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ANCIENT ALIENS: MARRADIANS AND ANUNNAKI: VOLUME ONE: EXTRATERRESTRIAL HOLIDAYS

Page 6

by ILIL ARBEL


  We must realize that while the sound in itself is not a direct threat to humans, the mere presence of Marradians on Earth, and their corrupt relationship with several governments, threaten our planet. We must terminate every contract and any association, and concentrate on the option of accepting Anunnaki help.

  CHAPTER THREE:

  MARRADIAN HISTORY

  The Exodus Controversy

  Humanity’s connection with the Anunnaki and the Marradians seeps into every aspect of our lives. Some of the truth about it is so controversial that I must apologize in advance. I know many will be offended by one of the most sensitive matters I want to discuss: the Bible. If you feel this is unacceptable, please don’t read any further.

  Both the Old and the New Testament speak in a metaphoric language, hiding the truth in myth and legend. The Bible mentions the Anunnaki (Anakim and Nephilim in Hebrew) but does not mention the Marradians at all. However, there are many subtle references to them as they associated with prominent personalities as Abraham, King David, and Jesus. The story of the Exodus is a prime example.

  The Exodus as we know it, a flight of a huge group of slaves saved by Moses and his God from the evil Pharaoh, never happened. The Israelites were not slaves. The Pharaoh was far from evil. Moses never left Egypt. He was a pure-blooded Egyptian and enjoyed an illustrious career as a general in Pharaoh’s army. He married a noble lady of Ethiopian origins (Numbers, 12:1), not Jethro’s daughter Zipora. And what about the rest of the triumvirate who managed the Exodus? Who was the real Aaron? Who was Miriam? Did she watch over her little brother Moses as he floated in his reed basket into the arms of the Pharaoh’s daughter? Who were Jethro and Zipora? And most important, did the Israelites invade Canaan?

  Many facts don’t add up. First, the tale of a baby floating in a container is almost a cliché. Second, why would Pharaoh’s daughter adopt a strange child? Perhaps she had an affair and gave birth secretly? Not really. Single motherhood in ancient Egypt’s sexually sophisticated culture was perfectly acceptable. Third, neither the departure from Egypt nor the invasion of Canaan is mentioned anywhere other than the Bible.

  As so often happens, the clashes between the Anunnaki and the Marradians decide human history. The Middle East has always been an important location, and the Marradians made their presence there secure. They interbred with the inhabitants for generations, and the only Middle Eastern country that retained Anunnaki supremacy was Phoenicia, today’s Lebanon.

  A group of people living in the Egyptian Delta had strong Anunnaki genetics since they came there from an area in southern Canaan where the Anunnaki had a significant settlement. Many Anunnaki males married earth women, and the population was heavily mixed. Some researchers claim they had a breeding program there, where earth women were impregnated in the Anunnaki labs, but I have no proof of that. We call this group the Israelites; they were named after their patriarch, Jacob-Israel.

  The Anunnaki wanted the entire population to immigrate to Canaan and blend with the population. The move was guaranteed to increase the Anunnaki presence in Canaan, but the Israelites were not going anywhere. Why should they? They were entirely comfortable in Egypt, a sophisticated society that encouraged the blending of cultures. Some of the Israelites engaged in trades, others in agriculture, some were artists, crafts persons, and architects, and many worked on building the pyramids for the Pharaoh in various capacities. They were comprised of twelve tribes, one of which, the Levites, had a concentration of intellectuals, philosophers, teachers, and scholars. The Egyptian authorities highly valued their services in these capacities. The Levites tribe had regular connections with the Anunnaki, mostly because of their religion.

  The religious question is highly controversial. The people who wrote the Bible reported a monotheistic deity whose name they were forbidden to mention; they represented him by the letters YHVH in writing, and verbally referred to him as God (Elohim, El) or The Lord (Adonai). The Egyptians, as well as eleven out of the twelve Israelite tribes, worshiped several representations of Cimric, the Marradian deity. Only the Levites accepted YHVH and considered the Anunnaki as his representatives. The core of the Anunnaki religion is All-That-Is, a very different concept. They denounce Cimric as a demon but allow it that YHVH is close in concept to All-That-Is.

