Sabtu, 14 Mei 2011

There is a Mesoamerican


There is a Mesoamerican civilization known as the Maya that exists through-out southern Mexico and northern Central America.

According to these Mayans, the age in which we are currently living marks the end of a 500 year long cycle that they call the Trail of Tears.

This cycle began with the Spanish Conquest of the Americas in the sixteenth century and culminated in the destruction of several native civilizations. These included the Maya, as well as the Hopi, Laika and Inca tribes.

To the Spanish conquistadors and the Catholic Church of Rome, who considered their knowledge to be dangerous, the spiritual wisdom of these American medicine men and women was a threat. So, in the late 1500s, the Church established an Office for the Extirpation of Idolatries, the sole purpose of which was to eradicate traditional religious practices in North and South America.[i] As a result, the native shaman priests went into seclusion. Their entire civilization shifted into a higher dimension of consciousness – in mass.

In the year 1987, a succession of planetary alignments occurred, which brought in the energies of the Christ Consciousness. At that time, the cycle of the Trail of Tears came to a completion and a new cycle began, which they call the Harmonic Convergence. In celebration of the arrival of this new cycle, there was a gathering of the indigenous tribal elders, which was held at sacred locations all over the world.

The present-day Maya, as a whole, do not attach much significance to b'ak'tun 13. Although the Calendar Round is still used by some Maya groups in the Guatemalan Highlands, the Long Count was employed exclusively by the classic Maya, and was only rediscovered with the decipherment of the Mayan writing system in the 20th century. Mayan elder Apolinario Chile Pixtun and Mexican archaeologist Guillermo Bernal both note that "apocalypse" is a Western concept that has little or nothing to do with Mayan beliefs. Bernal believes that such ideas have been foisted on the Maya by Westerners because their own myths are "exhausted". Mayan archaeologist Jose Huchm has stated that "If I went to some Mayan-speaking communities and asked people what is going to happen in 2012, they wouldn't have any idea. That the world is going to end? They wouldn't believe you. We have real concerns these days, like rain".

It is not certain what significance the classic Maya give to the 13th b'ak'tun.Most classic Maya inscriptions are strictly historical and do not make any prophetic declarations. One item in the Mayan classical corpus, however, does mention the end of the 13th b'ak'tun: Tortuguero Monument

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.::BY JUMBHO-MY AT HOME IN THE JEPARA CITY OF BEAUTIFUL::.