Monday, January 4, 2010

John Major Jenkin's Insight on the astronomy Behind The Maya Calendar End Date

As near as I can make out from the information that John Major Jenkins shared in his book Cosmogenesis 2012 the mechanics via which the now famous Winter Solstice galactic alignment manifests in the year 2012 work like this: The earth makes an orbital circuit around the sun approximately every 365 days. Because the earth's axis is tilted, at some times during that annual circuit the northern hemisphere where I live and also where the ancient Mesoamericans have always lived is inclined toward the sun and receives the sun's rays directly creating the summer season. However by the same token at other times of the circuit the northern hemisphere that I share with the Mesoamericans tilts away from the sun creating the Winter season. That's a constant. That never changes.

What does change is that the tilt of the earth's axis does not stay the same all the time. It changes very slowly marking a conical circuit that makes the earth look like its wobbling gradually. This wobble is circular, very much like the wobble of a spinning top but also so very, very slow that it takes the earth roughly 26000 years to complete one wobble. During that whole time the earh continues on its merry way spinning around the sun every 365 days but over the span of centuries its tilt in relation to the sun and in relation to everything else around it shifts gradually. This 26000-year phenomenon is called "Precession".

The earth lines up with the sun in such a way as to align with the Milky Way Galaxy once a year no matter what. But this alignment can take place at any given point and at any given season during its annual rotation around the sun depending on the way it happens to be tilted at a given time in its 26000-year precessionary cycle. At a period of history about two hundred years B.C. The alignment of the earth-sun-Galaxy did not take place during winter solstice. It took place at another time of the year. However, as Jenkins has demonstrated, the people living at that time in the ancient community of southern Mexico called Izapa (precursors of the classic era Maya) came to the conclusion that this state of affairs was not permanent and that eventually, some time in the distant future, the alignment would take place on the Winter Solstice. As Jenkins has suggested, this excited them because the Winter Solstice was a time that was seen as a kind of sacred beginning, a "birthing time. The bright, thick central bulge of the Milky Way Galaxy's core represented a metaphoric image of cosmic pregnancy to the early Mesoamericans. If the sun and the galactic plane close to the galactic core were to someday align
on Winter Solstice (especially if it happened near a unique dark structure called the "Dark Rift" located at that site which the ancients identified as a kind of dark birth canal) it would be considered a wonderful event literally pregnant with possibility for humanity. They understood that they themselves were not going to witness this marvelous event but they predicted it into the distant future, over two thousand years forward, and went to great pains to record the result of their astronomical research in the form of hieroglyphic inscriptions so that those who came after them would understand what they had discovered. These inscriptions are the ones Jenkins indicates in his books and videos as he walks us through the ruins of that ancient site.

They may not have fully understood the mechanics of the earth's tilt that made this astronomical possibility real but they did know how to use their advanced mathematics to figure out when this Winter Solstice alignment was going to take place, around the year 2012. according to Jenkins they got busy building an elaborate mythological complex around this fact and created the Long Count system to accurately measure how long it takes for this winter solstice sun-earth-galactic plane alignment to repeat. They came up with a cycle of a little under 26000 years divided into five smaller periods of almost 5200-years each, sometimes called the five "suns" or five "world ages". Western astronomers also arrived at a similar measurement of the roughly 26000-year-long precessionary cycle and called it the "Great Year".
I will include two graphic images that I created on the Windows utility "paint" to illustrate how the tilt of the earth changes over long periods of time and how that change affects Precession.

The first image below shows the earth at the point in its 26000-year wobble as it was around the time of the ancient Izapans. You will notice that during that era on the Winter Solstice location in its annual journey around the sun the earth and the sun are NOT lined up with the galactic plane.

The second image shows the point to which the earth's tilt has progressed as a result of two thousand years of precession, now around the year 2012. As you can see at this period of history the earth, the sun and the plane of the Milky Way Galaxy DO line up on the Winter Solstice during this present era just as Jenkins asserts that the ancient Izapans predicted.
Please click on the pictures to enlarge them and get a good detailed look at them.

