Tuesday, May 29, 2007

Sitchin on the Deluge, the pyramids, and the war of the end of the world

Sitchin closes his first book in the Earth Chronicle series, The 12th Planet, by discussing the Deluge. His second book, The Stairway to Heaven, is on the afterlife and those who sought a form of eternal life given to the “alien” gods who colonized Earth starting 450,000 years ago, the Nefilim. He discusses the location of their spaceports and then basically affirms what Maurice Chatelain asserted in his book Our Ancestors Came From Outer Space, that the Great Pyramid complex in Giza is, amongst other things, a high-tech landing beacon for the Nefilim. He starts his third book in the series, The Wars of Gods and Men, by discussing the various spats between the gods, which ended in the supremacy of one Marduk. Interestingly enough he opens the book with what supposedly will be the final war of the gods, the future war at the end of the world between the forces of light and darkness. This war will start in the modern day Mideast and will feature gods fighting alongside mankind in a biblical battle that will ensure the end of the world as we know it.


Perhaps doing a disservice Sitchin, one of roughly 300 or so Sumer-speaking folks alive on the planet, let’s look only briefly at each of these points by hitting the utmost highlights of the sections of his books listed here and which are based on tablets found in excavations in Iraq and throughout the Mideast. To prep for this, note that the Nefilim came here when Homo erectus, the product of Earth’s natural evolutionary system, walked the planet. These “alien” gods wanted almost strictly Earth’s royal and nuclear metals and commenced mining here almost immediately. Three stations were set up, one in what became Sumer, one in the hollows of “lower-Earth,” and one on a mother ship circling the Earth. Based on the Sumerian texts and various accounts of events that occurred during the Apollo missions, it can safely be concluded that the space station was eventually moved to the inside of the moon, which like Earth is hollow. In lower-Earth approximately 300,000 years ago, after a mutiny of the rank and file workers and gold miners, the Nefilim created mankind, the end result of what some are claiming was a elongated series of genetic modification experiments that used, amongst that of others, Neanderthal DNA and along the way created a variety of beings, from angels to centaurs to dwarfs. Finally Homo sapien was invented and he worked the mines of lower-Earth. Eventually the slave race was brought to the surface to work there as well.


The Deluge


The planet from which the Nefilim originated swings through this part of the solar system every 3,600 years or so. And it just so happened that around 13,000 years ago, as the Earth was warming and coming out of an ice age, the planet of the Nefilim could be seen soaring across Earth’s night sky. The gravitational pull of this planet drug the half-melted ice cap into the ocean, displacing enough water to send mile-high tidal waves roaring from pole to pole and back again. Mankind was already in a dire state at that point, being that climate change had made gardening, hunting and fishing incredibly difficult. But the Deluge was the climax that the Nefilim had envisioned and most of these so-called “gods” managed to escape into the Earth’s orbit and to watch it all go down from a distance. Enki, the creator of mankind, was sympathic towards one specific family, that of who we now refer to as Noah, and gave him the low down well in advance so that he could build a specialized craft, survive and then repopulate the Earth after the planet of the Nefilim was on its way back into space and the waters had receded.


It is during this tale that rifts amongst the Nefilim become apparent and somewhat defined. Enlil, who was in charge of the headquarters in Sumer, was to one degree or another basically vehemently anti-human. Enki, who had been in charge of the headquarters based in lower-Earth and who had created mankind was empathetic to man and thus ensured the survival of the species when the time came. Anu, who ran the space station orbiting Earth, was above this row and, based on tablets found in Sumer and Sitchin’s interpretation of them, played only a minor role in the decision to let mankind be wiped out due to cataclysmic events of astronomical proportions.


The Afterlife


The Nefilim were apparently able to live on after their Earthly bodies stopped functioning but to do so entailed a journey to a restricted place, a space port based inside a mountain. To get there these so-called “gods” built special burial chambers which would open to an underground tunnel that would lead them into lower-Earth. From there they would journey to the space ports, politicking heavily along the way to ensure a trip to some refuge away from Earth. Once they had pleased the right bigwigs, the recently-dead would board a vessel that would blast into space and that is the last that would be heard of them.


Apparently one of the effects Earth had on its Nefilim colonizers was it dramatically shortened their lives. They are coming from a planet that takes 3,600 Earth years to orbit the sun once, meaning that one year of life for the Nefilim spans 3,600 Earth years. But once on Earth, time sped up for them and a mortal’s death awaited. So they arranged to be carted off the planet just after death to some place, unlisted in the book, where a glorious afterlife, and perhaps a new body, awaited. During their stay on Earth they could bathe in a fountain of life- and youth-giving waters, also located in lower-Earth and also arrived at after an arduous journey and much politicking (all these places were heavily guarded to keep out the humans, the slave race).


