History of the Datu
Sharrukin the Second and the Birth of the Datu.
SHARRUKIN THE SECOND AND THE DATU:
I am Dul Aka Abba Sha Anaku Custodian of the Datu history
The information contained in this site originates with a sect of warrior
sorcerer's, known as the Datu. The word 'Datu' is of Assyrian origin. It
implies, 'one who is ordained'; and in the older Sumerian language it
implies, 'a pendulum or an object that wanders a circular course'.
The Datu were established as special bodyguards to the kings of Assyria in
719 B.C. by Sharrukin II, then ruler of Assyria.
In 721 B.C. Sharrukin II ascended the throne of Assyria (modern Iraq),
after deposing his half brother (Shalmanesser the fifth).
Sharrukin means 'true king'; and indeed, Sharrukin II was the rightful
heir to the throne. However, his brother "Shalmanesser" had been put upon
the throne following the death of their father, Tiglathpileser III.
Tiglathpileser named his second born son as the heir, due to the influence
of his second wife, Sharrukin's step mother.
Sharrukin's stepmother was the favorite of Tiglathpileser, and held sway
over Tiglathpileser's judgment. This sel centered second wife demanded
that Tiglathpileser kill both his wife and his first born son; but the old
king loved them and refused to kill them. The first born heir was
rechristened as "Sagi / Sugi (cupbearer)"; while his true name was
'stricken from the tablets and the heart of Assur', and is lost for all
time. Tiglathpileser then sent his first wife (Sharrukin's mother) to
serve in the temple of the moon god Nanna.
In her vengeance, the ex-queen turned priestess took and hid the symbol of
kingship, "The Tablet of Fate," in the inner sanctum of the moon god's
temple.
In the mythology of ancient Mesopotamia, the young gods fought a titanic
battle against the elder gods. During this battle, a vast amount of damage
was unleashed in the heavens and on the earth. This damage was 'repaired'
by Enlil the king of the gods (or variously Ninurta, Assur, Marduk,
depending on who was considered king of the gods at different times and in
different city states.). When all things had been set to right and put in
their proper places, the 'Order of the Many Things' was set down on a clay
tablet, referred to as the 'Tablet of Fate / Destiny'.
The Tablet of Fate was worn on the breast of the king of the gods, as a
sign of his authority; and many legends exist concerning the various gods,
monsters, and demons that sought to somehow wrest the tablet from the king
of the gods.
While the concept of the Tablet of Fate was associated with the king of
the gods, it also had an earthly equivalent associated with the mortal
kings of Mesopotamia. In most places, this was a copy of the Tablet of
Fate. The Tablet was a symbolic representation of the order of the many
things, and was worn on certain occasions of importance. It was carved out
of a blue, gold flecked stone, known currently as Lapis Lazuli.
The first wife knew, that without the tablet Shalmanneser would never be
the true king. She hid it away and payed a servant to claim that an
Aramaic slave, who had fled the king's household, had stolen it.
Sagi/Sugi was placed in the position of Shalmanesser's Cupbearer, and most
likely would of been lost to history, if not for a number of events that
can be found in 'The Stories of the Emissary"', within the main body of
this book.
With the help of his mother, Sharrukin took his rightful place on the
throne, and set about the task of ruling Assyria. At his mothers request,
Sharrukin spared the life of Shalmanesser and his wife Yaba, and sent them
to work as field hands in the fields owned by the temple of the Moon; but
Shalmanesser was likewise 'stricken from the hearts and Tablets of Assur
'.
An examination of ancient Mesopotamian society, will quickly reveal that
the people of Mesopotamia were inseparable from their gods. Their entire
society was based on the pious worship of the deities of heaven and earth;
and they believed that the gods walked amongst them. These people truly
believed that they were responsible for the 'care and feeding' of the
gods. They believed that the land was the property of the gods, and
the Mesopotamian rulers were the divinely ordained caretakers of the
property of the gods. The kings were the highest of the high priests, and
as such, they were responsible for the rituals that insured the land's
well being. in addition to this the Assyrian kings ruled not as divine
descendants of the god , but rather as the truest example of human
education and evolution (see the oratory by Ashurbanipal available at any
good site concerning Assyrian history, see also ANCIENT IRAQ by JORGE
ROUGE)
Sharrukin, as a 'divinely appointed king', was no exception to this
traditional responsibility.
