The Gods Rebel
8 minutes • 1676 words
The Nefilim relied on their scientific knowledge to achieve their mission.
It was there that Enki’s full value becomes clear—the reason for his, rather than Enlil’s, being the first to land, the reason for his assignment to the Abzu.
A famous seal now on exhibit at the Louvre Museum shows Ea with his familiar flowing waters, except that the waters seem to emanate from, or be filtered through, a series of laboratory flasks. (Fig. 147)
Such an ancient interpretation of Ea’s association with waters raises the possibility that the original hope of the Nefilim was to obtain their minerals from the sea.
The oceans’ waters do contain vast quantities of gold and other vital minerals, but so greatly diluted that highly sophisticated and cheap techniques are needed to justify such “water mining.”
The sea beds contain immense quantities of minerals in the form of plum-sized nodules—available if only one could reach deep down and scoop them up.
The ancient texts refer repeatedly to a type of ship used by the gods called elippu tebiti (“sunken ship”—what we now call a submarine). We have seen the “fish-men” that were assigned to Ea.
Is this evidence of efforts to dive to the depths of the oceans and retrieve their mineral riches? The Land of the Mines, we have noted, was earlier called A.RA.LI.–“place of the waters of the shiny lodes.”
This could mean a land where gold could be river-panned; it could also refer to efforts to obtain gold from the seas.
If these were the plans of the Nefilim, they apparently came to naught. For, soon after they had established their first settlements, the few hundred Anunnaki were given an unexpected and most arduous task: to go down into the depths of the African soil and mine the needed minerals there.
Depictions that have been found on cylinder seals show gods at what appear to be mine entrances or mine shafts; one shows Ea in a land where Gibil is aboveground and another god toils underground, on his hands and knees. (Fig. 148)
In later times, Babylonian and Assyrian texts disclose, men—young and old—were sentenced to hard labor in the mines of the Lower World. Working in darkness and eating dust as food, they were doomed never to return to their homeland.
This is why the Sumerian epithet for the land—KUR.NU.GI.A—acquired the interpretation “land of no return”; its literal meaning was “land where godswho-work, in deep tunnels pile up [the ores].”
For the time when the Nefilim settled Earth, all the ancient sources attest, was a time when Man was not yet on Earth; and in the absence of Mankind, the few Anunnaki had to toil in the mines. Ishtar, on her descent to the Lower World, described the toiling Anunnaki as eating food mixed with clay and drinking water fouled with dust.
Against this background, we can fully understand a long epic text named (after its opening verse, as was the custom), “When the gods, like men, bore the work.”
Piecing together many fragments of both Babylonian and Assyrian versions, W.G. Lambert and A. R. Millard (Atra-Hasis: The Babylonian Story of the Flood) were able to present a continuous text. They reached the conclusion that it was based on earlier Sumerian versions, and possibly on even earlier oral traditions about the arrival of the gods on Earth, the creation of Man, and his destruction by the Deluge.
While many of the verses hold only literary value to their translators, we find them highly significant, for they corroborate our findings and conclusions in the preceding chapters. They also explain the circumstances that led to the mutiny of the Anunnaki.
The story begins in the time when only the gods lived on Earth:
Seven cities were established, with 7 Anunnaki as city commanders.
“The 7 Great Anunnaki were making the lesser gods suffer the work.”
Of all their chores, digging was the most common, the most arduous, and the most abhorred. The lesser gods dug up the river beds to make them navigable; they dug canals for irrigation; and they dug in the Apsu to bring up the minerals of Earth.
Though they undoubtedly had some sophisticated tools—the texts spoke of the “silver axe which shines as the day,” even underground—the work was too exacting.
For a long time—for forty “periods,” to be exact—the Anunnaki “suffered the toil”; and then they cried: No more! They were complaining, backbiting, Grumbling in the excavations.
The occasion for the mutiny appears to have been a visit by Enlil to the mining area. Seizing the opportunity, the Anunnaki said to one another:
The drama and tension of the unfolding events are brought to life by the ancient poet:
Anu suggested that an inquiry be undertaken. Armed with the authority of Anu and the other commanders, Nusku went to the encamped mutineers. “Who is the instigator of battle?” he asked. “Who is the provoker of hostilities?”
The Anunnaki stood together:
When Enlil heard Nusku’s report of these grievances, “his tears flowed.” He presented an ultimatum: either the leader of the mutineers be executed or he would resign.
“Take the office away, take back your power,” he told Anu, “and I will to you in heaven ascend.”
But Anu, who came down from Heaven, sided with the Anunnaki:
Mami, the Mother of the Gods, said she would need the help of Ea, “with whom skill lies.” In the House of Shimti, a hospital-like place, the gods were waiting. Ea helped prepare the mixture from which the Mother Goddess proceeded to fashion “Man.”
Birth goddesses were present. The Mother Goddess went on working while incantations were constantly recited. Then she shouted in triumph:
“I have created! My hands have made it!”
She “summoned the Anunnaki, the Great Gods … she opened her mouth, addressed the Great Gods”:
The Anunnaki received her announcement enthusiastically. “They ran together and kissed her feet.” From then on it would be the Primitive Worker—Man—“who will bear the yoke.”
The Nefilim, having arrived on Earth to set up their colonies, had created their own brand of slavery, not with slaves imported from another continent, but with Primitive Workers fashioned by the Nefilim themselves. A mutiny of the gods had led to the creation of Man.