Lilith “Male and female he created them,” proclaims Genesis in its first
version of humanity’s
creation. But the Bible later changes its mind, explaining
the creation of woman as Jehovah’s afterthought. Jewish tradition outside the
Bible understood the disparity: there was a female created simultaneously with
Adam, and her name was Lilith. (There were variants: she was created before him;
or after him, from the slime of the earth; or much later, as the twin of the
evil Samael.) When the first man suggested intercourse to the primal female, she
enthusiastically agreed. Adam then instructed Lilith to lie down beneath him.
Insulted, she refused, pointing out that they had been created equally and
should mate so.
Lilith then went to Jehovah and tricked him into revealing his secret name, his
name of power. (See Isis for a similar tale.) Once she had power over him,
Lilith demanded that Jehovah give her wings; she then flew from Eden to the
western deserts. There she happily had orgies with elemental spirits and sand
demons, producing demon children by the score. (Here, too, there were variants
of the story: perhaps Lilith was banished from Paradise; perhaps she was born
with wings; maybe she flew off to the Land of Nod. Again, some say that Jehovah
cursed her with sterility.)
Adam was provided with a new mate, but he and Eve fell from Jehovah’s favor. As
penance for his sin, Adam vowed to avoid the pleasures of marriage for a
century. Then Lilith had her revenge. Each night she came to Adam and had
intercourse with him (in her preferred positions, one assumes), capturing his
emissions to form little demon babies. One of these, some say, was Samael the
evil prince, whom Lilith then took as her playmate and companion.
You would think her beautiful, Lilith of the luxurious hair and the arching
wings – until you saw the talons she had instead of feet. Her unearthly beauty
was dangerous to young men, who lusted after her and pined away, never aroused
by mortal women. Lilith threatened children as well, for she had power over all
infants in their first week, all babies on the first of the month and on Sabbath
evenings, and all children born of unmarried people. Mothers could protect their
young, however, by hanging an amulet marked “Sen Sam San” – for the protective
angels Sensenoi, Samangalaph, and Sanoi – around the child’s neck.
When Lilith came to steal a child, it was usually at night, when the babe was
tucked in crib or cradle. Because she liked her victims smiling, she tickled the
infant’s feet. It giggled; thereupon Lilith strangled it. Mothers hearing their
children laughing in dreams, or noticing them smiling as they slept, hit the
baby’s nose three times, crying out, “Away Lilith, you have no place here.”
Mothers were also wary of kites, pelicans, owls, jackals, wildcats, and wolves,
all disguises favored by Lilith, who went as well by 40 other names and
represented a terrifying power that the Sumerians called Lamasthu, the Greeks
Lamia, and other people ‘Gilou, Kishimogin, or Baba Yaga. See Agrat Bat Mahalat,
Eve, Mehitabel, and Naamah.
From the book 'Goddesses and Heroines' by Patricia Monaghan