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PART I

                                          DIVIDE AND CONQUER

                             I.I. The origin of the human drama

                             The origin of the situation you are in, dates back to ancient times.
                           Sumer  is  one  of  the  first  civilizations  in  the  world  in  the  region  of
                           southern  Mesopotamia  (south-central  Iraq).  It  emerged  between  the
                           sixth  and  fifth  millennium  B.C.  (Before  Christ)  and  was  highly
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                           developed  with  great  cities,  temples  and  pyramids.   The  Temple  of
                           Inanna, that you can see today in the ancient city of Uruk, keeps its
                           beautiful colors and depictions of animal chimeras (hybrids composed
                           of parts of different animals).
                             Inanna was the Sumerian goddess of beauty, sex, war and political
                           power. She was later worshipped by the Babylonians and Assyrians
                           under the name of Ishtar or Ashera. She was Isis of the Egyptians, Diana
                           of the Greeks and Venus of the Romans. Inanna was the consort of Baal
                           (or Moloch or Molech, a representation of Satan/Lucifer), a deity who
                           demanded  child  sacrifice.  Ancient  Sumerians  and  their  polytheistic
                           religion of evil expanded towards the northwest into Babylonia. Then
                           they  went  toward  the  west,  to  what  we  now  know  as  Canaan  and
                           Phoenicia.
                             One  suggested  identity  for  Molech  is  the  Canaanite  deity  Ba’al-
                           Hadad or Hadad. Hadad was considered the king of the gods by the
                           ancient Canaanites. Evidence that Moloch can be identified with him
                           comes from the fact that the pagan altars in the valley of Ben-Hinnom,
                           where children were sacrificed, are also described as altars to Ba’al by
                           the prophet Jeremiah.
                             Furthermore, Assyrian texts stated that child sacrifices were made to
                           Adad, the Assyrian equivalent of the Canaanite Hadad. This makes it
                           reasonable to suggest that child sacrifices were made to Hadad and that
                           a cult of child sacrifice was related to him. The pillars of Baalism, also

                             1   Crawford,  Harriet  E.  W.  (2004).  Sumer  and  the  Sumerians.  Cambridge:
                           Cambridge University Press. Leick, Gwendolyn (2002). Mesopotamia: Invention of
                           the City. London and New York, Penguin.



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