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And the Times, They Are A-Changin'
To hear Nobel Peace Prize recipient Rigoberta Menchu´ Tum tell it, the world is on the verge of a "New Time" where harmony and a re-connection with Nature will win over the violent death and destruction of our world.
While we wait for this "New Time" we live in "No Time", which is fraught with the pain and suffering, death and destruction that we now see, said Menchu´. People feel alienated and depressed. Natural disasters like earthquakes, volcanic eruptions and floods prevail. War, depletion of the world's natural resources, the loss of values, and passions directed towards violence, especially against women, seem endless. Children are born with low energy and youth close themselves off from taking responsibility for or having understanding of the world.
"We need to become aware of these problems and try to recover the values we lost," said Menchu´, who hails from Guatemala, a country slightly smaller than Tennessee and the heartland of the ancient Mayan culture of which she is a descendent.
"We need to feel the problems of others as our own and not just those of other people," she said recently through an interpreter during her recent visit to the annual Great Lakes PeaceJam program in Kalamazoo, Michigan.
The admittedly shy peasant girl who lost members of her family to the ravages of civil war—and wrote about her experiences in a 1987 autobiography, I, Rigoberta Menchuu´: An Indian Woman in Guatemala—is the first indigenous person to win the Nobel Peace Prize in 1992. But that honor, too, was in alignment with the ancient Mayan calendar, said Menchu´. During that same year the "No Time" era began and is expected to last until 2012-2014 when a new 5,125-year cycle begins. She said this "New Time" will be evident to the world in 2026.
"The cosmos line it up, but we have to work on it to make it happen," said Menchu´, 48. "Not all of us will be alive, but our children will be."
She distinguished between the natural clock, which comes from Nature, and the artificial clock, which comes from science and technology and focuses on money and material possessions.
"We have forgotten the natural clock and we don't believe in it," said Menchu´. "We only remember it when we are affected directly by it," like when we have cancer, other physical diseases—or when we have "relationship diseases" like racism and discrimination. Only a new "human conscience" can cure these diseases that affect us mentally, spiritually and psychologically, she said.
Menchu´ knows all too well the effects of "relationship diseases." The Guatemalan civil war that ended in 1996 left more than 100,000 people dead and a million refugees. Soil erosion, water pollution and deforestation in the Peten rainforest continue to ruin the land where 12.2 million people live, half of them below the poverty line. Organized crime, comprised mostly of illegal drug trafficking, runs rampant.
But change can happen, said Menchu´, when people get involved with various community initiatives. They can start by feeling pride in their families, refusing to be victims and by working with others to pave the way for the "New Time."
"I got into the struggle," she said referring to her advocacy of nonviolence during the war. "I didn't stay away from the hard times." What inspires and sustains her now are the people she meets and the ways their projects and enthusiasm contribute to the re-making of the world—like those who have worked over the past 10 years in order to solidify the peace in Guatemala, a place where the marks of genocide are still present in the thousands of remains of unidentified people.
"Until I accept the responsibility to change myself I'm not going to change others," said Menchu´. "I must change what I can do." She added that if everyone did this, the world could be brought to a new "collective consciousness", which she deems to be "the only solution" to our problems.
A big part of this consciousness is working under "the human clock" without regard for the plants and animals that make up the quality of life on earth. The Mayans taught that time goes beyond humanity and bids people to live in solidarity with others with sensitivity to their needs.
"The human species isn't by itself," said Menchu´. "In fact, if we were left alone on earth, we couldn't exist. Can you imagine how many animals complain of our exploitation to them?"
Menchu´ illustrated how her indigenous religion with its connection to Nature balances both the material and spiritual fortunes.
"If you have a lot of money," she said, "be careful, it will eventually be used up. If you have only spiritual fortunes, be careful, you can die of hunger."
What people today lack most, however, is their spiritual fortune, she said. They forget to thank God for life, food and their blessings.
Menchu´ says that the outcome of the "No Time" will be the connection between the male and female energies. All will work toward a common project.
"We lack light in our lives and live in darkness," said Menchu´. "What do you do with darkness? You go to the light. But we have to find the light in our own selves first and from that to get our internal strength and ideas out. Light is also found in others and for that reason we must listen to others to discover where that light is leading."