  The Anunnaki knew they had to frighten the Israelites to such an extent, that escape from Egypt would be a welcome relief. They set to work by choosing just the right leader – a very special young woman named Miriam, and selected YHVH as the god of the Israelite. They planned miracles and catastrophes that would accomplish the task.

  Miriam was a young Levite woman. This tribe was much less patriarchal than the other Israelite tribes because of their long association with the Anunnaki, so Levite women received as much education as they wished for, and Miriam was well versed in all the branches of knowledge a teacher or a governess would need.

  The Egyptian elite, as mentioned in a previous posting, valued the services of the intellectual Levites and it was not at all uncommon to find them teaching even the children of the Pharaoh’s household. Bat-Ya, the Pharaoh’s sister, engaged Miriam as a governess for her young son, Moses, a bright and advanced child who had the advantage of Anunnaki DNA.

  This situation was common enough. The Egyptian elite treated the Anunnaki with great respect, while the lower classes tended to associate with the Marradian culture. A woman of the Pharaoh’s family would consider it an honor to give birth to a child who was conceived in the Anunnaki method, in their advanced laboratories. The procedure would be entirely removed from sexual relations, and considered an immaculate conception. It was not a secret, but something to be proud of.

  Miriam stayed with Moses until he was ready for the military academy at age seven, where he was a great success and embarked on a brilliant military career. He had little contact with the Israelites after his separation from Miriam but remained friendly to them all his life.

  Miriam returned to her parents’ home. She was about twenty-eight years old, and like most Israelite women, even the highly educated ones, wanted to marry and have a family. At her age, people would consider it a late marriage, and she did not want to wait much longer and requested that her parents start looking for an appropriate match. The search was progressing well until one day Miriam received a visit from an Anunnaki official – a high honor. But what he said was disconcerting. Apparently, his people had another fate for Miriam in mind.

  The Anunnaki told the young woman she had to go, by herself, to Mount Sinai in the desert, where she would meet him, visit his spaceship, and discuss her mission. Mount Sinai was not too far if you rode a camel, so Miriam set out on her way early next morning.

  The mountain had a flat plateau on its top, surrounded by cliffs. It formed a natural spaceport, convenient for the Anunnaki to land without disturbing the people or hurting their properties. The spaceship was descending as she watched, and soon the Anunnaki came out to greet her. The meeting was brief – but it impacted history. The reverberations from it are felt to this day and will continue to do so for generations.

  The Anunnaki informed Miriam that she was chosen to be impregnated in the Anunnaki mobile lab, right there at the spaceship. She would never be coerced to do it, since the Anunnaki believe firmly in free will, but had the right to agree or reject the offer.

  She would give birth to a son whom she must call Aaron – the name carried vibrations that would help him developed special powers. When he reaches the age of seven, Miriam will become the leader of the Exodus – the return of the Israelites to their ancestral home, the Land of Canaan, which is, of course, the area which is now Israel. She would lead the entire Levi tribe, and as many of the Israelites who would be willing to come with them.

  It was a hard decision for Miriam. She felt honored to be the mother of an Anunnaki conceived child, but how about marriage and family? And she would have to exchange her comfortable conditions in the beautiful Delta area of Egypt for the harsh and dang
erous desert and spend years governing her people. But the Anunnaki told her she was wrong. They have already chosen a husband for her – a kind and intelligent man by the name of Jethro. They knew Jethro well and were confident that he would be more than willing to marry Miriam, assist her with her difficult leadership task, and care for Aaron like a father. As for the difficulties in the desert, that was true, but the Anunnaki promised Miriam plenty of help. For example, they would lead her by sending a smoke signal the Israelites could follow during the day, and a fire sign during the night, all the way from Egypt to the Land of Canaan. And if the food would be scarce, they would drop nutritious substances from the spaceship for their consumption. Of course, we know these miracles as the Pillar of Smoke, the Pillar of Fire, and the Manna from Heaven, all most useful for the expedition. Aaron, who was going to develop certain powers, would be able to find and extract water from a particular type of porous rocks by hitting them with a stick.

