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Known as a creational ancestral All Mother and Sky Heroine in the Dreaming of many Aboriginal Australian Tribes including the Darkinjung, Eora, Kamilaroi, and Wiradjuri, Birrahgnooloo came to the Land from the Sky to help create forests, mountains, and rivers. Birrahgnooloo was a fertility goddess. She was also a Shamanic shapeshifter who often appeared as an Emu. Aboriginal women when necessary respectfully asked her to send floods to renew the landscape. How she was depicted on rock paintings in women's bora is sacred knowledge not shared with the public. Birrahgnooloo along with her soulmate husband Baiame gave the Aboriginals their cultural values, laws of life, songs, and traditions. She also originated the first bora site where girls underwent the ritual initiation to become women.
Men did not go to
Birrahgnooloo bora, speak her name in public, or view rock carving depictions of
Birrahgnooloo. Instead, they were taught men's initiation rites by
Baiame at Baiame bora.
The Sacred Site focal point of Hierarch Birrahgnooloo and the Seventh Ray of Mythos Transformation is Josephine Falls, which is located at the foot of the southern face of Mount Bartle Frere in Wooroonooran National Park in Australia. About 1,367 kilometers northwest of Brisbane between Innisfail and Cairns, Wooroonooran National Park is a World Heritage Site Wet Tropics Area. Josephine Falls are accessed from a sealed road off of the Bruce Highway between Innisfail and Babinda. The waters of the falls flows picturesquely over the face of a large rock.
Hierarch Birrahgnooloo shares this Sacred Site focal point with her soulmate
husband Hierarch Baiame, also a Hierarch of the Seventh Ray of Mythos
Transformation...
Hierarchs Goddesses Gods of Twelve Universal Rays
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