Olga Bonfiglio is a professor at Kalamazoo College. She is the author of Heroes of a Different Stripe: How One Town Responded to the War in Iraq and a freelance writer for several national magazines on the subjects of social justice and religion. Her website is www.OlgaBonfiglio.com. Contact her at olgabonfiglio@yahoo.com.
u003cbr> "We need to become aware of these problems and try to recover the values we lost," said Menchu´, who hails from Guatemala, a country slightly smaller than Tennessee and the heartland of the ancient Mayan culture of which she is a descendent. u003cbr> u003cbr> "We need to feel the problems of others as our own and not just those of other people," she said recently through an interpreter during her recent visit to the annual Great Lakes PeaceJam program in Kalamazoo, Michigan.u003cbr> u003cbr> The admittedly shy peasant girl who lost members of her family to the ravages of civil war—and wrote about her experiences in a 1987 autobiography, u003ci>I, Rigoberta Menchuu´: An Indian Woman in Guatemalau003c/i>—is the first indigenous person to win the Nobel Peace Prize in 1992. But that honor, too, was in alignment with the ancient Mayan calendar, said Menchu´. During that same year the "No Time" era began and is expected to last until 2012-2014 when a new 5,125-year cycle begins. She said this "New Time" will be evident to the world in 2026. u003cbr> u003cbr> "The cosmos line it up, but we have to work on it to make it happen," said Menchu´, 48. "Not all of us will be alive, but our children will be."u003cbr> u003cbr> She distinguished between the natural clock, which comes from Nature, and the artificial clock, which comes from science and technology and focuses on money and material possessions. u003cbr> u003cbr> "We have forgotten the natural clock and we don't believe in it," said Menchu´. "We only remember it when we are affected directly by it," like when we have cancer, other physical diseases—or when we have "relationship diseases" like racism and discrimination. Only a new "human conscience" can cure these diseases that affect us mentally, spiritually and psychologically, she said.u003cbr> u003cbr> Menchu´ knows all too well the effects of "relationship diseases." The Guatemalan civil war that ended in 1996 left more than 100,000 people dead and a million refugees. Soil erosion, water pollution and deforestation in the Peten rainforest continue to ruin the land where ",1] ); //--> u003cbr> "We need to become aware of these problems and try to recover the values we lost," said Menchu´, who hails from Guatemala, a country slightly smaller than Tennessee and the heartland of the ancient Mayan culture of which she is a descendent. u003cbr> u003cbr> "We need to feel the problems of others as our own and not just those of other people," she said recently through an interpreter during her recent visit to the annual Great Lakes PeaceJam program in Kalamazoo, Michigan.u003cbr> u003cbr> The admittedly shy peasant girl who lost members of her family to the ravages of civil war—and wrote about her experiences in a 1987 autobiography, u003ci>I, Rigoberta Menchuu´: An Indian Woman in Guatemalau003c/i>—is the first indigenous person to win the Nobel Peace Prize in 1992. But that honor, too, was in alignment with the ancient Mayan calendar, said Menchu´. During that same year the "No Time" era began and is expected to last until 2012-2014 when a new 5,125-year cycle begins. She said this "New Time" will be evident to the world in 2026. u003cbr> u003cbr> "The cosmos line it up, but we have to work on it to make it happen," said Menchu´, 48. "Not all of us will be alive, but our children will be."u003cbr> u003cbr> She distinguished between the natural clock, which comes from Nature, and the artificial clock, which comes from science and technology and focuses on money and material possessions. u003cbr> u003cbr> "We have forgotten the natural clock and we don't believe in it," said Menchu´. "We only remember it when we are affected directly by it," like when we have cancer, other physical diseases—or when we have "relationship diseases" like racism and discrimination. Only a new "human conscience" can cure these diseases that affect us mentally, spiritually and psychologically, she said.u003cbr> u003cbr> Menchu´ knows all too well the effects of "relationship diseases." The Guatemalan civil war that ended in 1996 left more than 100,000 people dead and a million refugees. Soil erosion, water pollution and deforestation in the Peten rainforest continue to ruin the land where ",1] ); //--> u003cbr> But change can happen, said Menchu´, when people get involved with various community initiatives. They can start by feeling pride in their families, refusing to be victims and by working with others to pave the way for the "New Time." u003cbr> u003cbr> "I got into the struggle," she said referring to her advocacy of nonviolence during the war. "I