Excerpt
andlt;Bandgt; andlt;BRandgt;Introduction andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;And It Came to Pass andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;andlt;/Bandgt;And it came to pass, When men began to multiply on the face of the Earth and daughters were born unto them, that the sons of God saw the daughters of men that they were fair, and they took them wives of all which they chose.andlt;Bandgt; andlt;BRandgt;andlt;BRandgt;andlt;/Bandgt;There were giants upon the Earth in those days and also thereafter too, When the sons of God came in unto the daughters of men and they bare children to them--the same Mighty Men of old, Men of Renown.andlt;Bandgt; andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;andlt;/Bandgt; andlt;BRandgt;The reader, if familiar with the King James English version of the Bible, will recognize these verses as the preamble, in chapter 6 of Genesis, to the story of the Deluge, the Great Flood in which Noah, huddled in an ark, was saved to repopulate the Earth. andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;The reader, if familiar with my writings, will also recognize these verses as the reason why many decades ago, a schoolboy was prompted to ask his teacher why it is andldquo;giantsandrdquo; who are the subject of these verses, when the word in the original Hebrew text is andlt;Iandgt;Nihilismandlt;/Iandgt;--which, stemming from the Hebrew verb andlt;Iandgt;Navelandlt;/Iandgt;, means to fall down, to be downed, to come down--and in no way andlsquo;giantsandrsquo;. andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;The schoolboy was I. Instead of being congratulated on my linguistic acumen, I was harshly reprimanded. andldquo;Sitchin, sit down!andrdquo; the teacher hissed with repressed anger. andldquo;You donandrsquo;t question the Bible!andrdquo; I was deeply hurt that day, for I was not questioning the Bible--on the contrary, I was pointing out the need to understand it accurately. And that was what changed my lifeandrsquo;s direction to pursue the andlt;Iandgt;Nefilimandlt;/Iandgt;. Who were they, and who were their andldquo;Mighty Menandrdquo; descendants? andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;The search for answers started with linguistic questions. The Hebrew text does not speak of andldquo;Menandrdquo; who began to multiply, but of andlt;Iandgt;Haandrsquo;Adamandlt;/Iandgt;--andldquo;andlt;Bandgt;The Adamandlt;/Bandgt;,andrdquo; a generic term, a human species. It does not speak of the sons of andldquo;God,andrdquo; but uses the term andlt;Iandgt;Bnei Ha-Elohimandlt;/Iandgt;--the andlt;Iandgt;sonsandlt;/Iandgt; (in the plural) of andlt;Bandgt;The Elohimandlt;/Bandgt;, a plural term taken to mean andldquo;godsandrdquo; but literally meaning andldquo;The Lofty Ones.andrdquo; The andldquo;Daughters of The Adamandrdquo; were not andldquo;fair,andrdquo; but andlt;Iandgt;Tovothandlt;/Iandgt;--good, compatible . . . And unavoidably we find ourselves confronting issues of andlt;Iandgt;originsandlt;/Iandgt;. How did Mankind happen to be on this planet, and whose genetic code do we carry? andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;In just three verses and a few words--forty-nine words in the original Hebrew of Genesis--the Bible describes the creation of Heaven and Earth, then records an actual prehistoric time of early Mankind and a series of amazing events, including a global Flood, the presence on Earth of gods and their sons, inter-species intermarriage, and demigod offspring . . . andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;And so, starting with one word (andlt;Iandgt;Nefilimandlt;/Iandgt;), I told the tale of the andlt;Iandgt;Anunnakiandlt;/Iandgt;, andldquo;Those who from Heaven to Earth cameandrdquo;--space travelers and interplanetary settlers who came from their troubled planet to Earth in need of gold and ended up fashioning The Adam in their image. In doing so I brought them to life--recognizing them individually, unraveling their tangled relationships, describing their tasks, loves, ambitions, and wars--and identifying their inter-species offspring, the andlsquo;demigodsandrsquo;. andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;I have been asked at times where my interests would have taken me were the teacher to compliment rather than reprimand me. In truth,andlt;Bandgt; andlt;/Bandgt;I have asked myself a different question: What if indeed andldquo;there were giants upon the Earth, in those days andlt;Iandgt;and thereafter tooandlt;/Iandgt;andrdquo;? The cultural, scientific, and religious implications are awesome; they lead to the next unavoidable questions: Why did the compilers of the Hebrew Bible, which is totally devoted to monotheism, include the bombshell verses in the prehistoric record--and what were their sources? andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt; I believe that I have found the answer. Deciphering the enigma of the demigods (the famed Gilgamesh among them), I conclude in this book--my crowning oeuvre--that compelling andlt;Iandgt;physical evidence for past alien presence on Earth has been buried in an ancient tombandlt;/Iandgt;. It is a tale that has immense implications for our genetic origins--a key to unlocking the secrets of health, longevity, life, and death; it is a mystery whose unraveling will take the reader on a unique adventure.andlt;Bandgt; andlt;BRandgt;andlt;/Bandgt; andlt;BRandgt;Sumer, it is now known, was the land of a talented and dexterous people in what is now southern Iraq. Usually depicted in artful statues and statuettes in a devotional stance, it was the Sumerians who were the first ones to record and describe past events and tell the tales of their gods. It was there, in the fertile plain watered by the great Euphrates and Tigris rivers, that Mankindandrsquo;s first known civilization blossomed out some 6,000 years ago--andldquo;suddenly,andrdquo; andldquo;unexpectedly,andrdquo; andldquo;with stunning abruptness,andrdquo; according to all scholars. It was a civilization to which we owe, to this day, virtually every andlsquo;Firstandrsquo; of what we deem essential to an advanced civilization: The wheel and wheeled transportation; the brick that made (and still makes) possible high-rise buildings; furnaces and the kiln that are essential to industries from baking to metallurgy; astronomy and mathematics; cities and urban societies; kingship and laws; temples and priesthoods; timekeeping, a calendar, festivals; from beer to culinary recipes, from art to music and musical instruments; and, above all, writing and record keeping--it was all first there, in Sumer. andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;The philological recognition of Sumerian began, as we have illustrated, not through the discovery of the Sumeriansandrsquo; own tablets, but through the varied use, in Akkadian texts, of andlsquo;loan wordsandrsquo; that were not Akkadian; the naming of gods and cities by names that made no sense in Assyrian or Babylonian; and of course by actual statements (as that by Ashurbanipal) about the existence of earlier writings in andlsquo;Shumerianandrsquo;. Though virtually everything that we consider essential to a developed civilization has been inherited from the Sumerians, many people still respond with a blank andldquo;Who?andrdquo; when they hear the word andlsquo;Sumerianandrsquo; . . .andlt;Bandgt; andlt;BRandgt;andlt;/Bandgt;