Word was out, of course, that the “gods” had a fountain of youth tucked away somewhere and throughout the ages stories have arisen of men and demigods seeking out these places. One was Gilgamesh, the Sumerian king who claimed to be 2/3 “god” and 1/3 human, meaning that one parent was full-blooded Nefilim and the other was half Nefilim. Gilgamesh actively sought the fountain of youth and came across Nefilim space ports along the way. Another was Moses, who in biblical times and on assignment sought waters that would return to life the dead fish he carried in his boat. The third Sitchin mentions is Alexander the Great, whose father was an Egyptian Pharaoh and who eventually found the basic location of the fountain but who wasn’t allowed to join the “gods” in permanently residing in proximity to its waters. Alexander died young but obtained the immortality Milan Kundera speaks of in his book, “Immortality,” but nothing more, meaning he died the death of a mortal and it is likely the energy of his essence remained in use within this solar and energy system.


The Pyramids of Giza


To reach the path in lower-Earth that would take them to the space port where the spirits of recently-deceased Nefilim were transported to their afterlife residency, the bodies of the Nefilim had to be entombed in specific locations and certain rites enacted. Empty sarcophaguses have been found in the three pyramids of Giza and one might conclude that bodies of dead Nefilim “gods” were firstly placed in these coffins. Later they would be spirited away with some help from emissaries from the space ports, leaving behind those empty coffins that would so confuse archaeologists centuries later. The Nefilim “gods,” it is held today by researchers like David Icke, were extradimensional beings, meaning they could morph into various shapes and flip back and forth in space and time. So it is likely that upon being sealed in the sarcophagus and then inside the chamber, the “god” would await a visitation by an emissary from the space port who would, according to Sumerian tablets, walk through what has conservatively been called “a false door” but what was likely some sort of portal in the wall of the chamber, and then lead the “god” through the lower world and eventually on to the space port.


Meanwhile these pyramids, Sitchin holds, doubled as enormous beacons for ascending and descending Nefilim spacecraft. I’ve blogged on the Great Pyramid before and have pointed out its many characteristics that suggest it was obviously likely built by beings of a higher intelligence than humans.


Marduk’s world, human wars, and eschatology


Opening his third book, The Wars of Gods and Men, Sitchin briefly summarizes the various wars between the Nefilim-led humans of various ancient civilizations that originated in Sumer. These wars oftentimes featured “gods” fighting alongside humans. Or, in the case of Achilles and Alexander the Great, demigods, the progeny of “gods” and humans, leading, fighting alongside and dying amongst humans. Most of the fighting superficially would seem to be over territory but certainly the root cause of the wars must have been based on the Nefilim’s core mission on Earth, which primarily was to gather and horde all of the world’s gold to later take home, to that pesky planet that flies every 3,600 years, wreaking havoc here. Though this reader hasn’t reached a passage where Sitchin asserts exactly this, it would seem that at some point the Nefilim dissolved into various camps, each with legions of slaves to do their bidding. Each “god” wanted to be the one to win favor with the chief bigwig when the time came so endless wars of conquest became the norm, as each “god” did everything in his or her power to gather as much gold as possible. Eventually the “gods” decided to disengage from the fighting itself, and took a back seat role in steering future wars. This development came with one god, Marduk, successfully defeating all of his opponents and likely striking some sort of peace rendering obsolete direct conflict between the Nefilim “gods” in roughly 534 B.C. Enter the new era where proxy wars carried out by man are overseen from behind the scenes by the various competing “gods” with gold being the primary proponent of planning and fighting.


Sitchin doesn’t say exactly this, so it must be inferred. What he says is that after Marduk’s successful conquest of Egypt “the Wars of Men have been the wars of men alone.” Certainly. But if the Nefilim and the so-called “kings” they employed to be liaisons between them and their slaves have steered world and human events for no less than 100,000 years it is unlikely that they would just surrender control of the planet and its gold to the slave race!


Sitchin also describes the final and impending war of “gods” and man. Describing writings found in The Dead Sea Scrolls, Sitchin asserts the future could hold a “war of the sons of light against the sons of darkness” wherein “local battles will first involve Judea’s immediate neighbors, which shall increase in ferocity and scope until the whole ancient world would be engulfed.” The “ancient world” is the Mideast, and indeed warfare is spreading throughout that area. This war, which is growing in intensity by the day, may eventually entail Nefilim “gods” fighting alongside humans, as they did in the wars of old, Sitchin reports. Quoting from the scrolls themselves, Sitchin relates that “(o)n that day, the Company of the Divine and the congregation of the Mortals shall engage side by side in combat and carnage. The Sons of Light shall battle against the Sons of Darkness with a show of godlike might, amid uproarious tumult, amid the war cries of gods and men.”

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