didn't stay away from the hard times." What inspires and sustains her now are the people she meets and the ways their projects and enthusiasm contribute to the re-making of the world—like those who have worked over the past 10 years in order to solidify the peace in Guatemala, a place where the marks of genocide are still present in the thousands of remains of unidentified people. u003cbr> u003cbr> "Until I accept the responsibility to change myself I'm not going to change others," said Menchu´. "I must change what I can do." She added that if everyone did this, the world could be brought to a new "collective consciousness", which she deems to be "the only solution" to our problems. u003cbr> u003cbr> A big part of this consciousness is working under "the human clock" without regard for the plants and animals that make up the quality of life on earth. The Mayans taught that time goes beyond humanity and bids people to live in solidarity with others with sensitivity to their needs. u003cbr> u003cbr> "The human species isn't by itself," said Menchu´. "In fact, if we were left alone on earth, we couldn't exist. Can you imagine how many animals complain of our exploitation to them?" u003cbr> u003cbr> Menchu´ illustrated how her indigenous religion with its connection to Nature balances both the material and spiritual fortunes. u003cbr> u003cbr> "If you have a lot of money," she said, "be careful, it will eventually be used up. If you have only spiritual fortunes, be careful, you can die of hunger."",1] ); //--> u003cbr> But change can happen, said Menchu´, when people get involved with various community initiatives. They can start by feeling pride in their families, refusing to be victims and by working with others to pave the way for the "New Time." u003cbr> u003cbr> "I got into the struggle," she said referring to her advocacy of nonviolence during the war. "I didn't stay away from the hard times." What inspires and sustains her now are the people she meets and the ways their projects and enthusiasm contribute to the re-making of the world—like those who have worked over the past 10 years in order to solidify the peace in Guatemala, a place where the marks of genocide are still present in the thousands of remains of unidentified people. u003cbr> u003cbr> "Until I accept the responsibility to change myself I'm not going to change others," said Menchu´. "I must change what I can do." She added that if everyone did this, the world could be brought to a new "collective consciousness", which she deems to be "the only solution" to our problems. u003cbr> u003cbr> A big part of this consciousness is working under "the human clock" without regard for the plants and animals that make up the quality of life on earth. The Mayans taught that time goes beyond humanity and bids people to live in solidarity with others with sensitivity to their needs. u003cbr> u003cbr> "The human species isn't by itself," said Menchu´. "In fact, if we were left alone on earth, we couldn't exist. Can you imagine how many animals complain of our exploitation to them?" u003cbr> u003cbr> Menchu´ illustrated how her indigenous religion with its connection to Nature balances both the material and spiritual fortunes. u003cbr> u003cbr> "If you have a lot of money," she said, "be careful, it will eventually be used up. If you have only spiritual fortunes, be careful, you can die of hunger."",1] ); //--> u003cbr> What people today lack most, however, is their spiritual fortune, she said. They forget to thank God for life, food and their blessings. u003cbr> u003cbr> Menchu´ says that the outcome of the "No Time" will be the connection between the male and female energies. All will work toward a common project. u003cbr> u003cbr> "We lack light in our lives and live in darkness," said Menchu´. "What do you do with darkness? You go to the light. But we have to find the light in our own selves first and from that to get our internal strength and ideas out. Light is also found in others and for that reason we must listen to others to discover where that light is leading."u003cbr> u003c/font>u003cbr> u003cbr> Olga Bonfiglio is a professor at Kalamazoo College. She is the author of u003ci>Heroes of a Different Stripe: How One Town Responded to the War in Iraqu003c/i> and a freelance writer for several national magazines on the subjects of social justice and religion. Her website is u003cu>u003ca hrefu003d\"http://www.OlgaBonfiglio.com\" targetu003d\"_blank\" onclicku003d\"return top.js.OpenExtLink(window,event,this)\">www.OlgaBonfiglio.comu003c/a>u003c/u>. Contact her at u003cu>u003ca hrefu003d\"mailto:olgabonfiglio@yahoo.com\" targetu003d\"_blank\" onclicku003d\"return top.js.OpenExtLink(window,event,this)\">olgabonfiglio@yahoo.comu003c/a>u003c/u>.u003cbr> u003cbr> u003c/font> u003cpre colsu003d\"72\">-- u003cbr>Olga Bonfigliou003cbr>Professor of Education, Kalamazoo Collegeu003cbr>u003cbr>Email: