|
TM
Ancient Mayan Rebirth Rituals at Dos Palmas
By Irene Butler
The narrow road was lit only by our van headlights.
Rustling and low murmuring eerily drifted from the surrounding tangle of jungle.
I, along with six other Mayan culture enthusiasts, and our guide, Claudia, were
on our way to the Mayan village of Dos Palmas to heal body and spirit in a
sacred Temazcal (sweat lodge) ceremony – to be reborn as warriors.
Dos Palmas is located in the Riviera Maya region of
Quintana Roo State (120 km south of Cancun). As an ecotourism project, tourism
and community are developed with environmental preservation. It allows the
village families, who run the project, to earn incomes while staying together in
their community (instead of leaving for cleaning positions in city hotels).
What an ideal setting to glean insight into the beliefs and
traditions of the ancient Maya civilization. Rivalled only by the ancient
Egyptians, the Mayas reached their zenith during the classic period (250-900 AD)
building magnificent cities, developing a sophisticated writing system, an
astrological calendar of astonishing accuracy, as well as inventing the concept
zero in mathematics.
Upon our arrival at the village consisting of palapa-style
houses, we were whisked down a path past romping monkeys to test our skill at
conch shell blowing. A former trumpet player in
our group blasted out sound with ease. For all my effort, verging on
hyperventilation, I only managed a few feeble squeaks.
Ready or not, Claudia led us to the ritual site altar
filled with flowers and statues of gods.
My
eyes zeroed in on the craggy chiseled face of Polo, the Grandfather Shaman, who
had witnessed 95 summer solstices. Rising from his chair, this spiritual sage
greeted us in Mayan. He then nodded to his eldest son and two younger siblings
to commence the rituals before he retired for the night.
Smoke
from the burning sap of the sacred copal tree spiraled upward from a receptacle
on the altar. Claudia translated the young Shaman’s message, “He is asking the
gods to enlighten us and give us strength.”
We moved behind the altar to a low circular rock wall with
a blazing fire in the middle piled high with heating lava rocks. Conch shells
were sounded by group members in turn from each of the four entries into the
circular wall asking permission from the gods to enter the Temazcal that loomed
to the right of the circle.
To the south we summoned the serpent, representing water,
to make us one with Mother Nature and the world. The eagle was called from the
east for the breath of life and the winds that bring rain and good harvest
weather. From the west we hailed the deer, symbolizing the earth, and the wisdom
of the grandfathers. To the north we called upon the Jaguar, denoting fire, to
give us the spirit of a warrior.
Shedding
the outerwear that covered our bathing suits, one by one we were fanned with the
purifying copal incense to help us focus on the action of the healing ceremony. We were each
given a small lava rock to toss into the fire with “good wishes for others,
including our enemies”.
Crawling through the low doorway into the sweat lodge, we
positioned ourselves on the palm leaf covered dirt floor. Four shovels of
red-hot lava rocks were passed in succession through the door and into a central
pit. Each time we greeted the stones as grandfathers coming into our midst. The
door was closed. In the blackness the Shaman threw water infused with basil and
rosemary onto the glowing rocks. I became drenched in the blasting billows of
sanative steam. I breathed in the soothing warmth.
The Shaman’s soft tapping on a skinned instrument and his
healing words were mesmerizing. “We are here to shed our problems and worries
and be reborn from the womb of the Temazcal. In closing he called out, “Cry,
shout, laugh, yell to release your tension.” Not one of us uttered a “boo”. He
asked this again. Silence. A scream shattered the mute atmosphere across from
me. Then a loud squeal to my left, followed by my own shocked yelp as cold water
the Shaman threw on the upper wall rained down on my head. Laughter interspersed
yells around the circle until his pail was empty. Needless to say, there was a
lot of good-humoured “releasing”.
My buoyed spirit dragged my limp body out into the night
air. Extending our gratitude, we bid farewell to our esteemed hosts.
Donning our sweat suits, we followed Claudia to a dimly lit
cavern for a dip in the cenote (sinkhole). Bats flitted overhead. Stalactites
splattered droplets into the fresh water below. After the first breath-catching moments I found the water temperature both
comfortable and reviving; and so translucent stalagmites could be seen when
treading at a 10 foot depth.
An estimated 4,000 cenotes
dot the Yucatan Peninsula. Under a veneer of thin soil and vegetation the whole
peninsula rests on a porous limestone shelf. Rainwater seeps through the
limestone forming a massive network of underground rivers that eventually flow
to the ocean. Cracks in the limestone, making these rivers accessible from
above, are known as cenotes.
We
did not need to be called twice to the feast prepared for us by the village
women. Corn tortillas were brought to our table moments after sizzling on a pan
over an open fire. Bowls of succulent chicken simmered in traditional achiote spices,
flavourful fried beans and rice were passed around until we could hold no more.
The monkeys were huddled in sleep around the base of trees
on our way back to our vehicle. The black jungle swallowed us once more. The
Temazcal left me deeply moved and filled with valuable messages of our oneness
with nature. I knew I would forever relish the thrill of living the legendary
ritualistic rebirth of a Mayan warrior, though at that moment my heavy lids and
the soggy faces around me indicated a bunch of very tired warriors indeed.
For Direct Reservations:
Dos Palmas, Ecotours
Playa del Carmen, Quintana Roo
info@dospalmas.info or
gabriel@dospalmas.info
phone: 52 (984) 80 32462
cell: 52 (984) 7450413
OR book thru hotel travel agents (in Quintana Roo State,
Mexico)
Cost: 860 Mexican Pesos per person – which is approx. $ 78
US or $89 CAN
For more information:
www.dospalmas.info
Back to TravelLady Magazine |