The first year of Sharrukin's rule was spent settling domestic matters:
He released the citizens of Assur from any taxation, dismissed the
military draft, and soothed the people to peace. At the time of his
inauguration bread was the equivalent of 10 dollars a loaf! This
accomplished little more that freeing his hands to face Assyria's current
foes. Assyria had managed over the previous centuries, to take most of
Mesopotamia into its grip; but the various subject states were constantly
being prompted to rebel by the various enemies of Assur.
The first of these rebellions came as a harsh dose of reality for
Sharrukin. The king of Babylon (Marduk apil idina), who had ascended his
throne in the same year as Sharrukin, united with the Elemites with the
Egyptians and Babylonianbs and refused to kneel to the Assyrians
rule. When Sharrukin rode against the combined Babylonian, Egyptian and
Elemite forces, he was routed by the Elemites --and never even saw battle
against the Babylonians or Egyptians (720 B.C.).
Almost immediately, the Syrian provinces revolted with the assistance of
an Egyptian army; but Sharrukin tasted his first victory against them. He
then went home, stabilized his borders as they stood, and took up his
duties as king.
As a new king ruling a country surrounded by traditional enemies,
Sharrukin was at risk of assassination attempts and other political
intrigues almost constantly. Sharrukin could secure his safety in most
instances, but in the temples he was at a much higher level of risk.
Death, or even injury in the temple, represented a tacit denial of
Sharrukin's divine right to rule (by the gods themselves as it were).
It must be understood, that it was forbidden to bear weapons in the
temples. For it was seen as an insult to the gods and a lack of
faith in their protection, to bring a body of armed guards into the
temples of the gods --the very deities that had set Sharrukin on the
throne would be a horrible insult. Evan Cyrus the Persian would not let
his troops carry weapons in the temple hundreds of years later (so strong
was this tradition) . However, within his first three years of rule, there
were eleven attempts on Sharrukin's life. What was Sharrukin to do?
Sharrukin's solution is said to have come to him in a dream.
Sharrukin dreamed that he stood in a temple, upon the Tablet of Fate /
Destiny , and faced all the 'arrayed enemies of Assur '. They beset him at
every side, and he thought that he was lost for certain. But suddenly, a
large black pendulum appeared; swinging in a wide circle around Sharrukin.
Every enemy that approached to strike Sharrukin and steal the Tablet, was
driven back by the pendulum stone.
If an enemy tried to stop the pendulum, the decelerating pendulum drew
closer to the center, and wove a tighter circle of protection around
Sharrukin. In time, the enemies pressed closer; but even as they seemed
certain of victory, another blue pendulum appeared and drove them back. In
the end, seven pendulums swung around Sharrukin and kept him safe. (Black,
Blue Red, Silver, Green, Varicolored, Gold.)
Sharrukin went to his mother and sought an interpretation of the dream.
This is what she told him:
"The Datu (pendulums) represent seven body guards. They are to be drawn
from all corners of Harran (a city of tremendous importance to Sin the
Moon God). Even as the pendulums danced to save you, these Datu will dance
in the temple to save you from the enemies of Assur. If the enemies of
Assur press close to you, the Datu will press closer. If the Datu are with
you, none will take the Tablet of Fate ? Destiny from beneath your feet ".
The stories of how each of the first Datu was found can found under the
chapter heading of "THE STORIES OF THE EMISSARY."
Sharrukin instituted the Datu as the king's temple dancers. He gave them
the right to choose 'apprentices' and instruct them in secret. To insure
the silence and cooperation of the apprentices, the apprentices were told
that the Datu had been instituted by Sharrukin the first (In 2000s B.C).
In this way the neophytes would believe that they served an ancient
tradition in noble silence.
