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Rish'd
Nisanu 6754
THE AKITU FESTIVAL : March
20, 2004, The Assyrian New Year festival at Bet-Nahrain LIVE on AssyriaSat
THE AKITU FESTIVAL
The most important religious celebration of Babylon and one that provides
a background for understanding II Isaiah was the Akitu festival1 observed
annually from the first to twelfth of Nisanu (Hebrew Nisan: March-April).
The festal origins may lie in Sumerian times; the rites continued to be
observed into the Persian-Greek period. The chief figure in the cult during
the Neo-Babylonian era was Marduk, god of Babylon and supreme deity in the
empire. His temple, called Esagila ("House of the Uplifted Head"), stood
near the great ziggurat.
Rituals of preparation occupied the first days and included lustration
rites, the carving of images of wood, which were then overlaid with gold
and ornamented with jewels and semi-precious stones (Isa. 40:18-20; 41:7),
and prayers for blessing. The temple was ceremonially cleansed and wiped
down with the body of a sacrificed sheep and with oils.
The recitation of the Enuma Elish,2 the creation myth of Babylon, was
also part of the ritual. This myth relates the story of the birth of the
gods, the battle between Marduk, champion of order, and Tiamat, symbol of
chaos, and the creation of man in a god-ordered universe. Opening verses
describe a time when there was neither heaven nor earth but only the watery
abyss ruled by Apsu, symbol of fresh water, and his consort Tiamat, the sea.
Out of the first principle, water, came heavenly beings, created in pairs.
With the arrival of many offspring came noise so upsetting that Apsu and Tiamat
planned to kill their grandchildren. The plot, overheard by the wise earth
god Ea, was foiled with the killing of Apsu. But Tiamat was still alive.
Mustering her creative powers, she formed frightful monsters and over this
array placed one of her children, Kingu, pinning on his breast the tablets
of destiny, symbolic of control of the future. The stage was now set for
a dramatic, cosmic encounter of gods.
When none among the gods of order was able to stand up to Tiamat and
Kingu, Marduk, son of Ea and his wife Damkina, entered the arena having
been promised supreme kingship should he defeat the enemy. Kingu was overcome
and the tablets of destiny became the property of Marduk. Tiamat was killed
and split in two, like an oyster. With one half of the dead goddess, Marduk
formed the arch of the heavens and with the other half, the earth. In the
realm above he set Ann the sky god, in the realm below Ea, the earth god,
and between the two the air god, Enlil. Other gods were given abodes in
the heavens and the stars were formed in their likeness, with constellations
to mark the passage of time.
March 20, 2003 7:00PM for Tickets call 1-209-538-4130
3119 South Central
Ave.Ceres California 95307-3632, US
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