PARALLELS IN MAYA AND TAINO HATCHET TRANSFORMATION DEITIES


The Ceremonial Taino petaloid hatchet and its relation to the Maya hatchet god Kawil
Miguel A Sague Machiran

Until recently the only meaning that I saw in the ceremonial
hatchets of the ancient Tainos was as a symbolic tool of Experience used by the deity of wisdom "Guakar", one of the means by which the ancient Tainos gained wisdom through harsh experience. The Taino word for ceremonial hatchet is "manaya". These so-called "petaloid celt" hatchets are very common and get their archeological name "petaloid" because the actual tear-like stone blade is shaped like a flower petal.
The petaloid hatchet blades have an interesting history in Cuba. On that island the Yoruba African people who were brought as
slaves by the Spanish, often found these stones in the fields as they
were working, and for reasons that until now seemed to elude me they
identified them with thunder-bolts, and associated them with their
Yoruba orisha-diety, Chango. In relation to this post I would like you to point out that as in the case of all of the other Regla De Osha orisha-deities, Chango has special colors which are unique to him. His colors are red and white. He is portrayed as wearing a red and white crown and carries a double-headed red and white hatchet in one hand.

Some time back I did a fairly thorough personal study of the Taino
hatchets in all of their manifestations. Most of my study was done with the help of the book by the Cuban archeologist Rene Herrera Fritot, titled Estudio De Las Hachas Antillanas. The many images of Taino hatches in the books that I was reading at the time gave me access to a very wide assortment of these objects and allowed me the opportunity to compare the many manifestations in which they were modelled.

As I mentioned earlier, most of these axes were created with a stone
blade, carefully ground and polished to the shape of a smooth petal-
shaped or tear-drop shaped celt. This blade was then fitted or hafted
into a wooden handle to create the traditional Taino hatchet. On rare
occasions a complete hatchet was fashioned out of one piece of stone,
carefully shaped and polished to look like the original objects which
in fact have a wooden handle. There seems to be a tendency for the Taino craftsman to sometimes replace the original material that was traditionally used to create a ritual object with another material. Sometimes wood is replaced with stone. In the case of the manaya the wooden handle is replaced by a stone one rendering an object that is totally made of stone.
I found one example of a beautifully crafted all-stone manaya in the
pages of one book. Curiously this particular piece had a
carefully and skillfully shaped human foot carved at the end of the
handle in place of the usual knob that you find there to keep the axe
handle from flying out of the user's hand in the midst of work. It
was as if the artist had an understanding of this object as being a
living deity, like a cemi, and provided it with a foot as all cemies
have. I have thought of this cemi hatchet a lot over the years. In
any case it is obvious that these hatchets were considered to have
spiritual significance because many of them have images of spirit
beings attached to them, mostly at the top, the "head" of the hatchet.


If you think of the hatchet as being a living sacred being, and you
image it as having parts of a body in the same way that a human being
has, then the bottom end of the handle (be it wooden or be it stone)
would be the foot (and it's obvious that the Taino ancestors saw that
part of the handle as a foot because of the example that I mentioned
before with the carving of the foot at the bottom end). The top end
would be the head and the petal-shaped blade would appear to be
piercing this "head". I mention all of these facts because they play
an important role in the more recent research that I have been doing
lately in the field of Maya symbology





It turns out that the Classic era Maya, according to Schelle and Frew
in their book Maya Cosmos worshipped a special deity now sometimes
identified as K'awil, who was imaged as a hatchet. He either had only
one leg (which in a way was imaged as the handle of the tool)or he
had two legs but one was a lot longer than the other (sometimes
ending in a snake head instead of a foot)and he appeared to be
spinning on his longer leg. This deity often was represented as
having the stone blade of a hatchet piercing his forehead and
oftentimes that blade was represented as a thunderbolt.