u003ca hrefu003d\"mailto:olgabonfiglio@charter.net\" targetu003d\"_blank\" onclicku003d\"return top.js.OpenExtLink(window,event,this)\">olgabonfiglio@charter.net u003c/a> Home: (269) 226-8727 Office: (269) 337-7034 Author of Heroes of a Different Stripe: How One Town Responded to the War in Iraq Website u003ca hrefu003d\"http://www.olgabonfiglio.com/\" targetu003d\"_blank\" onclicku003d\"return top.js.OpenExtLink(window,event,this)\">http://www.olgabonfiglio.com/u003c/a> u003c/pre> u003c/div> ",0] ); //--> u003cbr> What people today lack most, however, is their spiritual fortune, she said. They forget to thank God for life, food and their blessings. u003cbr> u003cbr> Menchu´ says that the outcome of the "No Time" will be the connection between the male and female energies. All will work toward a common project. u003cbr> u003cbr> "We lack light in our lives and live in darkness," said Menchu´. "What do you do with darkness? You go to the light. But we have to find the light in our own selves first and from that to get our internal strength and ideas out. Light is also found in others and for that reason we must listen to others to discover where that light is leading."u003cbr> u003c/font>u003cbr> u003cbr> Olga Bonfiglio is a professor at Kalamazoo College. She is the author of u003ci>Heroes of a Different Stripe: How One Town Responded to the War in Iraqu003c/i> and a freelance writer for several national magazines on the subjects of social justice and religion. Her website is u003cu>u003ca hrefu003d\"http://www.OlgaBonfiglio.com\" targetu003d\"_blank\" onclicku003d\"return top.js.OpenExtLink(window,event,this)\">www.OlgaBonfiglio.comu003c/a>u003c/u>. Contact her at u003cu>u003ca hrefu003d\"mailto:olgabonfiglio@yahoo.com\" targetu003d\"_blank\" onclicku003d\"return top.js.OpenExtLink(window,event,this)\">olgabonfiglio@yahoo.comu003c/a>u003c/u>.u003cbr> u003cbr> u003c/font> u003cpre colsu003d\"72\">-- u003cbr>Olga Bonfigliou003cbr>Professor of Education, Kalamazoo Collegeu003cbr>u003cbr>Email: u003ca hrefu003d\"mailto:olgabonfiglio@charter.net\" targetu003d\"_blank\" onclicku003d\"return top.js.OpenExtLink(window,event,this)\">olgabonfiglio@charter.net u003c/a> Home: (269) 226-8727 Office: (269) 337-7034 Author of Heroes of a Different Stripe: How One Town Responded to the War in Iraq Website u003ca hrefu003d\"http://www.olgabonfiglio.com/\" targetu003d\"_blank\" onclicku003d\"return top.js.OpenExtLink(window,event,this)\">http://www.olgabonfiglio.com/u003c/a> u003c/pre> u003c/div> ",0] ); //-->


10 Comments so far
Show AllVoices of "Hope" that do not demand specific actions, that do not build around a plan, that say, "This will happen then", are false. Period. Guatemala with the full military, economic, and political support of US is still ruled by a Latin Aryan Oligarchy that would see all the Mayans dead in a trench covered with quick lime if they refuse the chains of their slavery. If the Mayans want their freedom, they will have to take it from the dead hands of that Oligarchy. I think the Mayans know this. Americans refuse to look. They still worship their richfilth.
Do not take false security from anybody's religious prophesies, Xrstian, Mayan, Zoroastrian, or Tibetan. In the end they are in the same class as astrological predictions in your local paper and should be given the same consideration.
I seem to recall that we were all supposed to be happily immersed in the Age of Aquarius by now, weren't we? And that goes without mentioning every single "End of the World" yahoo who's come down the pike. The smart ones use the trick to sell their books and make a bundle, before retiring to their island in the Carribean. The stupid ones ending up standing on a mountain side with a bunch of folks who "believed" and gave away everything but the clothes on their back. I suspect that is a freedom of sorts.
While the future is always uncertain, our lives are, to a large extent determined by what we do and how we do it, both in our individual lives and collectively in our communities.
Time to let go of "The Lesser Who-Who in the Tree" or "The Great Who-Who in the Sky" who is going to make everything all better. Are we going to carry that baggage with us, like our obsolete Appendix, when we go to the stars? How much excess baggage can you pay for?
Your future is today. Right now. It's all we've got.
Peace.
I agree with luckylefty; this article is ridiculous. The problems our species face today are not vague and tied to fictional beings from books; they are human problems. They won't be solved from "taking pride in our families," but rather for most people, rejecting them and refusing to continue the cycles of abuse, ignorance, and violence that those families perpetuated for centuries. Then we have a chance of being nice to the environment. It has nothing to do with the Mayans or "spirituality," but concrete, very real and visible happenings on this planet.
