Gilgamesh and Enkidu: The Book Where Humanity Wept for the First Time
Long before prophets and philosophies spoke of the soul, two friends walked the earth seeking its meaning. Gilgamesh and Enkidu is not merely an ancient tale - it is the moment when humanity discovered the pain of loss and the beauty of remembrance.
In this lyrical and philosophical retelling, Imad A. Daboul revisits the world's oldest epic as a mirror of the first awakening of human consciousness. Through the friendship of the wild man and the king, the book explores the birth of compassion, the mystery of mortality, and the eternal question that still echoes in our time: Why must we die if we can love?
Blending myth, mysticism, and metaphysics, Daboul reveals Gilgamesh not as a relic of Mesopotamian legend, but as a timeless meditation on the divine spark within every human being. This is the book where man first wept - and in that tear, found the beginning of his soul.
A must-read for lovers of Joseph Campbell, Carl Jung, Rumi, and Ibn Arabi, this work invites the reader to rediscover the first epic as a universal reflection on consciousness, friendship, and the longing for eternity.
Related Subjects
Philosophy