2012 News
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I found an interesting piece from John Major Jenkins regarding 2012. Apologies for the formatting but felt it was better to present it in its original form.
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In the Roots of the Milky Way Tree:
The Mayan Lord of Creation and 2012
Twentytwelvology. You won’t find it in Webster’s dictionary. Not yet. But believe me, before this decade is out, we’ll have that as well as plenty of 2012 -isms and -ographies.
“The 2012 Phenomenon” was recently the subject of a paper
written by anthropologist Robert K. Sitler.1
The sub-title of his paper brings focus to his approach:
“New Age Appropriation of an Ancient Mayan Calendar.” In his
assessment of the writings and statements of popular
writers, New Age teachers, and independent researchers
(including myself), he sorts the wheat from the chaff and
exposes “merely tangential connections to the realities of
the Mayan world.” To his credit, he distinguishes the
serious work done by myself and Geoff Stray2
from the wild and unfounded speculations of other writers.
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Sitler’s area of focus is the Long Count calendar and its
2012 end-date, which is the subject of growing interest and
controversy – not so much among academicians, who dismiss it
as irrelevant, but among spiritual seekers and people
interested in the wisdom attained by ancient civilisations.
So, what’s all the clamour and confusion about? What is the
Long Count calendar?
The Long Count Calendar
An archaeological site that’s been known about for decades
preserves an open secret about the culture that invented the
Long Count calendar. Izapa, in southern Mexico a few miles
from the Guatemala border, was the chief ceremonial
observatory of “the Izapan civilisation.”3
It was the transitional culture between the older Olmec
civilisation and the emerging Maya, and enjoyed its heyday
between 400 BCE and 50 CE. My investigation of Izapa’s
carved monuments and the site’s astronomical orientations
have revealed a great deal about how they understood the
Long Count calendar.4
The earliest monuments carved with Long Count dates were
found in the region of Izapa and have been dated to the 1st
century BCE. The Long Count notation uses bars to represent
5 and dots to represent 1. Five place values are almost
always used, representing the following periods of days:
Kin = 1 day
Uinal = 20 days
Tun = 360 days
Katun = 7,200 days
Baktun = 144,000 days
Thirteen Baktuns equal 5,125 years, which is one World Age
in the Maya Creation mythology. The Long Count calendar was
recorded on monuments and ceramic vessels for almost a
thousand years. Most of the dates refer to local mundane
events, like king crowning ceremonies. Some of the Long
Count monuments, however, refer to mythological events that
occurred at the beginning of the current World Age. Scholars
have figured out how the Long Count calendar correlates with
our own, so we know that the fabled dawn time – when all the
place values were set to zero – occurred on August 11, 3114
BCE. This should be written 0.0.0.0.0 in the Long Count, but
the monuments that speak of this date call it 13.0.0.0.0.
This is less confusing than it appears, because the two
accountings are equivalent. In the same way that 1300 hours
(military time) equals 1:00 p.m. (civil time), the Long
Count resets to 0 when 13 Baktuns are completed.
This tells us something important about the structure of the
Long Count calendar and its chronology of World Ages. Every
13 Baktuns (5,125 years), the Long Count resets to zero.
Thus, we should expect that when the Long Count again
reaches 13.0.0.0.0, it will reset to zero, the cycle of time
will begin anew, and a new World Age will commence. As
mentioned, several so-called Creation monuments describe
events that occurred in 3114 BCE, during the end-beginning
nexus of the previous World Age turnover. The texts
associated with these Creation monuments state that
“Creation happens at
the Black Hole,”
at “the Crossroads,” and “the image” will appear in the sky.
At that time, a new Solar Age begins and the Sun Lord gets
reborn. Creation Lord deities are often portrayed attending
the rebirth of the world, including one called Bolon Yokte
K’u who is closely associated with God L of the Mayan
pantheon.
He is portrayed on the ceramic
Vessel of the Seven
Lords
which contains the date 3114 BCE.5
This doesn’t mean the vessel is 5,120 years old; it simply
means that the Classic Period Maya were documenting, around
700 CE, their thoughts about the fabled dawn time.
Mayan Time Philosophy and 2012
Although the philosophy of cycle endings that we find on
these Creation monuments refers to past events in 3114 BCE,
it can also be applied to the next 13-Baktun cycle ending,
which falls on December 21, 2012. Some scholars have been
unwilling to accept this analogy, asserting there are no
Long Count monuments that refer explicitly to 2012. As we
will see, this position can no longer be maintained.
