Dalida, Les hommes de ma vie – Analysis of the song's Freemasonic Hints & Meanings
Dalida was a Freemason; her signature published as a picture in the Wikipedia entry is quite telling in this regard! In the present song, she describes her tragic life experience as a Freemason.
In fact, her life was a series of tragic personal moments (an abortion left her infertile in 1967), an incredibly high number of suicide attempts, and an enormous professional success that occurred only after Dalida decided to enter the evil order; Dalida’s successes were therefore all due to Freemasonic support and propulsion.
Quite remarkably, from 1967 to 1987, before her own last and final suicide, no less than 4 (four) men who had a love affair with Dalida committed suicide: Luigi Tenco (when just 29!), Lucien Morisse, Mike Brant (when just 28!), Richard Chanfray! This fact alone makes of Dalida an entire category in the Guinness Book of Records.
The song speaks in fact of 'the men of her life' (les hommes de ma vie); these men were not necessarily those she encountered in her free time, but those she met regularly in Freemasonic lodges that she frequented in the course of ritualistic orgies similar to that portrayed in the movie ‘Eyes wide shut’. This is in fact the cornerstone of Freemasonry, and for this reason many religious authorities called the Freemasons as ‘Satan’s children’.
The verses make state of her first encounter with a Freemason who opened to her the gates of the Satanic organization; she met him in Cairo, her home city. As we know that the Freemasons falsely depict themselves as the sons of light, we understand the real meaning of the verse ‘’he drove me from the desert to the plain light’’ – which has no possible meaning out of Freemasonic context.
The verse about ‘his hand, as a help, is still pushing me on the scene’ has also a deep Freemasonic meaning, because the hand is the Freemasonic symbol of help.
And what does the following verse mean? ‘The ideal man, every time, it was him’!
This is a confession that when, in every Freemasonic orgy, Dalida was having sexual intercourse with numerous ‘brothers’, she always recalled her earlier experience with the first Freemason she had encountered in Cairo.
Another hint at the Freemasonic orgies that start at midnight and take an end before dawn: ‘You lighted the sun at midnight’! It refers to the beginning of the ritual.
At another point, the verses refer to the suicide of Luigi Tenco (l’ Italien), a key person in Dalida’s personal life, and a Freemason. Of course, Luigi Tenco was a bastard with enormous psychological complexes that turned only worse after his proselytization into an evil Freemasonic lodge.