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Nile or Bird Goddess
The Nile Goddess
reaches for the Stars and "Draws Down the Moon" with the graceful
crescent-sweep of her arms. The hook-shaped hands of this goddess from early
Egypt symbolize regeneration, an evocative image of the life-death-life
principle of reincarnation. The Mother Goddess in late Neolithic times was
equated with bird and animal life. Worshipped by a people who called themselves
the Kemi, here, in this evocative image of life-death-life, is shown the core of
Kemian wisdom, the principle of reincarnation.
The image of this bird Goddess appeared in Egypt in early
predynastic times (4000 b.c.) as funerary figures with strongly beaked faces and
winglike arms and hands. These painted terracota figures, less than a foot high
and much alike, were found in graves in Mohamerian, near Edfu. They serve as a
superb blend of bird, woman and deity. Their greatly enlarged posteriors are a
representation of the cosmic or primal egg.
In Egyptian myth, the generation of the primal egg takes
place in what is known as the time of non-being where the sublime goose appears
among the imperishable stars. While the world is still flooded by silence, the
voice of the great cackler breaks the stillness, and she lays the egg containing
the germ of life. From her egg burst forth a bird of celestial light. The cosmic
matter from which the universe is formed comes from the primal egg.
[Brooklyn Museum of Art, New York. 4000 B.C.]
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