestors AND make my own interpretation. I refuse to allow a Jew to rewrite our history or a Sitchin to down play the achievements of our ancestors.

>..Siduri the single daughter of the boatman who tried to stop Gilgamesh from pursuing his quest for immortality because she was afraid he would get killed. (I don't know where you got the idea that she represents the sign Capricorn)

....Our ancient Sumerian ancestoirs were the first to write the epic of Guilgamesh and copies date back to around 3,000 BC. A thousand years later when they were known as the Babylonians the astrologers used the celestial path known as the eliptic to chart the characters from the very same Epic.
So the 12 tablets of the Epic of Gilgamesh were written in the stars by our ancestors as the 12 signs(constellations) of Gilgamesh. The Greeks of course took these Gilgamesh star signs - along with our philosophy, religion, science - and repackaged them, calling them the Zodiac, a greek word which means animals.
So the Epic of Gilgamesh was so important to our ancestors that its characters were written in the stars!
Aries, the ram represents the coming of Enkidu.
Taurus, is of course the bull of heaven,
Gemini, is the battle between Gilgamesh and Enkidu where they fight to a draw etc........and of course beautiful and wise Siduri, the tavern-keeper who lived on the edge of the sea was represented by the Babylonian goat-fish, which was called Capricorn by the Greeks and Romans.

>"O Gilgamesh! There has never been a way
>And no one since the days of old has passed the sea
>The way is hard and the road is rough
>And deep are the waters of Death which close the entrance
>Where, then, Gilgamesh, shalt thou pass over the sea?
>When thou reaches the waters of Death, what shalt thou do?"
>

These were never mere myths or tales. Just as the Ishtar and Tammuz myth explained the CYCLE of life so too the Epic of Gilgamesh explained (wo)manknd's
AIM in life.



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