They told us the Bible is the word of God, urging us to read it, live by it, and pray as it instructs. They declared it sacred, the ultimate truth. But they also warned us never to question it, labeling doubt as blasphemy and independent thought as heresy. Yet, here you are, guided by the YouTube algorithm to this moment, this channel. You’ve been chosen—chosen to think, to question, and to uncover the greatest lie ever told. I know what they don’t want you to know about the Bible. They won’t tell you that it doesn’t begin by revealing God, but Elohim. And who—or what—is Elohim? They’ll never admit that ‘Elohim’ is a plural term, echoing an ancient, forbidden name: Anunnaki. Even Wikipedia offers a carefully worded disclaimer, hinting at this truth. Why? Because they fear you discovering what’s hidden in plain sight. This isn’t an explanation—it’s a warning. So, who are they, and why have they worked so hard to conceal this? It’s time to unravel the story from the beginning, revealing a world and cosmos beyond imagination.
The truth lies buried beneath our feet, hidden for millennia, awaiting the brave. In the mid-19th century, archaeologists explored Mesopotamia, now modern-day Iraq, unearthing history-altering discoveries. Among them was the Library of Ashurbanipal in Nineveh, containing over 30,000 clay tablets inscribed with wedge-shaped cuneiform. Initially a mystery, these markings were deciphered by scholars like Sir Henry Rawlinson, revealing the language of ancient Sumer, Babylon, and Akkad. The tablets spoke, but their message was unexpected. Beyond mundane records of trade and decrees, they held stories—tales of creation, floods, and kings who ruled for millennia. These narratives, eerily similar to the Bible’s, were far older, predating it by thousands of years. Unlike the Bible’s singular Creator, they described powerful beings from the heavens, the Anunna or Anunnaki, shaping humanity’s fate. Were they gods, or something more tangible? What did these tablets reveal about their purpose on Earth?
The Library of Ashurbanipal was just the start. Further excavations uncovered more tablets, each piece adding to an unresolved puzzle. These ancient records suggest humanity’s earliest stories aren’t about traditional gods, but a connection to beings from the stars. The Epic of Gilgamesh, the oldest known myth, tells of Gilgamesh, a part-human, part-Anunnaki king seeking immortality. It depicts a world where the Anunnaki ruled as gods, withholding knowledge of life and death from humans. Why? In 1872, George Smith discovered the epic’s 11th tablet, the Flood Tablet, describing a deluge ordered by the Anunnaki. Enki, defying the others, warned Utnapishtim through a reed wall to build an ark, saving humanity. This mirrors Noah’s Ark, but in the Sumerian tale, Enlil decrees destruction while Enki protects, revealing divided motives among the Anunnaki. This account, predating the Bible, raises questions: is the biblical flood a retelling? Why obscure multiple beings for a singular God?
The Epic of Atrahasis offers another pre-biblical flood story. Here, the Anunnaki, frustrated by humanity’s overpopulation, unleash a flood not for moral judgment but to control numbers. Enki again warns Atrahasis to build a vessel, echoing Noah’s tale. Unlike the Bible’s divine justice, the Sumerian flood is a practical act of control. These parallels—Gilgamesh, Atrahasis, and the Bible—challenge the origins and motives of these stories. Were the Anunnaki caretakers or oppressors? The Sumerian King List, a seemingly mundane record of kings, adds intrigue. Early rulers reigned for tens of thousands of years, some dynasties spanning 200,000 years. These precise figures, from a culture known for accuracy, defy metaphor. Were these kings Anunnaki, with lifespans far beyond human? The Sumerians weren’t writing myths—they were documenting a history of contact with star-beings.
If the Anunnaki shaped humanity, their influence may persist. Why has this knowledge been suppressed? The Bible, revered as humanity’s origin story, parallels older Sumerian tales, suggesting it’s a retelling. Adam and Eve’s creation mirrors the Anunnaki’s genetic engineering of humans as laborers, using their DNA and primate genes. The Bible’s “Let us make man in our image” echoes the Anunnaki’s collaboration. Cain and Abel reflect Enki and Enlil’s rivalry, while the Tower of Babel may stem from a Sumerian stargate tale, not a divine act but Anunnaki control. The term Elohim, plural for “gods,” aligns with Anunnaki, meaning “those from the heavens.” Why does the Bible simplify these complex beings into a singular God? Was it to serve a new narrative, obscuring humanity’s origins?
Cultures worldwide echo Sumerian tales of sky-beings shaping civilization, from Mesoamerica to Egypt. Zecharia Sitchin’s Earth Chronicles suggest the Anunnaki mined Earth’s gold for their planet, Nibiru, creating humans as workers. While controversial, his bioengineering theory challenges divine creation. Sitchin’s mention of Galzu, a messenger of the “Creator of All,” lacks textual evidence, raising doubts. If the Anunnaki weren’t gods, where is God? Is there a divine force beyond them, or did we mistake technology for divinity? The Enuma Elish and Atrahasis myths describe humanity’s creation from divine blood and clay, suggesting the Anunnaki’s essence is within us. This divine spark implies we’re not mere creations but carriers of divinity.
I believe in God—not as a figure on a throne, but as energy, a cosmic frequency connecting all life. This aligns with ancient traditions recognizing humanity’s cosmic link. Reconnecting with this spark could free us from fear and division, uniting us to reclaim our potential. The Anunnaki’s legacy may live in our DNA, their spark within us. To awaken it, we must seek stillness, self-awareness, and alignment with the universe’s rhythm. Why does the Bible obscure this? Perhaps to control, consolidating fragmented truths into a narrative serving power. If we knew our creators were fallible beings, would we question religious and political authority? Governments and historians dismiss the Anunnaki, but consistent ancient knowledge suggests memory, not myth.
What if knowing our origins—our divine spark—disrupts systems of control? Religions often separate us from the divine, placing God beyond reach. What if the “gods” were Anunnaki, superhuman but flawed? Their fear is our awakening, realizing we don’t need intermediaries. If we understood our divinity, we might reject submission, creating our own systems. This is why the Anunnaki story is suppressed, labeled myth. These questions challenge everything, but you’re here to ask them. The choice is yours: will you seek the truth hidden for millennia? This is your story, humanity’s story, and perhaps just the beginning. Continue exploring, share your thoughts, and let’s uncover the truth together.