  Miriam returned to her home, and in time gave birth to Aaron and married Jethro; she also gave birth to two more children. When Aaron reached the age of seven, it was time to persuade the Israelites to accept the move. Through these seven years, Miriam and Jethro made great strides in convincing the people that YHVH was the true one God, but would they still be persuaded to leave their home and follow this God? It did not seem so. At this time the ten plagues and the other famous events took place – not to convince the Pharaoh to let the Israelites leave – he could not care less if a group of people decided to move on, but the Israelites themselves. Aaron, at age seven, was already a perfectly good little magician. As Miriam was speaking in several rallies, he showed “miracles” to the people with his walking stick, which he turned into a snake, then turned it back into a stick and made it burst into blossom with pink almond flowers, and so on. The Israelites enjoyed the show but were not convinced that it was a miracle worth leaving Egypt for. So the Anunnaki produced the plagues, one by one, until a sufficient number of Israelites were so frightened of YHVH they were ready to pack up and go to Canaan. Some Israelites did not join and never left Egypt.

  During the five years or so they spent in the desert (of course not forty as mentioned in the Bible), the Anunnaki persuaded Joshua, a young and capable man, to lead a group of Phoenicians with excellent Anunnaki DNA to Canaan as well. The Phoenicians settled in the north of Canaan, and the Israelites in the south, so they never met, but the two peaceful migrations worked as the Anunnaki wished. Both groups intermingled with their new Canaanite neighbors through marriages. After a few generations, the concentration of Anunnaki DNA was as high in Canaan as they could wish.

  Is Lilith a Demon?

  Lilith is probably one of the most maligned entities in the Judeo-Christian mythology, and the myriad legends about her demonic nature would not endear her to anyone despite her celebrated beauty. She had been accused of attacks on newborn infants, attempts to hurt new mothers, and evil sexual designs on men who are helpless against her no matter how virtuous they may be, since she seduces through their dreams like a succubus. None these have any basis in reality.

  Lilith has often been confused with Aruru, an Anunnaki who was involved in the creation of the seven types of early humanity. But like the other legends regarding Lilith, it is entirely untrue. In Hebrew, the name Lilith can mean an owl, so Jewish Hellenistic sources confused her with the Greek Goddess Athena, whose personal animal was an owl. But this is coincidental. Her name, in reality, is associated with the flowering tree Lilac, and with another unidentified blue and fragrant flower that opens only when the temperature, moisture level, and light are perfect.

  Midrashic sources said that she was Adam’s first wife and that she had left him, defying God and the angels who went to her as his messengers, trying to persuade her to return. The God thus referred to is the biblical God YHVH, but since the Anunnaki we know as Sinhar YHVH was only one of the creators of humans, this is just another myth. Some say that she told the so-called Fallen Angels not to bow to Adam, who in her opinion was not worthy. Since the term we use for the entities we refer to as the “fallen angels” is a misuse of the name of the Anunnaki themselves, as “Anakim” or “Nephilim,” it is quite unlikely that anyone had the slightest intention of bowing to Adam in the first place.

  So what is the real story of Lilith? Who is this elusive person so hated by all religions? And if she had so much to do with God and Adam, why was every trace of her removed from the Bible, only to surface later in the Midrashic legends?

  The plain facts are simple – Lilith was the first woman created by the Anunnaki. Those of us who study the creation of the human race by both the Anunnaki and the Marradians, are aware of the facts, but for newcomers to the field, I would like to mention a few points regarding the creation before I start discussing Lilith herself.

  Researchers established that the Anunnaki were not the first to experiment with the creation of intelligent, or almost intelligent life on our planet. The Marradians were the first extraterrestrials to do so. Their creations did not look or act human. The Marradians were explorers, with in-depth knowledge of mineralogy and mineral transmutation, but they were not geneticists, and their creations were only meant to help them find and carry certain minerals. Also, they had little interest in beautiful forms. Their creatures, therefore, were extremely primitive, suggesting a combination of robots and apes. The Marradians created several models, some of them with three legs, which they thought would add stability when the creatures were carrying heavy minerals. All of their creations had low-level intelligence.