Remember that the Yoruba slaves in Cuba associated the Taino stone hatchet blades
that they found in the fields with thunderbolts of their orisha-deity
Chango. It is possible that the Tainos whom these Yorubas met when
they were brought to Cuba instructed them as to a relationship
between the hatchet and a Taino thunder spirit or storm spirit of
some kind. This could be the reason that the Yorubas associated the
stone axe-heads with Chango.

The Maya K'awil was a deity associated with transformation. He seems
to have been very strongly connected with the spiritual transition
that a leader underwent at the moment when he assumed the authority
of kingship. Oftentimes Classic Maya rulers would have themselves
represented on carvings with a K'awil axe-blade piercing their
forehead to symbolize a moment of deep personal transformation (for
example on the day when the king would assume the throne). Oftentimes
these stone celts sticking out of their foreheads would be shown
smoking to represent that these were not ordinary axe-heads, they
were fiery thunderbolt axe-heads.

The deity K'awil was represented as a human-like being but he was
also represented as a hand-held hatchet and as such the Maya drawings
of these hatchets look exactly like the Taino hatchets. It is
understood in the Maya symbology that the top of the hatchet is in
fact the head of K'awil pierced by the petal-shaped stone thunder-
bolt blade, while the bottom end is his one foot. Oftentimes the
images of these hatchets are decorated with glyph designs
called "cauak signs" These signs represent thunder. Nowadays the
modern manifestation of this spirit is a character in modern Quiche
Maya tradition called "Ah Itz" (loosely translated "Master of the
sacred substance") This character is personified by a man in special
regalia during traditional Mayan calendar ceremonies. His regalia
included red and white clothes, a red and white headress that looks very much like a crown and a red and white hatchet. His task during these ceremonies is to activate a special energy that the Quiches believe exists in their calendar day-keepers. This energy is referred to as "lightning in the blood". The Ah Itz
walk around the crowd during the ceremonies touching the holy day-
keepers and activating the lightning in their blood.

It is very probable that red and white were the colors already
associated with the thunder spirit Chango when the Yoruba came over
from Africa, but it is, in my opinion, possible also that these African immigrants associated the Taino stone hatchet with their spirit Chango because the Tainos told them that they also used the bright red achiote paint
called bija to represent thunder and transformation. It is possible
that they told the Africans that the hatchet was a spirit in itself,
a spirit of transformation related to the Maya K'awil. It is possible
that the Taino hatchet was a personified hatchet-shaped cemi, whose
forehead was pierced by a thunder-blade just like the Maya spirit K’awil.. Remember that there is now incontrovertible proof of physical cultural contact between the Tainos and the Mayas evidenced by the discovery of a Taino manatee-bone vomic spatula at the Maya site of Altun Ha in Belize by a Canadian archeological team.




The Maya worshipped a spirit that they called "Hun-Rakan" and
sometimes "Hurakan". For a long time I have attempted to discover
what relationship, if any, this spirit had with our own storm spirit
Hurakan.The fact that the Maya Hurakan also was associated with
spinning storms such as tornadoes and hurricanes seems to be strong
evidence that this spirit was shared in common by both the Tainos and
the Mayas and it would take further linguistic research to
figure out who had him first. I am inclined to suspect that the Mayas
acquired the belief in Hurakan from the Tainos.
The Mayas imaged the characteristics of Hurakan to be strongly associated
to those of K'awil. That is why they associated K'awil's gyrating
dance on his one foot with the turning, spiral of the tornado's lower
tip and with the spinning motion of the hurricane. So in a way the
Maya Hurakan was also seen as a spirit of transformation. There is also evidence that the spinning motion of the Big and Little Dipper constellations are likewise associated with the god Hun Rakan or Hurakan and the concept known as "Heart of Heaven". Is is important to note that research by John Major Jenkins indicates that the concept of "Heart of Heaven" may have historically shifted focus during the classic era from the Big/ Little Dipper constellation complex (which he associated to a spinning fire-drill cult) to the heart of the Milky Way Galaxy, but ancestral connections to the Dipper constellations and its star-spinning element may have persisted on some level in association to the veneration a deity who spins on one foot.

