Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Video of our June 2011 ceremony in Q'umark'aj

Pilgrimage to the Land of the 2012 Volcano TAJUMULCO



Greetings My Relatives







It is with the greatest of humility that I am called upon to report on the succesful completion of the long-awaited sacred tour that Antonio and I have been planning for over a year now. A total of 21 participants from the United States and Poland joined Antonio's father Don Telesforo and I, and a group of some of the most traditional Maya spiritual guides of Guatemala on a journey among the holy ancestral sites of the highland Maya people in that country.



Our tour was organized jointly by us at the MAYA TAINO PROPHECY INITIATIVE (a program of the Caney Indigenous Spiritual Circle) and by the archeologist and epigrapher Dr Edwin Barnhart of MAYA EXPLORATION CENTER.
This tour is featured as an official archeology course through the CHATAQUA AHAU TRAVEL short course program.












We began our trek with a traditional fire ceremony at the main altar of the ancient city of Iximche, capital of the Kaqchikel Mayas. The ceremony was led by elder Tata Chus Ixim Toj, of Kaqchilel ancestry.
















I was given the honor of helping Tata Chus with the preparations of the ceremony.



























We were surrounded by the imposing ruins of the site.














































Tata Chus guided us through the fundamental elements of the ceremony teaching the participants many things that are important to know to fully appreciate the ancient sacred calendar culture that is at the basis of this life-path.




Later during the journey we travelled to the remains of the ancient capital city of the K'iche Maya people, a place called Q'umarkaj, near Santa Cruz Del Quiche, and participated in a grand ceremony there at the temple of Tojil led by our own spiritual guide, the K'iche Maya aj k'ij, Don Filiberto Perez of the Wukub Noj ceremonial center project, one of the two projects in Guatemala that we at MAYA TAINO PROPHECY INITIATIVE support. Don Filiberto was accompanied by his wife the elder Do~a Santos Lucinda, also by Don Telesforo Itzep, the father of my collaborator in the U.S. Antonio Aj Ik. We were also joined by Tata Chus Ixim Noj and Tata Jose Soc of the UNIFICACION MAYA community.

We were guided through one of the most powerful ceremonies I have had the honor of participating in ever.




























All of our participant guests were struck by the sweet serenity of the elder's prayers and by the intensity of the experience.








We were delighted by the fact that we were joined at the ceremony by Antonio's wife and three children, all of whom still live in his tiny village of Xix in the municipality of Chajul.









The ceremony concluded with prayers in behalf of Mother Earth and for all of her children during this the great era of transition just befor the end of this cycle of the Maya Calendar 2012.

































Later on we scheduled a conference guided by myself and Dr Barhart during which the elders were honored and where they had an opportunity to share their teachings with the rest of us.


















During the following days we travelled to other ceremonial sites where we were again led in solemn traditional ritual. These places included the K'iche Maya town of Momostenango and the imposing temple pyramid complex of Saculeu in the land of the Mam Mayas where Tajumulco volcano towers above the Heuheutenango landscape. It was this giant peak in the land of the Mam Mayas that was used by ancient Indigenous calendar elders over 2000 years ago to calculate the galactic alignment phenomenon that marks the 2012 prophecy.








In behalf of Antonio and myself and of the MAYA TAINO PROPHECY INITIATIVE, also in behalf of the CANEY INDIGENOUS SPIRITUAL CIRCLE which is the sponsoring organization of this initiative, I want to express my most sincere gratitude to the elders and teachers of the Guatemalan Maya community, to Dr Barnhart of MEC, to the wonderful group of participants from outside Guatemala who travelled so far to participate in this great experience, and most of all to the Divine Being who guides us all, HEART OF THE HEAVEN and HEART OF THE EARTH.
Taino Ti and In Lakesh
Miguel Sobaoko Koromo Sague

Friday, April 8, 2011


Spiritually awakened Indy Film makers from Virginia Beach visited Antonio and I here at the Pittsburgh Indian Center in April of 2011and interviewed us concerning the topic of Maya prophecy in connection with their upcoming movie WHITE BUFFALO: AN AMERICAN PROPHECY. Then afterwards they visited our own local white buffaloes of Southwestern PA. It was a great visit.

Antonio offered a prayer and fire ceremony to honor the holy Maya day sign of our meeting date and ask the Heart of Heaven and the Heart of the Earth to make of this film an effective vehicle for teaching.