IO and Lefty: OUR world has gotten where it is because ONLY your version of truth, logic and reasoning has been ALLOWED at decision making tables. Perhaps listening to those voices that tune into higher drummers, diversifying the input of forms of "reasoning" might lead us away from the same redundant behaviors, like war, competition, might makes right. LOGIC is only ONE half the brain, my male friends. And you boys have claimed the right to dominate all decision making bodies. I don't care about Hillary, most women who get anywhere in the present paradigm ACT like men, OR pass tests that show their intellects have been sufficiently codified to reflect MALE processes of sentience. GOD made two genders, and GOD equipped us with TWO brain hemispheres. HIS-story repeats because you think you have all the answers. You do not! Perhaps if you learned to listen to a logic that never was given a chance, you'd hear the poetry of the universe, the song of stars, and your heart mind open. WISDOM is the bridge between feelings and intellect, it is not a place you can get to when you are so smug. The astro-logos, the plan of the heavens as writ into the cosmic clockworks hardly requires your consent or realization, any more than a belief in gravity will impact the truth of its power.
Right on, Siouxrose!!! The definition of insanity is to continue to do the same thing over and over again and expect different results. Clearly some fresh and different thinking is needed here.
LOVE your posts Siouxrose
and...
not btagging, but been studying Mayan math for over 25 years, been to most ruins, and caves
and seen things at night not explainable, as an engineer
2012 is here soon, just we get slammed again, or they come and eat us all
who knows, no one here alive now does
hope Ms. Menchu wins, I used to live and work in Guatemala, i know all about it
Siouxrose - But there is no god out there. There is no out there. And reality doesn't divide into male and female, left brain, right brain, life, death. Those are all just concepts of divided, deluded minds. If you would walk the highest way, discard opinions, pro and con.
Beautiful Siouxrose.
"We cannot change the world, but we can change ourselves and the world in which we choose to give our creative energies. As we do this, ironically, without having intended to change the world, we will establish a level of higher resonance around which the releasing energies from the implosions of the old institutions shall accrue. This is a key and important point. Do not focus on changing the old world. It
is dying so let it die. That which is broken cannot be fixed and that which is real cannot be broken. Focus on what is real and the rest shall fade away.....
....Our jobs now are simple…envision, energize, ground into form and manifest that which we wish to behold, Heaven on Earth. Allow the Gift of Life and Breath to return to your Spirits as the gift of original innocence and know that, as we stand at the precipice of the ending we are perched on the threshold of a new Beginning as we return to ourselves and thereby come to know ourselves for the very first time."
From this link:
http://www.templeofsakkara.com/kencousenstreatise.htm#kenpart5
Ron @June 20th, 2007 8:41 pm,
Hallelujah and thank you for writing this: "There is no out there. And reality doesn't divide into male and female...If you would walk the highest way, discard the opinions, pro and con."
Or to put it another way, with music:
"People all over the world, join in
on the Love Train, Love Train.....
Cause if you miss it, I'll feel sorry, sorry for you..."
lyrics from this link:
http://www.stlyrics.com/lyrics/undercoverbrother/lovetrain.htm
Peace :)
Ron who gives you the AUTHORITY to speak for "reality." I am sharing a worldview based on sages, ancient mystics and a confluence of views from persons who developed a level of sentience completely unfamiliar to most trained by Western academe and its disciplines. Just because you can't tune into it does not mean it ceases to exist. Hail, ego the realm of Ron. And obviously there are distinctions between the qualities of intelligence associated with brain spheres, and from the perspective of a self, ensconced in the apparent boundary of a body, there is an objective "out there." (On a different note, I am having trouble posting to THIS site. Strange... but Mercury, the winged emissary responsible for and related to our mundane communications happens to be in a tricky retro phase. As tends to happen during these 3 week intervals which occur every several months, communication matters run amok. And I told NASA I'd be happy to--free of payment--alert them to such intervals so we don't lose multi-million dollar satellites or related equipment. This is a piss poor time to send these instruments anywhere.)
Siouxrose,
No, there are not "two genders" there are billions of them, and since I didn't tell you mine you have no right to use your sexist labels against me. The world has been relying on vague nonsense like what you suggest for many centuries; what I suggest instead is looking to humanism and the concrete, which includes emotional sensitivity and moving beyond tribal and ancient child abuse. I see you will never get that, but do yourself a favor and don't bother reading my posts let alone responding with more racist, sexist, vapid astrology.