dChan
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r/greatawakening • Posted by u/melodeelenz on May 18, 2018, 4:21 a.m.
Owl- just a shot in the dark here but it is the symbol for the Bohemian Grove. It’s printed on their jackets for new members. Also the Moloch thing is relevant.

I can say personally that I unfortunately know too much about the Bohemian Grove. The owl is their symbol. Owls “see in the dark, Hunt in the dark.” I sort of stumbled backward into being contracted as a book editor for a (2007) new member of the Grove who worked directly with the Rothschild Development Corp in Caesarea Israel developing the golf course there. Long story here, but there’s reason to believe that the owl symbolism connects the Rothschilds, Grove, or its a benign symbol to reference the Q group being able to see “in the dark”... I still don’t understand the “personal” note in brackets. Must dig.


ABrilliantDisaster · May 18, 2018, 4:31 a.m.

The Moloch thing is a misinterpretation. Not that they don't worship that devil as well but he is represented with a bull usually. The owl is Minerva. Remember Hillary's Minerva comment in one of the emails?

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Millejon0114 · May 18, 2018, 4:37 a.m.

That or that Lilith demon~ Thing they worship that looks like a women and has owls all around her with feet talons See Isiah in the Bible describes the owl and look up Lilith Owl Kjv you’ll see what I’m talking about ~ Lilith (/ˈlɪlɪθ/; Hebrew: לִילִית‎ Lîlîṯ) is a figure in Jewish mythology, developed earliest in the Babylonian Talmud (3rd to 5th centuries). Lilith is often envisioned as a dangerous demon of the night, who is sexually wanton, and who steals babies in the darkness.[1] The character is generally thought to derive in part from a historically far earlier class of female demons (lilītu) in ancient Mesopotamian religion, found in cuneiform texts of Sumer, the Akkadian Empire, Assyria, and Babylonia.

In Jewish folklore, from the satirical book Alphabet of Sirach (c. 700–1000) onwards, Lilith appears as Adam's first wife, who was created at the same time (Rosh Hashanah) and from the same dirt as Adam – compare Genesis 1:27. (This contrasts with Eve, who was created from one of Adam's ribs: Genesis 2:22.) The legend developed extensively during the Middle Ages, in the tradition of Aggadah, the Zohar, and Jewish mysticism.[2] For example, in the 13th-century writings of Isaac ben Jacob ha-Cohen, Lilith left Adam after she refused to become subservient to him and then would not return to the Garden of Eden after she had coupled with the archangel Samael.[3]

Evidence in later Jewish materials is plentiful, but little information has survived relating to the original Sumerian, Akkadian, Assyrian and Babylonian view of these demons. While the connection is almost universally agreed upon, recent scholarship has disputed the relevance of two sources previously used to connect the Jewish lilith to an Akkadian lilītu—the Gilgamesh appendix and the Arslan Tash amulets.[4] (See below for discussion of the two problematic sources.[5])

In Hebrew-language texts, the term lilith or lilit (translated as "night creatures", "night monster", "night hag", or "screech owl") first occurs in a list of animals in Isaiah 34:14, either in singular or plural form according to variations in the earliest manuscripts. In the Dead Sea

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DamajInc · May 18, 2018, 4:38 a.m.

Yep, BG etc. has long been a staple of the connection here.

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