The Datu were kept secret from everyone except Sharrukin, his mother, and
the dancers themselves. It was decided that not even Sharrukin's heirs
should know of them, lest they compromise Sharrukin's safety. It was
believed that if the Datu did their work well, Sharrukin could tell the
secret to his heir. If misfortune took Sharrukin, his mother could perhaps
pass word along. It should be obvious, that if no one knew of the Datu's
existence, there had to be a way for the Datu to prove their legitimacy
when the time came to serve the heirs of Assur.
Many ideas presented themselves, but none of them were guaranteed to work.
There was only one way that the Datu could be certain to gain the trust of
an heir to the throne: they would need to be in possession of knowledge
that was held only by the kings themselves. The Datu would be given the
secrets of the Tablet of Fate / Destiny.
A whole body of esoteric knowledge was associated with the Tablet, and
this knowledge (the 'Art of Master Adapa' and the Signs of Heaven and
Earth') was taught to the kings in the Bit Reduti, the 'house of
succession'. The secrets of the Tablet were forbidden to everyone but the
kings, and it would be sure proof that the Datu had been educated by the
king. This, along with the claim of an origin attributed to Sharrukin-I,
would hopefully insure the cooperation of Sharrukin's heirs.
The Tablet was a wondrous base for the Datu's newly born system. The
ability to create a 'long suffering tradition' from scratch put the Datu
in a unique position: The position to innovate mystically.
Innovation was a trait among the Mesopotamians. For when they first came
to their land, they found a mix of swamp and desert, surmounted by
mountains to the north and ocean to the south. There was a complete lack
of any of the most commonly used natural materials. There was no stone
(building stone), no wood (few trees), and no metal! These people had to
become masters of making a living out of mud and reeds; yet they not only
survived, they went on to master mathematics, writing, and architecture.
They brought water to the desert and created blossoming farmlands and
built high walled city-states. They loved lists with a joyous passion and
composed lists of every thing from cows to gods.
The one place that the Mesopotamians lacked real innovation, was with
their gods.
All over the land the various city states had their own gods and
goddesses; but all the states were tied together by the three great gods:
Ea, Enlil, and Anu/Assur (the gods of the abyss, the sky, and the
heavens). All the other gods and goddesses were the same, only the names
and ranks varied according to whom the patron god or goddess of the
city-state were
Initially the Mesopotamians worshiped a mother goddess of the heavens
(nammu / bau) and her male adversary / lover (Azag). Along with Bau and
Azag, came their daughter the earth (Ninhursagah) and her lover the waters
(Enki). From them, sprang all life. Next came the seven children: Sun (Utu
/ Shamash), Moon (Nanna / Zuen), Mars (Nergal / Ninurta), Mercury (Nebo /
Nibo), Jupiter (Enlil / Marduk), Venus (Inanna / Ishtar), and Saturn (Adad
/ Niniurta / Adar).
The Datu sought to recapture the old secrets and to blend the underlying
principles of the gods. This Gnostic approach allowed them to define the
archetypes of the primary deities and their powers. They went to the most
ancient accounts of the creation (most undescovered by modern
archeologists) and sought the underlying principles of existence. They
sought the unchanging principles in order to be able to grasp constantly
shifting particulars. They sought the common themes and the essence that
bound all the varied details together.
The Datu served Sharrukin in the temples, and when the king went on the
road to war in his eighth year of reign, they accompanied him. By the 708
B.C. Sharrukin took back Babylon from Marduk Apil Idina and united most of
Mesopotamia. He built a mighty fortress in Korsabad and inaugurated it in
706 B.C..
Just a year later, Sharrukin fell in Battle against Tabal.
The Datu did their duty throughout the years of Sargon's reign, and when
his son Sennecherab took the throne they stepped up and offered their
assistance. However, Sennecherab was not the first born son. His name
meant: 'The god Sin / Nanna has compensated for the death of his brother."
He was a master of ill conceived battles, fought by generals he did not
trust., he had no common sense, and came to near ruin He had
constant rebellion on his hands and was constantly plagued by his father's
old rival, Mardul Apil Idinna (Merodach Baladan of the old testament).
