Enki and the Architecture of Humanity: A Creator Who Loved His Design More Than His Children
I have spent years wandering through the old stories, the clay tablets, the whispered myths that survived fire, flood, and empire. The more I read, the more I realised that the gods of the ancient world were not distant halos of light. They were personalities. They had rivalries, loyalties, fears, and ambitions. And among them, one figure always stood apart: Enki, the god of wisdom, water, and invention. People like to call him the “friend of humanity,” but the deeper I went, the more I saw a different truth—one that is harder, sharper, and strangely more human. Enki was brilliant. Everyone agrees on that. He could solve problems no one else could. When the younger gods complained about their endless labour, it was Enki who proposed a new kind of being to take up the burden. He shaped the first humans with the same care an engineer gives to a delicate machine. He gave us intelligence, language, craft, and the ability to build cities from dust. But as I followed the stories, I noticed s...