I believe that the Taino hatchet was more than just a sacred
ceremonial object or tool. I believe that it was perceived as a cemi,
a spirit of lightning and thunder in its own right just like the Maya
hatchet spirit K'awil. I believe that the ancient Tainos imaged this
spiritual being as a transforming character, who had the power to
take a person from one level of existance to another, changing that
person, transforming that person, perhaps in an evolutionary manner.

This is well in keeping with my belief that the manaya is the tool
of Guakar because I can not imagine a personal life-event more
transforming than a moment of experience involving the fundamental
concept of trial and error. I believe that Guakar with his manaya, was the spirit of Experience.

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

What Maya teacher Antonio Aj Ik has to say about the popular 2012 media messages - Indigenous Caribbean Network


What Maya teacher Antonio Aj Ik has to say about the popular 2012 media messages - Indigenous Caribbean Network: "Amid the shrill din of false theories filling up the airwaves concerning the Maya 2012 prophecies there are a few serene serious and genuine voices who persist in defying the money grubbing fear-mongers to promote a sane interpretation of the ancient message.
K'iche Maya Calendar 2012 prophecy teacher Antonio Aj Ik of Chahul, Guatemala has launched a series of workshops that totally debunk the apocalyptic myth-makers and present the truth about his ancestor's real predictions.
It is significant to note that from among the countless crowd of Doomsday-scenario spinmasters in the current popular media, Antonio has discovered an authentic researcher who is truly connected to the reality of ancient Maya tradition.

'I only see one person out there who is telling the truth about my people's prophecy', Antonio proclaims. 'His name is John Major Jenkins, and people should be listening to what he says'.

Featured in an August 14 2009 airing of a 2012 Mayan Calendar piece on Fox News, Jenkins stadfastly counters the typical apocalyptic 2012 'End-Times' trash spewed by hs co-guest, Robert Gleason. Gleason keeps up the now familiar litanny of 'Catastrophic End', While Jenkins counters that this is only popular scare-tactics, and that the true Maya message is that of a powerful transition of human consciousness and not any 'End-Of-The-World' scenario.

K'iche Maya teacher Antonio Aj Ik has confirmed Jenkin's message and has assured us that the changes we are experencing in this important time of transition are primarily changes in the human soul!
Check out the Fox News interview"

MAYAN CALENDAR WORKSHOP IN PITTSBURGH - Indigenous Caribbean Network


MAYAN CALENDAR WORKSHOP IN PITTSBURGH - Indigenous Caribbean Network: "Saturday, Sept 26, 2009 Maya Calendar teacher Antonio Aj Ik, K'iche Maya of Guatemala and I presented our 2012 Prophecy workshop at the Open Mind Bookstore in the Pittsburgh subburb of Sewickley, Pennsylvania. We want to thank Phil of the Open Mind for his courteous hosting of our presentation and all of the attendants who not only were concerned enough about this important message to show up at the gathering, but contributed their intelligent questions, coments and responses to the discussion."

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

ANTONIO AJ IK, Maya teacher and seer






Antonio Aj Ik (Born of the Wind) saw his first light of day in the traditional Maya mountain region of Guatemala during the 1970's on the Maya Calendar day "Ik", a day that alludes to the elemental qualities of the word "Wind". He grew up during the most brutal era in the history of his country, a time during which his people were ruthlessly persecuted and massacred all over the remote Indigenous areas, sending thousands of them into hiding in the cold forbidding forests of the highlands. Several of his siblings were killed durng these terrible times as his family struggled to survive without food or medical care for long periods of time in their efforts to avoid marauding government army units of murderous civilian militias.