Despite this, the Datu served him just as they had served his father
Sargon. They slowly trained a new generation of Datu to attend the king,
and with Sennecherab's lack of popularity, they were granted further and
further freedom of activity in order to better protect him. The Datu
thwarted the attempts of several assassins, the most tragic instance
resulting in the death of one of the dancers (Ishtar-ina-kinu). She
realized that someone was attempting to push a statue of a winged bull
(Shedum) off it's base and onto the king as he prayed alone. The Datu
pushed the king out of the way, but she did not get clear in time.
Of all the cities of the ancient world, the crowning jewel was Babylon. It
was the single most sacred city (it's name means 'gate of the gods'). It
was literally the 'cord' that bound heaven and earth together. Thus it was
unthinkable that anyone would put it to the sword; but that is exactly
what Sennecherab did.
Marduk Apil Iddina had been inciting great difficulties for Sennecharab.
He had formed an alliance with the king of Elam (where he had taken refuge
after his defeat by Sargon II) , and with great boldness he entered
Babylon and declared himself King. Sennecherab fought the usurper's army a
few weeks later and took Babylon back. Sennecherab plundered the city and
deported 208,000 Babylonian citizens to Assyria, and put a puppet king
(his cousin) on the throne. Marduk Apil Addina fled....
Three years later Marduk Apil Iddina returned and started more trouble.
Sennecherab intervened and won again. He unseated the puppet king (who was
working with Marduk Apil Iddina) and replaced him with Ashur Nadin Shumi
(his own son).
Sennecherab sent an invasion force to Elam, where they sacked a few cities
and carried of a load of booty. The Elamites retaliated immediately and
invaded, calling on the dissatisfied Babylonians to revolt. The
Babylonians rose up against Sennecharab and turned his son over to the
king of Elam. The son was murdered in Iran.
The Elamites put a king on the throne of Babylon, but he was cast out by
Sennecherab's army only a few weeks later. The Babylonians went back to
their homes and were calm for a little while.
The last straw came in 689 B.C.
The people of Babylon used the treasure of Temple of Marduk to bribe
the current king of Elam into helping them throw off Assyrian control. The
Datu informed Sennecherab, and he grew very angry. The ensuing battle was
so close to a defeat of Sennacherib's army, that he was over come with
rage and shame over the rebellious actions of the Babylonians.
Sennacherib was warned of his lack of popularity by the them growing Datu
, and as a result he set about rebuilding many of the ancient sacred sites
of worship but despite warnings from his advisors, Sennecherab destroyed
the city of Babylon as completely as he could.
He put every last man, woman, child, and animal to the sword. He tore down
the walls and burned the buildings, and even diverted the path of the
Euphrates river so it would flow over the ruins and wash them away! He
even decreed that the city could not be rebuilt for 70 years! He gathered
the soil of Babylon into jars and sent them as presents to his Allies.
Today one of these containers of earth is held as a sacred relic of the
Datu.
His actions were unacceptable to the Datu, and for the next seven years
they pleaded with him to restore the city of the gods, even threatening to
with draw their protection... but to no avail. In response he had Nebo
Apil Idin the head of the Datu put to death by burning...
As a result, the Datu withdrew their protection from Sennacherib and
turned their attention to his son Essarhaddon.
In 681 B.C. a winged bull came crashing down on the 'great and mad
Sennecherab'. The massive damage it caused, covered the multiple stab
wounds rather effectively.
The Datu went to Sennecherab's son Essarhadon and proved their history to
him. They advised him to put to rest the many things that Sennecherab had
done to offend the people and the gods...
Essarhaddon claimed that there had been a scribal error in the recording
of Sennecherab's decree not to rebuild Babylon; and by flipping the number
70 upside down, he was able to claim that the decree had been 11 years not
70 (like our 6 fliped over to become 9, 70 in cuneiform becomes 11
when flipped over!). Thus the 11 years that had passed since the sack of
Babylon were sufficient to relieve the decree.
