Shall We Lift Up Our Eyes to the Statue of Liberty?

Posted on: February 25, 2009 by: admin

02 See No Evil
Image by S@Z via Flickr

I did some research on the internet on the Statute of Liberty and look at what I found:

From: http://www.crossroad.to/articles2/2002/carl-teichrib/5isis.htm

The Statue of Liberty is a goddess representation, with her sun-ray spikes an allusion to the headgear of the Colossus of Rhodes, a monument to the Sun-God Helios (interestingly, Auguste Bertholdi, the creator of the Statue of Liberty, was seeking a commission to construct a giant Isis statue holding a torch overlooking the Suez Canal).

From: http://www.williamhicks.net/torch_pass.php

Ancient writings have been discovered that mention the Goddess Diana, the Goddess of the Hunt and of the Moon, as being the light-bearer – and depictions are shown of her lighting the way for others with a torch, which is also a symbolic reminder of the fiery nature of the Goddess. The mythology of Diana was passed along and reached France. When The United States won her independence from England, the French gave the US a gift to symbolize our ongoing commitment to freedom, liberty and justice. The goddess Diana, our light-bearer, was depicted once again in the form of the Statue of Liberty.

From: http://www.withoneaccord.org/store/DivineKing.html

Right above the Alma tunnel is a replica of the torch from the Statue of Liberty [a Masonic idol, sculpted by a French Freemason]). That torch actually symbolizes the “light” of Lucifer.

From: http://www.wilsonsalmanac.com/statue_of_liberty.html

The 49-m-tall statue of ‘Liberty Enlightening the World’ was dedicated in New York Harbor by President Grover Cleveland. She was created by French sculptor Frédéric-Auguste Bartholdi. It has been said that the face is that of his mother.

The idea of the Statue of Liberty was not received well by either the US federal nor New York state governments. However, due to a campaign stated by publisher Joseph Pulitzer, funds were raised for the American half of the bill in only five months.

In Roman mythology, Liberty is Libertas, the goddess of freedom. Originally a deity of personal freedom, she evolved to become the goddess of the commonwealth. Her temples were found on the Aventine Hill and the Forum. She was depicted on many Roman coins as a female figure wearing a pileus (a felt cap, worn by slaves when they were set free), a wreath of laurels and a spear .

Libertas was presented in 1884 as a gift from the French Grand Orient Temple Masons to the Masons of America in celebration of the centenary of the first Masonic Republic, as much as a gift from France to America. The cornerstone of the statue has an inscription that records that it was laid in a Masonic ceremony. It is believed that Bartholdi conceived the original statue as an effigy of the Egyptian goddess Isis, and only later converted it to a ‘Statue of Liberty’ for New York Harbor when it was rejected for the Suez Canal. The statue of Isis was to be of “a robed woman holding aloft a torch” (Weisberger, Bernard, Statue of Liberty: 1st Hundred Years, p.30, quoted in Lloyd, James, Beyond Babylon, p.103).

Lux Mundi literally means ‘the Light of the World’. This is also another name for France’s Liberty, whose day this also is. Liberty’s torch shines hope in the world. Her statue graces New York City’s harbour, her full name being Liberty Enlightening the World.

From: http://madcowpolitics.com/

The origins of Isis can be found with Semiramis or Ishtar. In fact, Isis is just another representation of Semiramis.

Semiramis was Nimrod’s wife in Babylon and was recognized by many as the Goddess of Fertility. She was the queen of Babylon who claimed she was a goddess after the slaying of her husband Nimrod. Semiramis was represented by the planet Venus. Semiramis, Ishtar, and Isis were all goddesses of fertility who were represented by the planet Venus. In other words, they are all virtually the same deity.

The Roman Goddess Juno is also a deviation of Semiramis/Ishtar. Juno was the Goddess’s name in ancient Rome. It was Isis in ancient Egypt.

The rays on her head represent the rays of the sun and the torch represents “bringing the light.” The Statue of Liberty is in fact the image of Nimrod’s wife(Semiramis). The wife of Nimrod was also his mother. This is why so many cults have worshipped this god hero, because it not only represents fertility and the sun, but also incest.


Semiramis was also known as the sun god Halo. She faces due east towards the rising son. As mentioned before, her most famous names are Frigga, Juno, Ishtar, Inanna, Vanus, and Isis.

The Europeans still honor her with the name Frigga’s Day, hence Fri-day. The 6th day of the week since the Tower of Babel in all tribes has honored her. Her planet is Venus. To enter America you must pass under her feet.

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