From an early age he noticed that in the worst of times his father managed to maintain his bearings by continually immersing himself in the ancient tradition of his ancestors. Unlike most traditionalists, Antonio's father not only practiced the age-old "costumbres" which include the oracular calendar readings performed with the aid of sacred red t'zite seeds, but he also taught himself to read, and informed himself in regards to the written birthright of K'iche Maya folklore, a remarkable ancient text written in the native language of Antonio's people, called the "Popol Vuh". This extraordinary narrative dates back at least two thousand years in written form and several thousand more in spoken form. It is a complete exposition of Maya creation and philosophy, and forms the core theoretic element of the Maya concept of WORLD AGES, a concept which represents the interpretive basis for contemporary 2012 Time Shift theory.

Antonio saw this powerful spiritual survival mechanism, practiced by his father, the steadfast adherence to ancient Indigenous culture, bear fruit not only for his dad, but for many other Mayas accross his country. The people survived. The culture survived. In spite of some of the most ferocious assaults on ancient traditions in the history of Guatemala by foreign religious proselitizers, the spiritual culture survived. Although thousands were killed, many more survived and came back and ultimately thrived in spite of the government's best efforts at erradicating them.


Antonio believes that the reason he survived this terrible childhood ordeal was because he was meant to be one of the many genuine traditional Maya teachers that are now coming out of the crucible of the Guatemalan war and into a world that yearns to hear the truth about the much-touted end of the Maya Calendar, year 2012. With the assistance of Taino Indigenous spiritual teacher, Miguel Sobaoko Koromo Sague, a member of a Native nation that developed in the Caribbean region, closely neighboring the Maya homeland and in cultural contact with it, Antonio has dedicated himself to seeking individuals, groups, organizations and agencies who are willing to learn from the wisdom of the ancients, who are willing to open their eyes to the truth of what 2012 is really all about.



Antonio and his wife in their home town of Chajul,Guatemala.

Antonio's wife and daughter wear the trademark clothing of their village in a region of the world where people steadfastly cling to the Native customs.


Antonio works on the artwork which forms part of the hand-painted covers for his traditional fold-out, codex Mayan Calendar documents. He makes these available to participants during his workshops.



MAYA CALENDAR ALMANAC CODEX


Antonio is making this powerful tool available in an attempt to awaken us to the rhythms of his people's mystic calendar from the authentic pespective of the traditional Maya. This is done with express permission of his father, a traditional ajk'ij (calendar priest) who now lives in a region near the remote Cuchumatanes mountains of Guatemala.
Antonio has carefully prepared this document so as to make of it an unique introduction to the mysteries of the traditional oracular energies inherent in ancient Mayan time rekoning. It monitors a period of time that spans 360 days, just short of a solar year (365 days). This period of time was called a "tun" by Antonio's Classic-era ancestors. In the past it formed the fundamental basis for the emblematic cycle known as the OxLajuj Baktun, a stretch of time now often called a "World Age" or a "Sun" which forms one fifth of the mighty 26,000-year EVOLUTION OF CONSCIOUSNESS journey of humankind. Antonio shares with us that his ancestors prophesied our era to be an important moment of transition for the human race, a time during which humanity would gradually pass from one stage of consciousness and understanding into a whole new one. Each of the five Oxlajuj Baktun "World Age" periods constitutes a powerful rebirth of our vision as children of the Sun Spirit and therefore they assigned to each one of these 5200-year cycles the name "SUN". Knowing that we are now actually experiencing the end of the Fifth Sun, the last cycle in the series of five, Antonio has chosen to express this important teaching in the form of a fold-out codex book that closely mirrors the pattern and form of the ancient books used by the sages of his ancestral past.
This document includes the current 360-day cycle spanning the period of time between two key intances of the nagual "AHAU" (Junajpu). The text guides the reader through a simple, clear explanation of the meaning and interpretation behind each day's nagual (glyphic symbol and sacred name). It allows the reader to bring his or her own intuitive energies to bear in the process of delving into the oracular truth behind each day of human life.
The cover is beautifully illustrated with a hand-painted image meticulously created by Antonio himself.