In the years since their inauguration, the Datu had not been idle. They
had inducted and trained many new Datu. These people were able to pass
through all the training of the temple and eventually gained high
positions within the temple structure. This eased the further development
of the Datu.
Up until the invasion by the Persian army in 589 B.C., all the kings of
Assyria had followed the same basic gods and the same basic premise of
rulership (divine perfection / authority). This made it possible for the
Datu to approach the new dynasties with an explanation of their sacred
duty. Those kings who declined did not last more than a few years. Those
who accepted were well protected.
Over the many years, the Datu had developed into far more than temple
dancers and body guards. They had slowly crept into every branch of the
temple and even the government. Reading and writing were the domain of
scribes/priests, this gave them access to privy knowledge. After all, to
read or write a letter, one called a priest. If s/he was Datu, one could
count on any dangerous words reaching the ears of the king! Priests often
could travel freely when all others were suspect, and even when entire
cities were sacked, the temples remained relatively untouched. Most
monarchs made the restoration of the temples a form of positive PR. In any
event, the Datu were usually spared from deportation, or exile because
they were priests.
All of these factors left the Datu in the temples. Sometimes they would
stay hidden for years, and then the right king would come along and they
would return to active duty. At other times, they aided in the campaigns
to restore or overthrow a monarch.
The Datu developed a system of martial arts called Tibir (palm). It was
taught as a form of dancing game. It started with simple steps and games,
but eventually progressed to a full speed, full power, combat system
complete with weapons training (mace, dagger, sword, spear, staff, sash
and beads).
The time spent in secret allowed the development of an inner sanctum
structure complete with mythology, philosophy and theology. Sabian
Astrology and astral magic were just beginning to take root at the time of
the Datu's inauguration, and it also crept into the tradition.
In addition to serving the Assyrian Monarchs, the Datu brought their
services (and the legitimacy of possession of the Tablet of Fate / Destiny
) to Nebuchadrezzar II in Babylon after the defeat of the last king of
Assyria. The Datu continued to protect the kings of Babylon till the
conquest of Mesopotamia by the Persians (lead by Cyrus) in 539 B.C.
The Datu served Sharrukin, Sennacherab, Esarhaddon, Ashurbanipal,
Ashur-Etil-iIllani, Sin-Shumu-Lishtar, Sin-Shar-Ishkun,'Assur-Ubalit the
Last', Nebuchadrezzar II, and Nabu-Na'id (Nabonidus).
The Invasion of the Persians (by Cyrus /Curash) in 539B.C. led to the
final fall of the Mesopotamian Monarchs, and the resultant exodus of the
Datu. At first the Persians were unexpectedly indulgent of the
Babylonians. Cyrus the Persian allowed the people to worship in the
temples and he even 'took the hand of Bel' (claimed to worship Marduk the
national god of the Babylonians). He barred his soldiers from carrying
weapons in the temples, and claimed to be the true successor to the
Mesopotamian kings.
Cyrus allowed Gobryas the Chief general of Nebuchadrezzar II to govern
over Babylon, but only a year later, Cyrus set his own son Cambyses on the
throne.
The Datu watched Cambyses for almost ten years, and considered approaching
him in order to serve him; but in 328 B.C. Cyrus died in battle and
Cambyses left to ascend the throne of Persia. He died only a few years
later (522 BC...) and was replaced by his brother Bardiya the Usurper.
In the uproar that followed, a young prince named Darius began to rise to
power...
Darius the Great defeated Bardiya a short eight months later and became
Emperor of Persia; but a number of the Satraps (governors set in place by
Cambyses) refused to obey him.
Both a false Bardiya and a false Nebuchadrezzar appeared and began
rallying followers. In the resulting discord, the Babylonians revolted....
The revolt in Babylon was put down rapidly and the freedoms of the
Babylonians were considerably narrowed. A uniform common law was set over
all of Darius' subject peoples. Aramaic became the common tongue for the
empire, and only scribes studied the old languages. The gods were still
worshiped but the temples were not as well maintained. When the rule of
Persia passed to Xerxes, it was only four years before the Babylonians
revolted again...
