Jim_from_the_South
Honorable
Grey aliens, also referred to as Roswell Greys, or Grays, are reportedly extraterrestrial beings. Seventy-three percent of all reported alien encounters in the United States describe Grey aliens, a significantly higher proportion than other countries. So they very well may be the version that is currently over the skies of the US, while other representatives are over other nations.
Typically Greys are described as being human-like with small bodies with smooth grey-colored skin, enlarged hairless heads, and large black eyes. The Barney and Betty Hill abduction claim, which purportedly took place in New Hampshire in 1961, popularized Grey aliens, but they began to be reported as early as the 1947 Roswell UFO incident.
If you, as I do, believe that the earliest accounts of aliens are evidenced from the earliest times that man first put hand to rocks or stylus to create markings on stones or clay, then perhaps some of the evidence that I have arrived at below will be of some help to you in your journey of discovery.
According to Sumerian traditions, the first humans were known as the "Black Headed people". This is not entirely correct in its translation, since it refers to their hair color and not skin color, but it is
evidence that the great majority of those early people had black hair. And when they crafted one
of their epic poems, and included someone who did "not" have black hair, perhaps we should pay closer attention.
Were Enki, Ea, Enlil, Inanna, etc., ever reported on, as regards physical looks? Almost never, and when they were, it was a genetic type of description, usually revolving around "greatness" or "strength" or "wisdom, love" etc., but not much in the way of physical attributes.
I recently translated a communication from an extraterrestrial group, that was provided to my by an abductee. The alien was described as having "extremely white skin" and "very light blond or white hair", even though it was apparently a younger person. As I have mentioned previously, I am at present nearly ready to release a book on that event, "Alien Message Decoded", but I wish to provide you with other information, from the mouths of the Sumerians themselves, and not necessarily an alien.
We're all aware, I'm sure, that the Sumerians were created with the first writings, although that is absolutely not true, in that I have found that I was able to translate the markings at Gobekli Tepe, and they are certainly much older. But I will leave that for another day. But more important, how did they learn to write? Is there any one person who is credited by the Sumerians as having "taught" them how to write in the first place? Yes, there is. And she's a goddess (actually a star goddess in their words), by the name of Nisaba. Her daughter would later become the wife of Enlil, so we can assume that she was arrived very early in the Sumerian god-lore, at least 6,000 years ago. .
She was well respected by the humans, who wrote hymns to her, and by the gods themselves. In fact she was appointed as the official scribe of the gods, and recorded all of their important data on tablets made from lapis-lazuli stone, and with a golden stylus. How she used a metal stylus to carve symbols into hard stone is a good question, but one that I have no answer for at present.
Her name itself is transliterated as Naga, and translated in English as Nisaba. Naga, by the way, is defined as "potash or soap". Potash actually refers to pot ash, which is plant ashes soaked in water in a pot. It was historically used in bleaching textiles , making glass and soap, and other products.
However, what we should understand here, for those with eyes to see, is that it is
a whitish to light-gray color. Was Lady Nisaba the first "gray"? Further evidence
for that idea is found in the dedication hymns written by the Sumerians to honor her.
In the Hymn to Nisaba she is described as follows:
Lady colored like the stars of heaven, holding a lapis-lazuli tablet!
Some night if you look up at the stars, you might find that, rather than being
pure white, they often resemble a type of light-gray color, or off-white, perhaps
due to pollution, but nonetheless.
And the stanza "Good woman, chief scribe of An, record-keeper of Enlil, wise sage of the gods!" confirms my finding that she was the scribe to the gods and kept their records, as well as being credited by the Sumerians with the invention of writing.
In her early form as a grain goddess she was represented as a single stalk. And she was described
as the "Lady with hair the color of ember". Ember is a wheat that grew in ancient Sumer, and it
was dirty-blond in color.
So, white to light gray skin, blond to dirty-blond hair. Not the typical black head at all. And beginning to edge a bit closer to my own recent translation of a message from a white to blond haired very white alien.
And here's the kicker. In Temple Hymn 42, Enheduanna calls her "faithful woman exceeding in wisdom." Already mentioned was her close relationship to scribes and scholarly activities. Mathematics and astronomy were in her repertoire. She was said to be "a lady with cunning intelligence." She was the goddess of creative inspiration, goddess of creative mind. (Monaghan, 11). She is also credited
with teaching geography, map-making, and astronomy to the Sumerians, who have been well
known as dedicted to those arts, reflected in their own drawings of stars and planetary positions.
