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Author L.A. Panchuk Discovers
More Than the Mayan Calendar:
End of the World Date, or Something Else?
Saint Augustine, Florida (PRWEB)
September 23, 2007 -- In exploring the areas of
Mexico, Belize and Guatemala in 2006 and 2007,
author L.A. Panchuk toured and documented the
local Mayan folklore stories of old and recorded
the great question of their Calendar and its meanings.
What he discovered shocked him and created a document
that he says now points to several different possibilities
to the meaning of the Mayan Calendar.
Explorer and author of the novel titled The Devil's
Magnet, L.A. Panchuk begins his report on the
findings from his travels across Central America
and the Maya stories involved in the great Calendar
which is set to end on Dec. 21. 2012 and thus
it is said to be the end of the world.
To explore this region Panchuk set out a number
of questions to each Maya he met with, he documented
the various stories handed down generation to
generation to explore all the Maya and their folklore
stories. In the end Mr. Panchuk would cover the
calendar and the questions surrounding its mysteries
by gaining a full insight into this rich history
for a race that arrived at a date that we are
now on a collision course.
Panchuk quickly points out that the rumors about
the calendar and its meanings have various endings
depending on which old story handed down you like
to run with. His favorite was a large lightening
bolt that is set to hit on the night in question.
"The lightening," Panchuk admits, "was
not in my original plans to build a mainstream
feeling about this great race and came on a story
that shocked me." Mr. Panchuk further reports
he came up on a story about a large hair man like
creature in the Maya folklore that was indeed
another Big Foot story. Among the many stories,
Larry Panchuk points to the calendar and its faithful
day towards a change, or is it the end of the
world. "Even we don't really know,"
he reports, "if they knew, or did they know"
something more than what our scientists know today,
but certainly the alignment of the planets on
this night gives it an extra credibility that
makes you think twice about what is intended to
happen.
"I sat down with tour guides, average Maya
people, elders of the Maya and all gave me their
'grandfather's story'. As I documented their belief
and stories I would drop the question about the
calendar on them, once they seemed comfortable
in our discussions about old Maya folklore, it
was always interesting to hear everything they
had to tell me. What I got was something else,
in one such case I was told about the ruins that
we have never discovered. Apparently the Maya
are to this day still keeping secrets from the
general public about their great history in Central
America. I was informed that some ruins may have
been buried by the Maya people themselves to preserve
their temples until their gods returned from the
stars. In another issue, a Mayan informed me that
the real temple where the great lightening bolt
will hit on Dec. 21, 2012 has not been discovered
and most Maya do not know its location."
So many stories were documented, Mr. Panchuk says
he's still working on them and trying to deal
with the complicated question -- What is the truth
about this date?
L.A. Panchuk is set to visit more areas in the
future to continue to unearth the folklore, the
ruin sites and the greatness that set the Mayans
into the history of Central America. |