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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 />

pyramid, were the objects I had come all this way to see: several dozen<br />

engraved stelae depicting negroes and Caucasians ... equal in life ...<br />

equal in death.<br />

If a great civilization had indeed been lost to history, and if these<br />

sculptures told part of its story, the message conveyed was one of racial<br />

equality. No one who has seen the pride, or felt the charisma, of the great<br />

negro heads from La Venta could seriously imagine that the original<br />

subjects of these magisterial sculptures could have been slaves. Neither<br />

did the lean-faced, bearded men look as if they would have bent their<br />

knees to anyone. They, too, had an aristocratic demeanour.<br />

At Monte Alban, however, there seemed to be carved in stone a record<br />

of the downfall of these masterful men. It did not look as if this could<br />

have been the work of the same people who made the La Venta<br />

sculptures. The standard of craftsmanship was far too low for that. But<br />

what was certain—whoever they were, and however inferior their work—<br />

was that these artists had attempted to portray the same negroid<br />

subjects and the same goatee-bearded Caucasians as I had seen at La<br />

Venta. There the sculptures had reflected strength, power and vitality.<br />

Here at Monte Alban the remarkable strangers were corpses. All were<br />

naked, most were castrated, some were curled up in foetal positions as<br />

though to avoid showers of blows, others lay sprawled slackly.<br />

Archaeologists said the sculptures showed ‘the corpses of prisoners<br />

captured in battle’. 33<br />

What prisoners? From where?<br />

The location, after all, was Central America, the New World, thousands<br />

of years before Columbus, so wasn’t it odd that these images of<br />

battlefield casualties showed not a single native American but only and<br />

exclusively Old World racial types?<br />

For some reason, orthodox academics did not find this puzzling, even<br />

though, by their reckoning, the carvings were extremely old (dating to<br />

somewhere between 1000 and 600 BC 34 ). As at other sites, this time-frame<br />

had been derived from tests on associated organic matter, not on the<br />

carvings themselves, which were incised on granite stele and therefore<br />

hard to date objectively.<br />

Legacy<br />

An as yet undeciphered but fully elaborated hieroglyphic script had been<br />

found at Monte Alban, 35 much of it carved on to the same stele as the<br />

crude Caucasian and negro figures. Experts accepted that it was ‘the<br />

33 The Cities of Ancient Mexico, p. 53.<br />

34 The Ancient Kingdoms of Mexico, p. 53; Mexico, p. 671.<br />

35 The Ancient Kingdoms of Mexico, pp. 53-4; The Cities of Ancient Mexico, p. 50.<br />

149

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