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Know_files/FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS.pdf - D Ank Unlimited

Know_files/FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS.pdf - D Ank Unlimited

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Graham Hancock – <strong>FINGERPRINTS</strong> <strong>OF</strong> <strong>THE</strong> <strong>GODS</strong><br />

in a sacred sanctuary in the Mixtec capital Achiotlan? We know of this<br />

curious object through the writings of a sixteenth-century eyewitness,<br />

Father Burgoa:<br />

The material was of marvellous value, for it was an emerald of the size of a thick<br />

pepper-pod [capsicum], upon which a small bird was engraved with the greatest<br />

skill, and, with the same skill, a small serpent coiled ready to strike. The stone was<br />

so transparent that it shone from its interior with the brightness of a candle flame.<br />

It was a very old jewel, and there is no tradition extant concerning the origin of its<br />

veneration and worship. 7<br />

What might we learn if we could examine this ‘very old’ jewel today? And<br />

how old was it really? We shall never find out because Fr. Benito, the first<br />

missionary of Achiotlan, seized the stone from the Indians: ‘He had it<br />

ground up, although a Spaniard offered three thousand ducats for it,<br />

stirred the powder in water, poured it upon the earth and trod upon it ...’ 8<br />

Equally typical of the profligate squandering of the intellectual riches<br />

concealed in the Mexican past was the shared fate of two gifts given to<br />

Cortez by the Aztec emperor Montezuma. These were circular calendars,<br />

as big as cartwheels, one of solid silver, and the other of solid gold. Both<br />

were elaborately engraved with beautiful hieroglyphs which may have<br />

contained material of great interest. Cortez had them melted down for<br />

ingots on the spot. 9<br />

More systematically, all over Central America, vast repositories of<br />

knowledge accumulated since ancient times were painstakingly gathered,<br />

heaped up and burned by zealous friars. In July 1562, for example, in the<br />

main square of Mani (just south of modern Merida in Yucatan Province)<br />

Fr. Diego de Landa burned thousands of Maya codices, story paintings<br />

and hieroglyphs inscribed on rolled-up deer skins. He also destroyed<br />

countless ‘idols’ and ‘altars’, all of which he described as ‘works of the<br />

devil, designed by the evil one to delude the Indians and to prevent them<br />

from accepting Christianity ...’ 10 Elsewhere he elaborated on the same<br />

theme:<br />

We found great numbers of books [written in the characters of the Indians] but as<br />

they contained nothing but superstitions and falsehoods of the devil we burned<br />

them all, which the natives took most grievously, and which gave them great<br />

pain. 11<br />

Not only the ‘natives’ should have felt this pain but anyone and<br />

everyone—then and now—who would like to know the truth about the<br />

past.<br />

Many other ‘men of God’, some even more ruthlessly efficient than<br />

7<br />

The Magic and Mysteries of Mexico, pp. 228-9.<br />

8<br />

Ibid.<br />

9<br />

Mysteries of the Mexican Pyramids, p. 7.<br />

10<br />

Yucatan before and after the Conquest, p. 9. See also Mysteries of the Mexican<br />

Pyramids, p. 20.<br />

11<br />

Yucatan before and after the Conquest, p. 104.<br />

116

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