Incan Prophecies
Prophecies of the Q'ero Incan Shamans
The light of idealism gleamed in his eyes as Dr. Alberto Villoldo described
how an earthquake in 1949 underneath a monastery near Cuzco, Peru, had
rent the ground asunder, exposing an ancient Incan temple of gold. This
fulfilled a sign that the prophecies of Mosoq, the "time to come,"
were now to be shared with the modern world.
Dr. Villoldo, a psychologist and medicinal anthropologist, has lived
among and trained with the Q'ero shamans and has played a key role in
bringing their ritual and prophecy to the awareness of the modern world.
The Q'ero are the last of the Incas -- a tribe of 600 who sought refuge
at altitudes above 14,000 feet in order to escape the conquering conquistadors.
For 500 years the Q'ero elders have preserved a sacred prophecy of a
great change, or "pachacuti," in which the world would be
turned right-side-up, harmony and order would be restored, and chaos
and disorder ended.
The Q'ero had lived in their villages high in the Andes in virtual solitude
from the world until their "discovery" in 1949.
In that year, Oscar Nunez del Prado, an anthropologist, was at a festival
in Paucartambo, in southern Peru, when he met two Indians speaking fluent
Quecha, the language of the Incas. The first Western expedition to the
Q'ero villages then occurred in 1955.
Four years later, at the annual Feast of The Return of the Pleiades
taking place in the Andes, the gathering of 70,000 pilgrims from South
America were awed, and the crowd parted to let the Q'ero, unannounced
and wearing the Incan emblem of the sun, make their way forward to the
mountain top to make known that the time of the prophecies was at hand.
They were welcomed by theassembly and were told, "We've been waiting
for you for 500 years."
Recently, Q'ero elders journeyed to North America in fulfillment of
their prophecies.
In November 1996, a small group of Q'ero, including the tribal leader
and the head shaman, visited several cities in the US, including New
York, where they performed a private ceremony at the Cathedral of St.
John the Divine.
The shamanic ritual had not been performed for 500 years. But in thevery
home of those who symbolized the former conquerors of their Incan ancestors
they shared their ritual and knowledge, not only with interested Westerners
who were learning their ways, but also with the Dean of the great cathedral,
thereby symbolically and spiritually linking the two continents of North
and South America.
According to ancient prophecy, this is the time of the great gathering
called the "mastay" and reintegration of the peoples of the
four directions.
The Q'ero are releasing their teachings to the West, in preparation
for the day the Eagle of the North and the Condor of the South (the
Americas) fly together again.
They believe that "munay,"
love and compassion,
will be the guiding force of this great
gathering of the peoples.
The new caretakers of the Earth will come from the West, and those that
have made the greatest impact on Mother Earth now have the moral responsibility
to remake their relationship with Her, after remaking themselves,"
said Don Antonio Morales, a master Q'ero shaman.
The prophecy holds that North America will supply the physical strength,
or body; Europe will supply the mental aspect, or head; and the heart
will be supplied by South America.
When the Spanish conquered the Incas 500 years ago, the last pachacuti,
or great change, occurred.
The Q'ero have been waiting ever since for the next pachacuti, when
order would emerge out of chaos.
For the past five centuries they preserved their s acred knowledge,
and finally, in recent years, the signs were fulfilled that the great
time of change was at hand: the high mountain lagoons have dried, the
condor is nearly extinct and the discovery of the Golden Temple has
occurred, following the earthquake in 1949 which represented the wrath
of the sun.
The prophecies are optimistic. They refer to the end of time as we know
it -- the death of a way of thinking and a way of being, the end of
a way of relating to nature and to the earth.
In the coming years, the Incas expect us to emerge into a golden age,
a golden millennium of peace.
The prophecies also speak of tumultuous changes happening in the earth,
and in our psyche, redefining our relationships and spirituality.
The next pachacuti, or great change, has already begun, and it promises
the emergence of a new human after this period of turmoil.
The chaos and upheaval characteristic of this period will last another
four years, according to the Q'ero.
The paradigm of European civilization will continue to collapse, and
the way of the Earth people will return. Even more importantly, the
shamanic elders speak about a tear in the fabric of time itself.
This presents an opportunity for us to describe ourselves not as who
we have been in the past but as who we are becoming.
Pachacuti also refers to a great Incan leader who lived in the late
1300s.
He is said to have built Machu Picchu and was the architect of an empire
the size of the US.
For the Incas, Pachacuti is a spiritual prototype -- a Master, a luminous
one who stepped outside of time.
He was a messiah, but not in the Christian sense of the only son of
God, beyond the reach of humanity.
Rather he is viewed as a symbol and promise of who we all might become.
He embodies the essence of the prophecies of the pachacuti, as Pacha
means "earth" or "time," and cuti means "to
set things right." His name also means "transformer of the
earth."
The prophecies of the pachacuti are known throughout the Andes. There
are those who believe the prophecies refer to the return of the leader
Pachacuti to defeat those who took the Incas' land.
But according to Dr. Villoldo, the return of Pachacuti is taking place
on the collective level. "It's not the return of a single individual
who embodies what we're becoming, but a process of emergence available
to all peoples."
The Q'ero have served as the caretakers of the rites and prophecies
of their Inca ancestors.
The prophecies are of no use unless one has the keys, the rites of passage.
The Star Rites, or "Mosoq Karpay" (The Rites of the Time to
Come), are crucial to the practical growth described in the prophecies.
Following the "despachos" (ritualistic offerings of mesa,
or medicine bundles) at the ceremony in New York City, the shamans administered
the Mosoq Karpay to the individuals present, transmitting the energies
originating with the ancestors of their lineage.
The transmission of the Mosoq Karpay is the ceremony representing the
end of one's relationship to time.
It is a process of the heart.
This process of Becoming is considered more important than the prophecies
themselves.
The Karpay (rites) plant the seed of knowledge, the seed of Pachacuti,
in the luminous body of the recipient.
It is up to each person to water and tend the seed so that it can grow
and blossom.
The rites are a transmission of potential; one must then make oneself
available to destiny.
The Karpays connect the person to an ancient lineage of knowledge and
power that cannot be accessed by the individual. It can only be summoned
by a tribe.
Ultimately, this power can provide the impetus for one to leap into
the body of an Inca, a Luminous One. That person is connected directly
to the stars, the Incan Sun of cosmology.
The Q'ero believe that the doorways between the worlds are opening again.
Holes in time that we can step through and beyond, where we can explore
our human capabilities. Regaining our luminous nature is a possibility
today for all who dare to take the leap.
The Andean shamans say,
"Follow your own footsteps.
Learn from the rivers,
the trees and the rocks.
Honor the Christ,
the Buddha,
your brothers and sisters.
Honor the Earth Mother and the Great Spirit.
Honor yourself and all of creation."
"Look with the eyes of your soul and engage the essential,"
is the teaching of the Q'ero.