Preface:
The Mayan 2012 end of the world “prophecy” is scaring the pants off
numerous children and suicidal teenagers. 1-in-10 people
believe that the Mayans have prophesied the end of the world (and see this). A Google search for "Maya
2012" currently brings up 325 million hits, only slightly less than a
search for the most popular words.
This post is a
public service announcement to reach children and adults scared about the Mayan
prophecy … to show with the Mayan priests’ own words that the world
will not end in 2012.
Many people are
talking about the Mayan 2012 prophecy
.
But few know what
the Mayan priests actually said about 2012.
In reality, Mayan
elders say something very different from what you might have
heard.
For
example, Wakatel Utiw – leader of the National Council of Elders Mayas,
Xinca and Garifuna, Day Keeper of the Mayan Calendar, and 13th generation
Quiche Mayan Spiritual Leader - says that the end of the Maya
calendar has nothing to do with the end of the world.
He also explains
that December 21, 2012 might not even be the end of this cycle of the
calendar:
Contrary to
popular belief the living elders of the Maya do not agree that December 21,
2012 is the end of their calendar. A new “Sun” represents the beginning of a
new Long Count cycle in the calendar system of approximately 5,200 years, which
they say may not happen for many years.
And see this.
(A brand new film
called “Shift of the Ages” tells the Mayans’ beliefs in detail … and
gives their true warnings.)
Similarly, Tz’utujil
Mayan elder Tata Pedro Cruz says that the world will not end
in 2012:
Mayan elder and
priest Carlos Barrios – who has extensively studied the Mayan calendars – says:
Anthropologists
visit the temple sites and read the inscriptions and make up stories about the
Maya, but they do not read the signs correctly. It’s just their imagination.
Other people write about prophecy in the name of the Maya. They say that the
world will end in December 2012. The Mayan elders are angry with this. The
world will not end. It will be transformed.”
Leonzo Barreno – a
Guatemalan native who was trained by Mayan elders to read the ancient
calendars – says says the ‘apocalypse’ concept is a false
interpretation of the Long Count calendar, that the Mayan elders taught him
that December 21 this year simply marks the start of a new calendar:
‘There are two
sides to the story,’ he told CBC. ‘The one that we know is this apocalyptic
meaning that has been given to the Long Count.
‘The other side
of the story is the Mayan side, which you rarely see on media articles, because
they never interview my own people.’
‘For them it’s a
joyous event, not an apocalyptic event. What is coming is the end of a calendar
and the beginning of a new one.
Ricardo Cajas –
president of the Collective of Native Organizations of Colectivo de
Organizaciones IndÃgenas de Guatemala – says the date did not represent
an end of humanity or fulfillment of the catastrophic prophecies, but that the
new cycle “supposes changes in human consciousness.” (Translation).
Pedro Celestino Yac
Noj – a Mayan sage living in Cuba – says:
The 21st is for
giving thanks and gratitude and the 22nd welcomes the new cycle, a new dawn.
Rather than being
the end of the world, Mayan priest Jose Manrique Esquive believes that
2012 may bring a transition to a better time for humankind.
And AP noted in
2009:
Apolinario Chile
Pixtun is tired of being bombarded with frantic questions about the Mayan
calendar supposedly “running out” on Dec. 21, 2012. After all, it’s not the end
of the world.
***
Definitely not,
the Mayan Indian elder insists.
***
Chile Pixtun, a
Guatemalan, says the doomsday theories spring from Western, not Mayan
ideas.
And if you don’t
believe what the current Mayan leaders say, please remember that archaeologists
recently found a cache of ancient Mayan calendars which goes thousands of
years past 2012. And see this.
Note: The Mayan
elders do make prophetic warnings, but it has nothing to do with 2012.
Specifically, they warn that we need to rein in war and pollution or we will
destroy ourselves.
Given that numerous
end of the world prophecies have come and gone without incident, and that
the Pope has declared that – due to a miscalculation – we are
currently in AD 2016, not 2012 – it is smart to take all date-specific
predictions with a spoonful of cynicism.
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