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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 />

Indescribable cold, fire, earthquakes and derangement of<br />

the skies<br />

The Avestic Aryans of Iran, who are known to have migrated to western<br />

Asia from some other, distant homeland, 7 are not the only possessors of<br />

archaic traditions which echo the basic setting of the great flood in ways<br />

unlikely to be coincidental. Indeed, though these are most commonly<br />

associated with the deluge, the familiar themes of the divine warning,<br />

and of the salvation of a remnant of mankind from a universal disaster,<br />

are also found in many different parts of the world in connection with the<br />

sudden onset of glacial conditions.<br />

In South America, for example, Toba Indians of the Gran Chaco region<br />

that sprawls across the modern borders of Paraguay, Argentina and Chile,<br />

still repeat an ancient myth concerning the advent of what they call ‘the<br />

Great Cold’. Forewarning comes from a semi-divine hero figure named<br />

Asin:<br />

Asin told a man to gather as much wood as he could and to cover his hut with a<br />

thick layer of thatch, because a time of great cold was coming. As soon as the hut<br />

had been prepared Asin and the man shut themselves inside and waited. When the<br />

great cold set in, shivering people arrived to beg a firebrand from them. Asin was<br />

hard and gave embers only to those who had been his friends. The people were<br />

freezing, and they cried the whole night. At midnight they were all dead, young<br />

and old, men and women ... this period of ice and sleet lasted for a long time and<br />

all the fires were put out. Frost was as thick as leather. 8<br />

As in the Avestic traditions it seems that the great cold was accompanied<br />

by great darkness. In the words of one Toba elder, these afflictions were<br />

sent ‘because when the earth is full of people it has to change. The<br />

population has to be thinned out to save the world ... In the case of the<br />

long darkness the sun simply disappeared and the people starved. As<br />

they ran out of food, they began eating their children. Eventually they all<br />

died ... 9<br />

The Mayan Popol Vuh associates the flood, with ‘much hail, black rain<br />

and mist, and indescribable cold’. 10 It also says that this was a period<br />

when ‘it was cloudy and twilight all over the world ... the faces of the sun<br />

and the moon were covered.’ 11 Other Maya sources confirm that these<br />

strange and terrible phenomena were experienced by mankind, ‘in the<br />

time of the ancients. The earth darkened ... It happened that the sun was<br />

still bright and clear. Then, at midday, it got dark ... 12 Sunlight did not<br />

return till the twenty-sixth year after the flood.’ 13<br />

7<br />

The Arctic Home in the Vedas, p. 390ff.<br />

8<br />

The Mythology of South America, pp. 143-4<br />

9<br />

Ibid., p. 144.<br />

10<br />

Popol Vuh, p. 178.<br />

11<br />

Ibid., p. 93.<br />

12<br />

The Mythology of Mexico and Central America, p. 41.<br />

13<br />

Maya History and Religion, p. 333.<br />

199

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