Moreover, one scholar understands quite clearly the
analogical relationship between the period ending of the
previous World Age (in 3114 BCE) and other period endings,
great and small, throughout Mayan history: “Zoomorph P and
Altar P’ [at Quirigua] were commissioned by Sky Xul as the
primary commemorative monuments for his third period ending
festival on 9.18.5.0.0 [September 13, 795 CE]. As a
celebration of cosmic renewal, the period-ending was
considered to be a replay of the events of cosmogenesis,
which occurred on 4 Ajaw 8 Kumk’u [13.0.0.0.0 in 3114 BCE].”6
This means that we can identify a generalised principle of
the Mayan concept of period endings: each period ending in
the Long Count, including all the various place value
levels, were seen to be like-in-kind replays of the great
period-ending event that occurs at the end of the 13-Baktun
period. As such, the next 13-Baktun period-ending (in 2012)
should be a big replay of the events described for 3114 BCE.
That scenario involves the rebirth of the Sun Lord from the
sky-earth cleft.
The belief that we don’t have “direct statements” about 2012
in the archaeological record ignores the plethora of
pictographic images at Izapa that portray a rare celestial
alignment that appears in the skies in the years around
2012.7
This galactic alignment is the key to understanding 2012,
and it involves the rebirth of the December solstice Sun
Lord through the Dark Rift “cleft” in the Milky Way, located
between Sagittarius and Scorpio.
It is “the image” that appears in the sky during
cosmogenesis. My interpretation of the Mayan 2012 date comes
from an interdisciplinary examination of the carvings of
Izapa, laid out in my book
Maya Cosmogenesis
2012.
The theory has withstood eight years of debating with
scholars, and the ideas are starting to seep into general
acceptance. I say “seep” because the unaffiliated source of
the breakthroughs will probably go unacknowledged.
The process will most likely follow the sequence mentioned
by Thomas Kuhn, in his
Structure of
Scientific Revolutions.
First, a radical new theory (often proposed by an
independent thinker or outsider) will be ignored by the
mainstream scholars. Then, as it starts to make inroads,
status quo scholars will vehemently criticise and attack it.
Finally, after the truth of the new breakthrough is
recognised, they will embrace it as if they knew it all
along. The three-stage process often takes decades, but may
get turbocharged in respect to 2012, since that date looms
so close in our future.
Understanding the New Discoveries
My theory about the 2012 end-date finds contextual support
in two recent discoveries. One is a Pre-Classic mural
depicting the Creation myth and the other is a hieroglyphic
text pointing explicitly to the 13-Baktun cycle end date,
December 21, 2012.
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The Mayan civilisation rose to prominence some 2,000 years
ago, in the jungle forests and mountains of Mesoamerica. The
Classic Period stretched from 200 CE to 900 CE. However,
archaeologists are finding older sites with all the
hallmarks of the Classic Period, so the origins of Mayan
civilisation are slowly getting pushed further back in time.
One of these sites, San Bartolo in Guatemala’s Peten
rainforest, preserves stunning murals of the Mayan creation
myth in what has been called “the New World’s Sistine
Chapel.”8
They have now been given the early date of 250 BCE.
Realising that the murals were threatened by looters in the
area, archaeologist Bill Saturno recorded the paintings by
holding a flatbed scanner sideways against the walls and
taking over 350 digital scans. They were digitally pieced
together to reveal a very early rendition of the Maya
Creation Myth, involving five trees of paradise.
The mural is incomplete in sections, having crumbled over
the centuries, but two of the Sacred Trees preserve an
interesting feature. Toward the base of the trees we can see
a paw sticking out. This feature has been noticed on other
portrayals of Mayan Sacred Trees, and has been identified as
a jaguar paw, perhaps representing one of the Hero Twins,
Xbalanque.
“Balan” means jaguar, similar to “Bolon” (“nine”) and the
two terms are often used in word puns. In fact, they are
sometimes interchangeable in hieroglyphic passages. The two
meanings likewise reinforce each other, as jaguars were
night creatures ruled by the nine Lords of the Night. We’ll
come back to this in a moment.
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Another important fact of the San Bartolo Creation Trees is
how closely they resemble trees portrayed at Izapa, the
origin place of the Long Count calendar. Upon close
examination, we can see that the trees combine caiman and
tree symbolism, and the caiman’s head is at the bottom, in
the roots of the tree. Izapa Stela 25, 10, and 27 all
contain this inverted caiman tree, and are widely
acknowledged to represent the Milky Way. The caiman’s mouth
represents the “Dark Rift” in the Milky Way – the “Black
Hole” of Mayan Creation mythology. Likewise, the Bird Deity
in the branches of the San Bartolo trees are often found in
the Izapan trees, and represents the Big Dipper
constellation.9
He must fall from his tree before the Sun Lord can be reborn
at the end of the Age.
