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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 />

way to Arabia and thence to India, where he established many cities.<br />

Moving on to Thrace he killed a barbarian king for refusing to adopt his<br />

system of government. This was out of character; in general, Osiris was<br />

remembered by the Egyptians for having<br />

forced no man to carry out his instructions, but by means of gentle persuasion<br />

and an appeal to their reason he succeeded in inducing them to practise what he<br />

preached. Many of his wise counsels were imparted to his listeners in hymns and<br />

songs, which were sung to the accompaniment of instruments of music.’ 30<br />

Once again the parallels with Quetzalcoatl and Viracocha are hard to<br />

avoid. During a time of darkness and chaos—quite possibly linked to a<br />

flood—a bearded god, or man, materializes in Egypt (or Bolivia, or<br />

Mexico). He is equipped with a wealth of practical and scientific skills, of<br />

the kind associated with mature and highly developed civilizations, which<br />

he uses unselfishly for the benefit of humanity. He is instinctively gentle<br />

but capable of great firmness when necessary. He is motivated by a<br />

strong sense of purpose and, after establishing his headquarters at<br />

Heliopolis (or Tiahuanaco, or Teotihuacan), he sets forth with a select<br />

band of companions to impose order and to reinstate the lost balance of<br />

the world. 31<br />

Leaving aside for the present the issue of whether we are dealing here<br />

with gods or men, with figments of the primitive imagination or with<br />

flesh-and-blood beings, the fact remains that the myths always speak of a<br />

company of civilizers: Viracocha has his ‘companions’, as have both<br />

Quetzalcoatl and Osiris. Sometimes there are fierce internal conflicts<br />

within these groups, and perhaps struggles for power: the battles<br />

between Seth and Horus, and between Tezcatlipoca and Quetzalcoatl are<br />

obvious examples. Moreover, whether the mythical events unfold in<br />

Central America, or in the Andes, or in Egypt, the upshot is also always<br />

pretty much the same: the civilizer is eventually plotted against and<br />

either driven out or killed.<br />

The myths say that Quetzalcoatl and Viracocha never came back<br />

(although, as we have seen, their return to the Americas was expected at<br />

the time of the Spanish conquest). Osiris, on the other hand, did come<br />

back. Although he was murdered by Set soon after the completion of his<br />

worldwide mission to make men ‘give up their savagery’, he won eternal<br />

life through his resurrection in the constellation of Orion as the allpowerful<br />

god of the dead. Thereafter, judging souls and providing an<br />

immortal example of responsible and benevolent kingship, he dominated<br />

the religion (and the culture) of Ancient Egypt for the entire span of its<br />

known history.<br />

30 Ibid., p. 2.<br />

31 Ibid., 2-11. For Quetzalcoatl and Viracocha see Parts II and III. Interestingly enough,<br />

Osiris was said to have been accompanied on his civilizing mission by two ‘openers of<br />

the way’: (Diodorus Siculus page 57), ‘Anubis and Macedo, Anubis wearing a dog’s skin<br />

and Macedo the fore-parts of a wolf ...’<br />

380

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