Please explore their facebook page and their website.
Taino Ti
Miguel
Please explore their fnd their website.
Taino Ti
Miguel

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Takaji My Relatives

As part of my preparations for the upcoming pilgrimage to the sacred sites of the Mayas in Guatemala this coming June I travelled to the traditional highlands of that country in March of 2011 to confer with the elders who will be guiding us on this powerful nine-day experience.



This is a land where most of the women still wear their traditional hand-woven "corte" skirts, each one colorfully and graphically announcing the town in which she lives.







Ixil Maya women in their traditional hand-woven colorful maroon "corte" skirts and gorgeous embroidered "huipil" blouses stroll naturaly all over the streets of Nebaj, the tiny vilage where I stayed while on my mission to meet with the elders.



While at the outdoor market we ran into the wife and young son of Antonio Aj Ik, the man with whom I have been working and teaching for almost three years all over the eastern U.S. sharing the truth of his people's prophetic tradition.




You can tell that Antonio's wife is not an Ixil but rather a K'iche Maya because she does not wear the traditional maroon Ixil "corte" skirt. Her corte is blue and bears a different woven pattern. The Ixils and the K'iche speak different Maya languages and although these languages are not mutually intelligible the people go through the trouble of learning each other's tongue and now live in peace side by side in this small mountain community.



The men typically have abandoned the traditional native dress and as can be seen in the case of Antonio's young brother and his father seen here at the market where we ran into Antonio's wife. They wear typical western European and U.S. clothes, T-shits, sweat-shirts and jeans.



However the tradition is so strong here that from time to time one runs into an older man who is still wearing his traditional outfit. This old man was selling ceremonial candles at the steps of the local Catholic church in the main square of the town of Nebaj. I bough some of his candles in preparation for the ceremony I expected to participate in later during my visit. I also bought the local copal incense.



Notice the old woman in the background who has just finished doing special prayers in the church and is walking out barefoot.



The Highland Maya combine Catholic religion with ancient millenarian Indigenous tradition that dates back from the time before Jesus was born.

I held my meeting with the elders Don Telesforo, who is Antonio's father, Don Filiberto who is presently in the process of organizing and constructing a sacred ceremonial and teaching center in his town nearby, Don Francisco, Dona Santos and Dona Ana, We gathered at the town square and conferred for several hours in the modest outdoor patio of my hotel. Then we ate brunch at a nearby eatery.

After my meeting with the elders, Don Telesforo guided me to key people and organizations in the town who could help me with our plans of marketing traditional Guatemalan handcrafted artwork in the USA to raise funds for Don Filiberto's project and for our assistance of the IX Canaan women's organization in Ramate, in the Peten jungle.



One of these people was the weaver Dona Rosa whom we met at the local Nebaj crafts center.








I made plans with Dona Rosa to market her weavings and the weavings of other women in the area through the Caney Indigenous Circle.



After my visit to the highlands I journied deep into the lowland rainforest of the Peten in the north, not far from the site of the most spectacular ancient classic-era Maya sacred ancestral sites.

I arrived in Ramate on the shores of Lake Peten Itza and met with the women of Ix Canaan who devote themselves to creating beautiful hand-crafted wooden carvings. I delivered power tools which I had brought in behalf of the Caney Indigenous Circle as the first installment in what I hope will be an on-going project of assistance of these artists with art supplies of all kinds. They had a lot of fun trying out the unfamiliar Dremmel tool, which when they are able to master, will make their work a great deal easier.



I also gave them an electric handsaw and watercolor paints. As part of my gift I created an instructional video that provides them detailed instructions on the use and care of the tools as well as several manuals in Spanish. In this photo the ladies watch the instruction video on my laptop computer.



Soon I hope to be marketing beautifully crafted wood carvings such as these, created by these women as well as other items such as basketry and small jewelry.







The last portion of my visit in the Peten was spent with a local Maya holy man, Tata Chus, who recognized my status of spiritual guide of my Taino people and took me on a special personal journey among the most powerful energy centers of the two nearby ancestral sacred sites, Tikal and Uaxactun.



We performed joint tobacco ceremony among the imposing temple pyramids and stelae of these two timeless energy centers.







Then in Uaxactun we culminated the journey with a small Maya fire ceremony using some of the candles and copal that I had acquired in Nebaj.









Tata Chus and I capped off our prayerful visit to Uaxactun by meditating as we faced the three sacred monuments of the so-called "Group-E" which are special archeo-astronomical guide points that allow for the calculations of Solstices and Equinoxes.

Taino Ti
Miguel

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Please click this LINK to access our events page and an opportunity to register for this unforgettable experience in the sacred heartland of Maya tradition and prophecy.