Showing posts with label el colca. Show all posts
Showing posts with label el colca. Show all posts

Monday, December 16, 2013

In the shadow of the condor

by the Scottsman

In the shadow of the condor

Since returning from South America, I have been haunted by Simon and Garfunkel. I cannot walk down a city street without some long-haired Indian peña band cloaked in kaleidoscopic, test-pattern shawls launching into a folkloric instrumental of the duo’s 1970 hit, El Condor Pasa. Each time I hear their lilting panpipes, it evokes memories of the first time I heard the song in southern Peru.
I was seated in the Los Nidos restaurant in the southern Peruvian town of Chivay, slapping my thighs and stomping my feet with a cosmopolitan assortment of tourists while a pea band of five brothers belted out an upbeat set of Andean folk songs.
However, just as the crescendo approached fever pitch, the band altered tack with the melancholic ballad about the flight of the condor. The crowd was transfixed by the music and its appropriateness to our location. The condors were the reason we all went to Chivay, the "place where the birds nest".
My journey had originated from the city of Arequipa that morning. With my guide, Guillermo Rendon Cuadros, we hitched a ride out of town in a jeep along a rutted dirt road to the altiplano above.
There, the scenery was on a monumental scale. Herds of vicuas‚ the wild cousins of the domesticated llama‚ appeared as specks beneath the symmetrically perfect volcano of El Misti, which rose above the grasslands of the Salinas and Aguada Blanca National Reserve like an oversized chocolate mousse.
We passed through the flats of the Pampa de Arrieros and detoured around marshes before starting our slow descent towards the Colca Canyon, the yawning 60-mile-long cleft wedged between the 20,000-foot volcanic giants of Coropuna and Ampato. Formed by seismic activity and earthquakes along a fault in the Earth’s crust, it measures twice as far from its valley floor to its rim as the Grand Canyon and ranks only behind the neighbouring Cotahuasi Canyon as the world’s deepest.
Archaeological records indicate some human habitation in the canyon as far back as 7,000 years ago. Since the first natives settled in the Colca Canyon, they have pursued a mostly subsistence lifestyle‚ developing a simple but effective form of agriculture to suit the harsh terrain and inclement conditions. Their tranquil seclusion was shattered by invading cultures twice; first by the Incas some time around 1450 AD and then by the Spanish conquistadors the following century.
Before its colonisation by the Spanish, the indigenous Collahua and Cabana people lived on and tended private plots of land that were scattered throughout the valley rather than settling collectively in villages. Typically, they resided in the valley’s upper reaches, harnessing the water that flowed down from the mountains to irrigate their maize, potato and corn fields.
"Every person believed that they were protected by a hill or a mountain," Guillermo told me. "The people respect the mountains because they give them water, and human sacrifices were made as homage to the mountain gods."
The most famous of these sacrifices, discovered in September 1995, is that of an almost perfectly preserved teenage Inca girl, nicknamed Juanita. Five hundred years ago, she was carried to just below the summit of Ampato; in itself an extraordinary feat, without the aid of modern climbing equipment. Archaeologists believe her sacrifice may have been a prayer for rain after a prolonged drought had almost starved the valley.
At the time, there were an estimated 70‚000 people living in the Colca Valley. After the conquistadors overthrew the Incas‚ thousands of Colca people were taken from the valley to work as slaves in silver and copper mines. The remainder of the population were herded into the 14 villages that were built on the orders of the Spanish viceroy. Each village was designed around a Catholic church, with grid-patterned streets that allowed guards to watch in several directions at the same time.
The first of these villages that we visited is one of the largest: Yanque. Built in 1700 with funding from the Spanish king, Philip V, its whitewashed walls depict stone relief monuments that honour members of the Spanish royalty and clergy. As with other villages in the valley, its dusty streets are relatively deserted by day, as its inhabitants set off early to toil in the fields.
The Collahuas and Cabanas are recognised for the superb agricultural techniques, irrigation channels and terraces that they developed in the valley. Before the Spanish arrival, the land was carved into terraces covering 8,000 hectares, but when the people were herded together, most of these were abandoned. The only terraced fields tilled today are those in the immediate vicinity of the villages.
Next morning, Guillermo roused me before dawn to join the rush out of Chivay to the Condor Cross. Although the Colca Canyon derived its name from the 500-year-old Inca corn and maize deposits found buried in sealed vaults (called colcas) in the canyon walls, it is synonymous nowadays with the world’s largest bird of flight. Thousands flock to the canyon every year to witness these majestic birds soaring on thermal updraughts rising from the valley floor.
It was barely 8am when we arrived at the Cross, which, at more than 10,500 feet above the valley floor, was the canyon’s deepest point. A convoy of minibuses had raced ahead of us, spilling dozens of camera-toting tourists on to a rocky outcrop overlooking the canyon rim. The daily condor show had already begun.
The condors zig-zagged in front of the lookout, creeping ever higher until they could gain sufficient uplift from the swelling thermals to launch their hefty torsos over the mountains. As large as they were, they were still dwarfed by the mountains, and it was only when one of the adults passed within its three-metre wingspan that I could adequately appreciate its impressive bulk. This giant of the vulture family grows to a height of around four feet and weighs up to 25lbs.
"The condor can go without food for 14 days," said Guillermo. "Sometimes they fly to the coast 90 miles away to look for seal placenta. Strangely, they would rather commit suicide than die of hunger or cold. They do this by flying high and plunging to their death."
"Does that happen often?" I asked.
"I have seen it twice."
An army of Collahua and Cabana women huddled behind a wall of alpaca wool pullovers, rugs, socks and hats nearby, waiting to sell their handcrafts to tourists. Each group was distinguishable from the other by their dress. While Colca men wore nondescript trousers and shirts - a legacy of a 1780 rebellion against the Spanish who consequently banned them from wearing black because of its affiliation with mourning - the women’s clothing was infinitely more elaborate. Richly coloured embroidery adorned their hats and blouses, worn over voluminous skirts.
Collahua women, who inhabit the region east of Pinchollo to Chivay and beyond, wore boater hats decorated with rosettes to indicate their marital status. Two rosettes symbolised that the wearer was single while one denoted a married woman. From that, it was fair to say that the married ones had been deflowered.
After the condors had departed, we continued on towards Cabanaconde at the canyon’s end, 40 miles from Chivay. The hillsides were dotted with wild chona cactus, which produces a sour-tasting fruit favoured by the emerald-feathered Andean parakeet. The village of Pinchollo, whose name translates as "area of the walls", had adapted a different variety of cactus as a crude form of fencing. Rows of the prickly tuna cactus were spread along the tops of the village’s stone walls, deterring all but the most determined of trespassers from thinking of climbing over them.
The further we travelled from Chivay, the more primitive the villages became. We descended a gravel road into the natural amphitheatre cradling Cabana-conde, in the shadow of Hualca Hualca (meaning "the necklace" because of the permanent ring of snow capping its summit). The village’s drab, chocolate-brown buildings matched the earthen colour of its streets.
Contrasting with its primitive adobe constructions was the two-storey, concrete shell of my hotel. Like all hotels in the valley, its heating was non-existent and hot showers were sporadic. A better option was to bathe in the hot springs of La Calera, two miles north-east of Chivay.
After exploring the town on foot, I retired for another sub-zero night cocooned in layers of blankets. If only one of those condors could have wrapped one of its massive wings around me. Surely, then, I would have been warm. 
To contact Guillemo Rendon write to: mountainzone_054@yahoo.com.
Peru facts
How to get there
Online flight finder ebookers.com offers flights from Edinburgh to Lima via Amsterdam on KLM for 580, including taxes.
Where to stay
Stay at the Hotel Colca Inn, Salaverry 307, Chivay (tel: 51 54 521111), Hotel La Posada del Conde, Calle San Pedro, Cabanaconde (tel: 51 54 180372). Accommodation from 2-20 per night.
Tourist information office, Plaza de Armas, Arequipa (tel: 211021, ext 113). Tour options
GAP Adventures visits the Colca Canyon on its 21-day Highlights of Peru (1,050), Inca Heartland (915), Absolute Peru (1,115) and 31-day Altiplano Expedition (1,185) tours. Email adventure@gap.ca or visit www.GAPadventures.com
Further information
British passport holders do not require visas. A tourist card, obtained on flights into Peru or at the border, allows for stays of up to 90 days.
1 = 5.70 Peruvian soles. It is best to change money in Lima or Arequipa before arriving in the Colca Canyon. Traveller’s cheques and major credit cards are accepted and ATMs are available in cities.