So, is this the first report of a gray? Personally I feel that the grays as we are seeing them in modern times, are more probably some type of automaton or cloned beings used for messenger services, but it is possible that the originals took on expanded roles. Your opinions are appreciated.
Typically Greys are described as being human-like with small bodies with smooth grey-colored skin, enlarged hairless heads, and large black eyes. The Barney and Betty Hill abduction claim, which purportedly took place in New Hampshire in 1961, popularized Grey aliens, but they began to be reported as early as the 1947 Roswell UFO incident.
If you, as I do, believe that the earliest accounts of aliens are evidenced from the earliest times that man first put hand to rocks or stylus to create markings on stones or clay, then perhaps some of the evidence that I have arrived at below will be of some help to you in your journey of discovery.
According to Sumerian traditions, the first humans were known as the "Black Headed people". This is not entirely correct in its translation, since it refers to their hair color and not skin color, but it is
evidence that the great majority of those early people had black hair. And when they crafted one
of their epic poems, and included someone who did "not" have black hair, perhaps we should pay closer attention.
Were Enki, Ea, Enlil, Inanna, etc., ever reported on, as regards physical looks? Almost never, and when they were, it was a genetic type of description, usually revolving around "greatness" or "strength" or "wisdom, love" etc., but not much in the way of physical attributes.
I recently translated a communication from an extraterrestrial group, that was provided to my by an abductee. The alien was described as having "extremely white skin" and "very light blond or white hair", even though it was apparently a younger person. As I have mentioned previously, I am at present nearly ready to release a book on that event, "Alien Message Decoded", but I wish to provide you with other information, from the mouths of the Sumerians themselves, and not necessarily an alien.
We're all aware, I'm sure, that the Sumerians were created with the first writings, although that is absolutely not true, in that I have found that I was able to translate the markings at Gobekli Tepe, and they are certainly much older. But I will leave that for another day. But more important, how did they learn to write? Is there any one person who is credited by the Sumerians as having "taught" them how to write in the first place? Yes, there is. And she's a goddess (actually a star goddess in their words), by the name of Nisaba. Her daughter would later become the wife of Enlil, so we can assume that she was arrived very early in the Sumerian god-lore, at least 6,000 years ago. .
She was well respected by the humans, who wrote hymns to her, and by the gods themselves. In fact she was appointed as the official scribe of the gods, and recorded all of their important data on tablets made from lapis-lazuli stone, and with a golden stylus. How she used a metal stylus to carve symbols into hard stone is a good question, but one that I have no answer for at present.
Her name itself is transliterated as Naga, and translated in English as Nisaba. Naga, by the way, is defined as "potash or soap". Potash actually refers to pot ash, which is plant ashes soaked in water in a pot. It was historically used in bleaching textiles , making glass and soap, and other products.
However, what we should understand here, for those with eyes to see, is that it is
a whitish to light-gray color. Was Lady Nisaba the first "gray"? Further evidence
for that idea is found in the dedication hymns written by the Sumerians to honor her.
In the Hymn to Nisaba she is described as follows:
Lady colored like the stars of heaven, holding a lapis-lazuli tablet!
Some night if you look up at the stars, you might find that, rather than being
pure white, they often resemble a type of light-gray color, or off-white, perhaps
due to pollution, but nonetheless.
And the stanza "Good woman, chief scribe of An, record-keeper of Enlil, wise sage of the gods!" confirms my finding that she was the scribe to the gods and kept their records, as well as being credited by the Sumerians with the invention of writing.
In her early form as a grain goddess she was represented as a single stalk. And she was described
as the "Lady with hair the color of ember". Ember is a wheat that grew in ancient Sumer, and it
was dirty-blond in color.
So, white to light gray skin, blond to dirty-blond hair. Not the typical black head at all. And beginning to edge a bit closer to my own recent translation of a message from a white to blond haired very white alien.
And here's the kicker. In Temple Hymn 42, Enheduanna calls her "faithful woman exceeding in wisdom." Already mentioned was her close relationship to scribes and scholarly activities. Mathematics and astronomy were in her repertoire. She was said to be "a lady with cunning intelligence." She was the goddess of creative inspiration, goddess of creative mind. (Monaghan, 11). She is also credited
with teaching geography, map-making, and astronomy to the Sumerians, who have been well
known as dedicted to those arts, reflected in their own drawings of stars and planetary positions.
So, is this the first report of a gray? Personally I feel that the grays as we are seeing them in modern times, are more probably some type of automaton or cloned beings used for messenger services, but it is possible that the originals took on expanded roles. Your opinions are appreciated.