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Mayan Nobel laureate to address the 2012 prophecies
in Boulder
By Laura Snider
Source: www.dailycamera.com
The movie "2012," released last year,
is an apocalyptic vision of the end of the world.
Fireballs rain down. Earth cracks open, swallowing
highways and houses. Skyscrapers crumble. A giant
waves crash over the high peaks of the Himalayas.
The
movie is based on the notion that the Mayan calendar
predicts the end of the world on Dec. 21, 2012.
The movie is just one of a number of doomsday
prophecies based on the end of the 13th baktun
(each baktun equals approximately 144,000 days)
on the Mayan calendar.
But these interpretations are based more in pop
culture than in reality, according to Rigoberta
Menchu Tum, a Mayan who was raised in the Guatemalan
highlands.
Menchu Tum, who won the Nobel Peace Prize in
1992 for her work promoting social justice for
indigenous people, will be in Boulder on Thursday
with two of her spiritual elders to discuss how
Mayan communities interpret the prophecies of
2012. The event is sponsored by PeaceJam, which
works to connect Nobel Peace Prize laureates with
youth.
"This is happening all over the place. It's
not just in Hollywood, it's also in academia,
and it's a very sad thing to see," Mechu
Tum said through an interpreter. "It's a
form of manipulation -- they're trying to make
people scared. And that's wrong because the Mayans
say the world will not end in 2012. It is the
beginning of a new era, and there will be new
hope."
Menchu Tum was also in the Denver area last November
to speak at PeaceJam's annual luncheon. The movie
"2012" had just been released and she
was peppered with questions about the Mayan calendar.
Menchu Tum answered what she could, but promised
she'd come back in 2010 with the experts -- two
of her own spiritual advisers, Don Pedro Yae Noj
and Dona Faviana Cochoy Alva.
"This year is the year for preparing the
light bearer -- this is the year they're supposed
to start helping people prepare for 2012,"
said PeaceJam co-founder Dawn Engle. "Two
years ago, they wouldn't have done this."
Thursday's event will offer opportunities for
people with different levels of understanding
about the Mayan calendar to break into separate
work groups.
"This is going to be extraordinary. It's
unprecedented," Engle said. "Never before
have people been able to sit and ask questions
directly to their Mayan elders and be directly
answered -- unfiltered, unedited, the direct real
deal."
For Menchu Tum, her experience with the Mayan
calendar is not an abstract study of her own culture
and history.
"The Mayan measurement of time is a great
gift. It's something that I -- and my people --
use every single day," Menchu Tum said. "We
consult the calendar to learn where the energy
is for the day. It's very complicated, but when
you know how to read the calendar, it really becomes
a guide to you. It shows each individual how to
live and balance and make the most of the day."
Even though Menchu Tum is adamant that the world
will not end, she does believe that whatever transition
is coming could be difficult.
"We're in a period as we approach 2012 when
things are dissolving because time is dissolving
and we are going to enter a new era when time
begins -- not just for Mayans but for all people,"
Menchu Tum said. "It's going to be a time
of change and maybe chaotic change. It depends
on us. It's up to humanity to decide how well
the transition goes." |