Xerxes suppressed the revolt and shortened the Babylonian leash even more.
The Temples began to be neglected, and the worship of the Chaldean gods
began to be replaced by the Persian deities, Ahura Mazda (the god of
Light) and Ahriman (the god of Darkness). Eventually Xerxes outlawed the
worship of the Chaldean gods completely.
Several more conquerors came through Mesopotamia, including Alexander of
Macedonia. Alexander had the ambition to make Babylon and Alexandria the
joint capitals of his empire, but died before Babylon could be reborn.
It became clear that there would never be a true Mesopotamian monarch
again.
Ironically, it was not military reasons that led to the fall of Babylon.
When invaded by the Persians, and later the Macedonians and Scythians,
Babylon became part of the 'back yard' of larger empires. It ceased to be
a central place of government or an important economic trading city. With
no Kings, the traditional responsibilities of maintaining the temples and
irrigation canals went unfulfilled. The temples crumbled and the canals
silted up, the towns of importance moved to the 'Royal Road' that bypassed
Mesopotamia into Syria. The great city-state of Babylon and the seat of
power, Assyria crumbled away and the duties of the Datu were no more.
By 100 AD. there were only seven Datu left. Over the previous 250 years,
Datu had slowly left the temples to live in common society. These
merchants, sorcerers, diviners and wanderers were able to actively teach a
few younger generations of Datu. It was only through the dedication of a
few of the Datu that their knowledge went on.
They continued the refinement of their Tibir self defense that was based
on dance, and they practiced a religeo-philosophical system based on the
Tablet of Fate / Destiny and the Art of Master Adapa. They practiced the
'Chaldean/ Sabian' arts of Astrology.
Most importantly, they practiced a unique form of divination called
'shub-ni-garash' (to cast the oracle of the self), and developed a corpus
of magical knowledge and techniques. The Datu had codified the knowledge
of the Tablet of Fate /Destiny, and their system absorbed and integrated
pieces of Sumerian, Akkadian, Assyrian, Persian and Greek mysticism.
Thankfully, the cumbersome cuneiform writing system had fallen into
general disuse, being replaced by the Aramaic and Greek alphabets.
The Datu chose to maintain the tradition of secrecy, and passed the
knowledge down to close friends and family. The numbers of the Datu slowly
grew and, in time, some of the Datu went forth into other parts of the
world. Hu the wanderer went to the British Isles; Hiram the Scribe went to
Rome. Others went to Syria, Egypt, India, Asia and Africa. They held
conclave every seven years, and they absorbed and infused the things that
they learned into the Tablet of Fate / Destinies...
It was common for a Datu to have a 'circuit' of students, and to wander a
circle that brought him to a new student each week or two weeks. Not all
Datu choose their students wisely, and one of the misfortunes of the
tradition was the rise of the Hanochem (eaters of sin): a sect that
twisted the Datu's tradition in to something akin to Satanism. The two
paths came together and fought with magic, fire, and sword, and the eaters
of sin were defeated. But even their knowledge was absorbed into the
Tablet; though now it is taught only to fully educated masters of the
Datu's path.
Eventually, the majority of the Datu ended up in the cities of Harran and
Eddessa, where they encountered the Syraic alphabet and developed the
flame script that is still used today in a cursive form. Aramaic was still
spoken in this region and that language (syraic) is still spoken today.
A complete history of the Datu after 440 A.D. is beyond the scope of this
work, and is not presented here for several practical reasons.
Firstly, a history of the Datu after 400 A.D. is not required to
understand the traditions of the Datu or the Tablet of Fate. Secondly, our
order feels that the system should be judged by its usefulness rather than
on hierophantic-blathering about ancient traditions and rosters of
historical figures that have taught or followed it, though you would be
surprise at the list of names.
Lastly, it is preferable to our order to maintain a closed-door
policy in regards to the personal lives of our current or past adepts, and
any further history of the Datu could potentially prove to be an invasion
of that privacy.