  The Anunnaki, when they came to earth, had different views on the process of creating sentient beings. They were accomplished geneticists, but even they developed a few unsuccessful experimental stages, and the early models could not even speak. They eventually refined the model and proceeded to create humans much like us. There are many religions, legends, and myths regarding creation, and naturally, we cannot list all of them in a short article. However, some of the stories are remarkable in how they convey the truth while changing the meaning. The most significant is the familiar biblical story of Eve, created from Adam’s rib, which is an interesting twist on what happened when the Anunnaki were ready to begin seeding the earth with their type of humans. They started from a female form and created the male form from her, not the other way around.

  The technology is still a mystery to humans and is likely to remain so for a long time. But we do know that Lilith’s DNA was taken from pure Anunnaki sources. If you consider it, what other sources could they have used? Certainly not the type of DNA that still existed in the remnants of the proto-humans created by the Marradians. The Anunnaki abhorred such creatures. The easiest thing was to use pure Anunnaki DNA, and then modify the model to fit the conditions on earth. The people would be smaller than the Anunnaki, who are extremely tall, they would not have all their spiritual or physical attributes, and they would not live long. But Anunnaki genetics would still be there, giving the humans substance, strength, and intelligence.

  Among the Anunnaki who created us, many are remembered in our religions and myths. One of these Anunnaki was called Lucifer. This familiar name was later attached to another entity, Samael, as often happens in poetry and myth, and they are thought to be the same person. Samael, however, was not even present on earth during those early days and was employed elsewhere in the multiverse. Later Samael would be confused with the Devil – an entity that never existed despite its popularity here on earth, but let us hope that such unimportant matters do not concern Samael too deeply; he has little to do with our insignificant planet and his work lies elsewhere. To have Lucifer thus confused with the Devil is quite ironic since he is one of our creators, but the important issue is that the Anunnaki successfully created the first woman, and called her Lilith.

  She looked just like a gorgeous Anunnaki. Tall, though slightly smaller than the average Anunnaki female, she had long, flowing black hair, glowing olive skin, and the typical huge, black eyes. The
Anunnaki were pleased to see that her intelligence was impeccable, and since she was determined to be a perfect specimen, they decided to use her DNA for the creation of more humans, particularly for a mate for her.

  Perhaps she was a little too perfect; Lucifer and Lilith fell in love. They did not mention it, even to each other, or act upon it in any way, since they knew that such behavior would not be encouraged by the Anunnaki. But when the Anunnaki created her mate from her modified DNA, she flatly refused to accept him. Used to the magnificent beauty of the Anunnaki race, Lilith was utterly repulsed by Adam, who turned out to look slightly Neanderthal, while Lucifer looked like what we imagine when we described angels. Worse, since the DNA was already somewhat diluted, Adam was not very bright. Not stupid, nothing like the creatures created by the Marradians, but not even close to Lilith’s intelligence, let alone that of Lucifer.

  The Anunnaki would never force anyone to accept an unwanted partner, but the situation was difficult. Adam had to have a mate, and what would you do with Lilith? They sent two high-ranked Anunnaki to discuss the matter with her, but she continued to refuse, and finally, breaking her resolve to be silent for Lucifer’s sake, openly declared her love for him. The two high-ranking Anunnaki left her in her room, went back to the other Anunnaki, and told them the entire story. Lucifer, hearing that, declared his love for Lilith and proceeded to request permission to marry her.

  Free will is the most important tenet in Anunnaki philosophy, so the Anunnaki decided that Lilith would go to Nibiru with Lucifer, and undergo various medical procedures to help her become a full-fledged Anunnaki, which was possible since her entire DNA was correct. As for Adam, another operation was needed to give him a partner. DNA was taken from him to create a woman. Her name was Eve, and she also looked slightly Neanderthal and had the same level of intelligence as Adam. She had no objection whatsoever to marry Adam, and the two were instrumental in populating the earth with humans as we know them. Six couples were created, and with no further drama or problems, they helped Adam and Eve in the production of humanity.

 

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