The Legend of Lilith
They say that Eve was created from Adam's rib, but they forgot Lilith. Because Lilith revolted against the god and the man, from the escaped paradise to hell.
According to the legend, there was Lilith before Eve. Simultaneously with Adam, he was created out of clay and clay, just like him. Lilith was a seductive woman who liked purple color, maverick, long wavy red hair, white skin, amber eyes.

As a blessing, God gave Adam and Lilith a corner from heaven. Adem and Lilith, who started living together, never got along. Because Adam asked him to be obedient and do what he said. Lilith said that they were equal, saying that we were created from the same earth as you.
And one day he left Lilith heaven and Adam. By saying the forbidden name of God, he fled from the paradise to the demons in the Red Sea and became a lover with the demon.
To Adam, who remained alone in Heaven, God created an obedient woman after Lilith’s disobedience. For this, he used Adam’s rib and Eve was born from the rib.
When Lilith heard what happened in the heaven, she felt great anger and jealousy. To take revenge, he went to heaven in disguise of his beloved demon and deceived Eve to make him eat the forbidden apple. Adam and Eve, who ate the forbidden apple, were now expelled from heaven as a mortal. But Lilith’s anger did not stop and began to haunt children whose children were descendants of Adam. God sent three angels to stop Lilith. The angels told her that if she did not come back, her children would be killed every day. Lilith never agreed to come back. Suffering with the killing of their children, Lilith started killing children from Adam and Eve in 8 days and boys in 20 days.

In Turkish mythology, Lilith’s killing of babies was called alkar or albasti. To protect against the devil, the Qur’an is placed next to the puerperant woman, and the puerperant wears a red ribbon.
Lilith’s name is mentioned in the epic of Gilgamesh, Kabbalah and Talmud. According to Jewish mysticism, Lilith calls the god the female devil who rebelled.
“If we take a brief look at the origin of the word Lilith,” lil “in Old Sumer, Mesopotamia, would mean storm and wind. This also means the word” lilitu “originating from Babylonian-Assyrian, which means female devil or ghost ghost. The word “laila”, of Hebrew and Arab origin, is used in the meaning of night and is etymologically associated with Lilith in traditional stories, and translated as “night ghost.” The Sumerian-Babylonian origin is derived from the word ‘lilıi’, meaning ‘lotus’, thus associating Lilith with the lotus goddesses of Egypt and India. According to Raphael Patai, ‘kali’ is also one of lilith’s nicknames. especially as a symbol of the female Yoni and rebirth as well as spiritual purity. “

Source:
Tamer Konca, Lilith: İlk Kadın İlk İsyan