The Datu existed in moderate numbers for a long time but the decimation
brought by the first and second world wars took a terrible toll on our
numbers. By the end of WW II, only three Datu remained. They died in 1954,
1961, and 1979. The last of them had only one fully initiated apprentice
(my master).
It must be understood, that this is a living tradition that has grown and
evolved with a life of it's own.
Due to the ages that have passed, many elements of Assyrian and Babylonian
origin have fallen away, and we have had to take into account the changes
in society and understanding that have developed since our beginnings. We
have striven to hold the dearest and most important elements of the
ancients intact and have altered nothing unless it has been proven
wrong...
...You will not find the overwhelming veneration of Marduk or Assur
here. These gods were heavily embellished and were of more
importance to the political arena. The priests of all of these gods
practiced money lending and land rental practices that kept the population
firmly locked into their little pens. If this offends any worshipers of
Marduk, Anu, or Assshur, please do not be offended, just do a little
research and you will see this for yourself. The purpose of the teachings
were not to carry political messages or propaganda that is were they
began, but they grew far beyond that.
One of the primary tenants of the Datu, was that anything that was part of
the knowledge of the tablets that proved to be incorrect by science or
math, etc. should be replaced with the relevant truth.
An excellent example is the order of the planets and the signs of the
zodiac. In ancient days our kind (humans) were a bit conceited, so we
thought that the earth was the center of the whole universe! At that time,
the view from here was like this:
Looking out, we first see:
1. The Moon (it seems closest)
2. Mercury
3. Venus
4. Sun
5. Mars
6. Jupiter
7. And finally, Saturn
Beyond this lay the zodiac like a great painted sphere, the backdrop to
everything.
We now know that we live in a heliocentric solar system that is far from
being the center of the universe. Starting as far out from the Sun as we
can go and using only those planets that the ancients knew of, the order
is:
Saturn, Jupiter, Mars, Earth, Moon, Venus, Mercury, Sun.
How has this affected the teachings and the tablet? It balanced out
ancient flaws in the teachings so bad that entire families of knowledge
had to be invented to smooth it over!
Another example is the zodiac:
Initially, the tablet is a group of 4 binary number sets. These number
sets expand by doubling: 2-4-8-16.
1. The 2 are positive and negative.
2. The 4 are earth, water, fire, wind.
3. The 8 are the planets (including the Earthg) in the order just given.
4. The sixteen are the signs of the Zodiac and four elemental lords.
At the time of the developments of the teaching of the tablet (note that
the teaching are far older than the Datu) the dominant astrological sign
at the spring equinox was Taurus.
The initial sign of the zodiac moves slowly in what is know as
'procession' (the stars don't move, we do but to our perspective the
zodiac slowly revolves).
At the time of the Datu, the sign of Taurus had moved on and the
sign of Aries had passed (this is the 1st sign in modern astrology) and
now Pisces was the dominant sign. We are now headed into the age of
Aquarius.
It can be seen, that if we left the attributions of the Arian age in place
on the tablet, that our cosmic watch is slow. We should put it a cosmic
hour ahead (divine light savings time?) then we are at the sign of the
fishes. How does this affect things? Again, it makes more sense and
rectifies difficulties with the tablets.
Now comes the age of Aquarius. There is a huge debate about whether the
age has already begun or not. The Datu say it begins in 2078, so we will
next rectify then.
In actuality, we do maintain the original order of the planets and such
attributes (original order and new order for planets and zodiac) in order
to honor tradition, as well as using the shape of the rectification in the
teachings of the three paths of Enki, Enlil, and Anu.
We are taught that we are one race, the mulu izi (children of the fire).
We are taught that we have a three-part being:
1. A Lowerself, that is Mortal (Our body)
2. A Middleself (mind), that is Elemental / Mental (this is the place of
our 'dignity' or personal power)
3. And A Higherself (personal god / soul), that is Eternal / unending
Yes, there are cultural differences, but we are one race.
Dul Aka Abba 30th Enissary of the Guraga Aka Datu...