>>20135575Diana/Artemis was associated, together the goddess Persephone/Proserpina and Selene/Luna, with Hecate, the Greek goddess of Witchcraft. Although known as a Greek Titaness, she may have originated as the Anatolian sun-goddess of the underworld, named Arinna, who mediated interactions between the upper and lower worlds. In Greek myth, Hecate is a titan goddess who did not have to relinquish her powers on earth, sea, or in heaven when the Titans fell, but Zeus honored her above all. To whatever righteous person calls on her, Hecate can give prosperity and power: kings in the law-court, on the battlefield, shepherds, sailors, and athletes.
During the New Moon, devotees will leave offerings of food outside their homes for Hecate and her legion of spirits and the dead, in gratitude and for protection and blessings. This offering meal is called the Deipnon, and has earlier origins in the Hurro-Hittite Purification Ritual for the Former Gods. CTH 446 calls on the Sun-goddess of the Earth to open up the gates of the underworld and send up the Former Gods to free a household of sin, curses, forsworn oaths, strife, and bloodshed, offering them a meal of blood, bread, and other foodstuffs.
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/255852651_Hecate_An_Anatolian_Sun-Goddess_of_the_UnderworldIf you want to make a connection with the Jews, Hecate is mentioned under the name of Enêpsigos in the apocryphal Testament of Solomon, the first historical Goetic text attributed to King Solomon of Israel.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enêpsigos