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== The Legend of the Two Brothers: Worthiness and Morality == ''Raphèl maí amèche zabí almi'' - King Nimrod, founder of the Tower of Babel, forced to repeat these meaningless words in Hell forever. Giant history has many parallels to ancient Jewish, Egyptian, Babylonian, Mesopotamian and Hindu religious parables, but it is one myth that all giants hold true to their hearts: The Legend of the Two Brothers. No one remembers their true names, though Giants justify them as being either Cain and Abel or Set and Osiris due to the proximity of their tales to the Giants myth. In the days before man, demigods roamed the earth, men of strange form and power, living apocryphal lives and performing esoteric duties. These were the ages where the God of Judgement saw these wandering creatures and decided to gift them law. Over generations, the gods would become more and more stable in their forms, until they where what the God of Judgement deemed worthy. It was there that two brothers came to be. Both were strong and wise, though one had a darkness in his heart. When they were called forward to be blessed, the God of Judgement deemed one brother Worthy of inheriting the earth, and the other Unworthy, for he was wicked. The Unworthy Brother then slain the Worthy Brother, and was indeed denied by the Earth, where he was forced to wander forever. In the story of Cain and Abel, God granted Eve another son, Seth, as a replacement for Cain, who would sire the children meant for the farmer, whereas Cain would travel the world until, as writting in the Zohar, he found the Demon Lilith who would be his wife, starting a family of cursed blood. Similarly, when Set killed Osiris to take his throne in the Egyptian, Isis found Osiris' body and resurrected it, if only to impregnate her with a son. Both tales shared the lineage of the Worthy and the Unworthy Brothers passed on. Naturally, over the millenia upon millenia, humanity would expand and intermingle, though their blood would always remain a part of the Sinner and Martyr. Giants, being a culmination of the balance between blood, therefore walk a fine line between being seen as Worthy and being deemed Unworthy. This judgement ultimately hinges on their morality and their ability to act with reverence towards their Totem; Though they may not believe in salvation, their totem will always be there to guide them.
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