This simple comparison means the “Creation Myth” at San
Bartolo utilises the same astronomical features the Izapan
Creation Myth does. Those features are central to how the
2012 alignment of the solstice Sun and the Milky Way was
encoded into Mayan myth.
Another new discovery involves the recent translation of a
text from Tortuguero, a Classic Maya site north of Palenque,
which explicitly points to December 21, 2012. Drawn by Sven
Gronemeyer and translated by Mayan epigrapher David Stuart,
the legible part of the text reads: “At the end of 13
Baktuns, on 4 Ahau 3 Kankin, 13.0.0.0.0;
something
occurs when Bolon Yokte descends.”10
Since the verb glyph describing what happens is effaced,
scholars have stated that the text doesn’t really tell us
much, but in fact it does.
First off, scholars now have to acknowledge we do have a
hieroglyphic text which refers explicitly to the ending of
the current 13-Baktun cycle, in 2012. Secondly, a usual
suspect in Mayan creation narratives is present, Bolon Yokte.
This means that 2012 was thought of as a cosmogenesis, a
creation or recreation of the world.
I’ve been arguing this for years, debating doomsayers as
well as scholars who would like to think that 2012 is
irrelevant within Mayan time philosophy.11
But, as expected, we can now see that 2012 is to be thought
of as a world renewal.
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We can also determine something very intriguing about the
name of the Creation Deity who is present in both 3114 BCE
and in 2012 CE. Bolon Yokte means bolon (nine), y- (plural),
ok (foot), -te (tree). Although bolon means “nine,” the word
is a homophonous pun for balan (jaguar). Mayan folklore and
hieroglyphic texts often combine the two designations, for
dramatic effect or for emphasising how the Jaguar God is one
of the nine Lords of the Night
(the Underworld).12
Thus, we have an alternate identification for the Creation
Lord Bolon Yokte which means something like “jaguar at the
foot/feet of the tree.”
Perhaps the plural “feet” refers to two feet: the foot of
the jaguar and the foot of the tree. Thus, the jaguar foot
or paw at the foot of the Creation tree likely represents
the Creation Lord Bolon Yokte. He was present at the last
World Age creation in 3114 BCE and he will be present at the
next one, in 2012.
But why is he there? Probably because the spotted jaguar
pelt symbolises the stars of night, and the mouth of the
jaguar represents the Underworld Portal, which is seen in
the sky as the Dark Rift in the Milky Way. This “Black Hole”
in which Creation happens also represents the birth cleft of
the Great Mother, the Milky Way.
In 2012 the December solstice Sun Lord will have shifted
into alignment with the Dark Rift, after making a
centuries-long processional journey though the stars of the
night sky. The Sun Lord, and the Age, will be reborn.
Twentytwelvologists, Unite!
We now have a Mayan inscription, from the Classic Period
site of Tortuguero, that refers directly to the end of the
current World Age of the Long Count calendar. The text
indicates the event is to be thought of as a world renewal.
The deity attending the world renewal, Bolon Yokte, was
present during the previous World Age shift, in 3114 BCE,
and he is a guardian of the portal of rebirth at the Dark
Rift “Black Hole” in the Milky Way’s “nuclear bulge” – the
Galactic Centre. He waves to us, as the jaguar paw, from
behind the base of the Creation Tree on the recently
discovered Creation murals from San Bartolo.
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These are exciting times as we recover the lost knowledge of
the ancient Maya sky watchers. Especially so, since the
world-transforming renewal date in the Maya Long Count
calendar is right around the corner. That ancient wisdom
speaks for a grand processional paradigm, of how we on Earth
experience galactic seasons of change, of how our Sun moves
into rebirth at the celestial Black Hole at the base of the
Creation Tree.
December 21, 2012 signals the commencement of a new World
Age, one that has successfully transformed, purified, and
renewed the previous cycle of time. An essential component
of this is conscious human participation, a willing openness
to the process.
As we pay attention to the changes going on around us and
tune into our own evolving journey through the 2012
experience of renewal, we all become twentytwelvologists.
Not only by having studied it in the primary sources of Maya
Creation texts, but by living it.
Let’s convene in 2013 and share what we’ve learned.
© Copyright New Dawn Magazine, http://www.newdawnmagazine.com. Permission granted to freely distribute this article for non-commercial purposes if unedited and copied in full, including this notice.
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