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Many gather to ponder end of Maya days
The calendar of the ancient civilization
ends Dec. 21, 2012.
By Louis Sahagun
Source: http://www.latimes.com
Reporting from San Francisco -- Hundreds of people
gathered near the Golden Gate Bridge over the
weekend to ponder the enigmatic date of Dec. 21,
2012, the last day of the ancient Maya calendar
and the focus of many end-of-the-world predictions.
In these times of economic distress, participants
shelled out $300 each to attend the sold-out 2012
Conference, where astrologers, UFO fans, shamans
and New Age entrepreneurs of every stripe presented
their dreams and dreads in two days of lectures,
group meditations, documentaries and, of course,
self-promotion.
Normally, New Age platforms attract the interest
of only the narrowest group of enthusiasts. But
this one has been generating wider audiences because
it so forcefully underscores the turmoil of the
times, as indicated by the stock market plunge,
Iran's nuclear ambitions, the Sept. 11 attacks,
global warming and the possibility of a magnetic
pole shift and stronger sunspot cycles.
To some, the end of the Maya Long Calendar's
roughly 5,000-year cycle portends calamity, or
the birth of a new age, or both.
The conference's slogan: "Shift happens."
The gathering of about 300 people from as far
away as Holland was launched with the blessings
of a Guatemalan shaman and the scary predictions
of Jay Weidner, whose firm, Sacred Mysteries,
has sponsored four 2012 events in the last six
months.
"The greatest crisis in human history is
unfolding all around us. It's not the end of this
world, but it's the end of this age," he
likes to say. "To survive the 21st century,
we're going to have to become a sustainable world
-- people should want to know how to pound a nail,
milk a cow and grow their own food."
Now, a gold rush of "2012ology" is
underway. A similar conference in Hollywood this
year drew an audience of more than 1,000. At least
two gatherings are planned for the Los Angeles
area in the spring. "A Complete Idiot's Guide
to 2012" was published last month, adding
to a burgeoning market of books, CDs and History
Channel specials suggesting that the ancient Maya
predicted the impending end of the world as we
know it.
Director Michael Bay is set to make a movie titled
"2012," based on a novel about multiple
earths in parallel universes slated for destruction.
Stewart Guthrie, professor emeritus of anthropology
at Fordham University, was not surprised by the
growing interest in newfangled notions about what
those Maya time keepers might have had in mind
as far back as AD 200.
"When events leave us feeling powerless
and confused, we are more open to new claims about
the disorders of the world," he said. "If
people persuade enough others to accept their
answers to this crazy world, it can become a movement,
for better or worse."
For example, the Gulf War and the Oklahoma City
bombing boosted the popularity of doomsday predictions
of famine, earthquakes and social tumult. Some
were cobbled from the spooky riddles and images
in the Bible's book of Revelation, which scholars
believe was actually written to help early Christians
cope with their Roman oppressors.
In 1973, when the appearance of Comet Kohoutek
coincided with a decision by members of the Organization
of Petroleum Exporting Countries to announce an
oil embargo, the big question was whether the
chunk of dirty ice hurtling through space would
be the most spectacular celestial sight of the
century, or wreak social unrest, tidal waves and
earthquakes as claimed by some members of the
New Age crowd. As it turned out, Kohoutek fizzled
and shot past Earth without incident.
Then there was the worldwide turn-of-the-century
panic in the late 1990s that had corporations
spending millions on computer fixes, and people
around the world stocking up on Spam, water, batteries
and energy bars.
The scene at the 2012 Conference here had the
same giddy sense of urgency. Conference co-organizer
Sharron Rose said the Maya timeline foretold "the
most profound event in human history. Everything
we know, everything we are, is about to undergo
a substantial and radical alteration."
Exactly which direction to take, however, was
unclear. The group is strikingly splintered, each
focused on his or her own New Age theories: Spiritual
teacher Jose Arguelles, for instance, contends
that the Maya were prescient space aliens. And
author Daniel Pinchbeck describes 2012 as a time
for "the return of the Quetzalcoatl,"
the mythical feathered serpent of Mesoamerica.
Maya researcher John Major Jenkins drew enthusiastic
applause from the crowd with a lecture in which
he said that Maya hieroglyphics are rife with
images of trees and animals that represent the
center of the Milky Way galaxy and what he called
"the Black Hole of Maya Creation mythology."
That kind of talk irritates Boston University's
William Saturno, a leading authority on the Maya,
who did not attend the conference. Saturno dismissed
the 2012 movement as "this year's Nostradamus."
The ancient Maya civilization flourished in southern
Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras, and
lasted nearly 2,000 years from before the time
of Jesus until the Spanish conquest in the 16th
century. The culture's achievements included soaring
pyramids, a highly accurate calendar and intricately
carved stone monuments.
"I had a guy come into my office once to
ask me a question about a specific Maya mural
with a depiction of a hanging nest in it,"
he recalled. "He claimed it was the exact
form of a Maya Black Hole. I said, 'Nah, I'm thinking
it's a bird nest.' "
"These guys are loony and are making a buck
in a market that has to be short-lived,"
he added. "And they will continue to do so
right up until Dec. 21, 2012, when the Maya calendar
simply switches over like an odometer and everything
is fine."
David Stuart, an art historian and Maya glyph
expert at the University of Texas at Austin, agreed.
He didn't attend the San Francisco event.
"Looking back to the ancient Maya for answers
to modern problems," he said, "is not
the best use of our time or brain cells."
But astrological consultant Rick Levine, president
and chief wizard of StarIQ.com, said such critics
missed the point.
"People come to an event like this because
they are hungry for information," he said.
"You don't need to be a New Ager to know
there's a lot of weird things going on in the
world."
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