Anyone who has cared to study some more about Anunnaki knows that these entities have been around for quite some time. Mention of them is found as far back as ancient Sumerian texts, and their relationship with human beings has long been a source of contention for seekers of hidden truths.
They have appeared in some of the oldest texts in the world—also in the oldest surviving text in the world, The Epic of Gilgamesh, which is probably about a half-man, half-Anunnaki, according to sources.
But while we know that mention of the Anunnaki is frequent in pre-Christian texts, we don’t know that they might have been mentioned in other texts as well—such as the Book of Enoch.
What is the Book of Enoch?
The Book of Enoch is an extremely ancient Hebrew text which is purported to have been written about Noah’s grandfather—that’s Enoch. A lot of the book, on the first reading, is very supernatural and is about little more than demons and giants. It explains which angels were expelled from heaven and why, and why the great flood was such a massive moral necessity—so the regular religious stuff.
You read a lot about fairies and other superhuman/nonhuman entities which makes you believe that the Book is, at first sight, simply a fairy tale.
But there’s more to that.
The Book of the Watchers
The first part of this book is about some entities called the “Watchers”—largely believed to be angels. It is believed, and is purported in other Hebrew texts, that the Watchers were angels who fathered a supernatural race called the Nephilim. In other sources, they have been called fallen angels and even giants.
While most readers just take this at face value and believe that it is, again, regular religious fare and nothing more, there are clues in this book that point to a different direction.
Such as. . .
The Demoralization of Humans
The Book of the Watchers is, by and large, about the demoralization of the human race—a phenomenon that coincided with the interruption of angels in human affairs.
In this book, the idea that is presented is that the Watchers are, like the Abrahamic Satan, fallen angels whose purpose is to lead humans astray. You can give them whatever name you like: demons, Beelzebub, djinns, or. . . the Anunnaki?
The Anunnaki too were lofty—the like the once-noble Watchers. They too have interrupted several times in human affairs—like these said angels. The Anunnaki have even mated with humans, and the Nephilim—or the race of giants—could be, like Gilgamesh in the epic, one of these hybrid entities.
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