[repost]
The word Bograh is interesting and rather obscure. That in itself suggests that this text originates from some obscure group that uses the Canaanite/Phoenician language that we call Hebrew nowadays.
Boger means mature. Normally a -ah suffix would mean a feminine version but the Talmud repeatedly uses the word Bogeret for a mature woman. This suggests that -ah might come from an earlier time when more of the Akkadian grammar was in use. Then the -ah would indicate direction
For instance the Southern Desert, the Negev is found "to the south" negbah. Shamayim is heaven in Hebrew and "towards heaven" is shamaimah.
It makes a sort of sense you Boger as a word describing something like a Senate (from the Latin "old men") and therefore "toward the mature" would refer to something that was spoken before their Illuminati Senate.
However there is another possibility.
Ask yourself, why does the Babylonian Talmud use a non-standard way to refer to a mature female "bogeret" instead of the normal feminine form "bograh". Could it be that Bograh already had a special meaning to refer to the Matriarch? We know that the Illuminati still maintain the ancient Sumerian/Babylonian style of matriarchy. Family bloodlines are traced by descent from the mother. The Matriarch is the highest role in the religion. If you study the Khazar's the supreme ruler was a religious ruler. This person had a lieutenanant, the "kunde" who was the war leader. The word Kunde is the origin of the gothic "kuningaz" which is where we get the words king and queen.
This is only one item of fact, one unusual word, but it reinforces the idea that this may be genuine info that some servant overheard while the masters were meeting in a secret room in a rambling old house with secret passages and unusual acoustics.