Friday, November 29, 2013

Municipality of Arequipa awards the best adventure tourism tour operators of Arequipa



By the Colca Specialist

The Municipality of Arequipa awarded the best adventure tourism tour operators of Arequipa.The awards ceremonial was part of the event called “AQP XTREME SPORTS HALL OF FAME 2013”, event that was considered by the specialists as the event of the year 2013.

Since there are hundreds of travel agencies in Arequipa and 90 percent are brokers and not real tour operators, the main goal of the ceremonial was to introduce the best adventure tourism tour operators to the entire world and to award those whose efforts in favor of the development of ecotourism, sustainable tourism, and adventure tourism are more than outstanding.

The ceremonial took place in the Municipality Palace of Arequipa and it gathered the crème of the crème of the arequipenian adventure tourism world: tour operators, promoters, authorities, among others.

At the end of the ceremonial the representatives of the tourism department of the Municipality of Arequipa presented the three inductees to the AQP XTREME SPORTS HALL OF FAME 2013, promoters of adventure tourism and sportsmen who are considered as icons of adventure sports and tourism  in Arequipa such as the mountainbiking record killer Guillermo Carlos RendónCuadros .

During the ceremonial special awards were given to a rescue team unit of the national peruvian police and to the mountainclimbing guide of the year: Mr EloyCacya, a mountainclimbing guide from Colca Valley who was declared as mountainclimbing guide of the year thanks to his successful work done in the rescue of Ciro Castillo Rojo  , as student lost in the walls of Colca Canyon (found dead) and thanks to the rescue of the body of Oliver Toledo, a student who got lost in a religious pilgrimage to the Sanctuary of Chapi.
The awarded ones were the following:

THE BEST ADVENTURE TOURISM TOUR OPERATORS

- ZarateAventuras (Mountainclimbing)
Manager :Sr.CarlosZárate.

- Colca Trek. (Trekking)   
Manager: Mg Vlado Soto.

- Naturaleza Activa (Mountainbiking)
Manager: Sr. Eduardo Sánchez Bendezú.

- Expediciones y Aventuras.(River Rafting)
Manager: Sr Gustavo Rondón Alvarez.

- Colca Horse El Herraje (Horseriding in Colca Valley)
Manager: Srta Sofía Solange Málaga Cáceres.

- Inka Expeditions (School Ecoturism Fam Trips)                                            
Manager: Sr Gonzalo Ruy  Zevallos Portilla.

- La Casa de Mauro. (River Rafting in Majes River)
Manager: Sr Maurilio AmilcarZuñiga Medina.

THE BEST ADVENTURE TOURISM PROMOTERS

-Lic. Humberto Huamaní Luque.

-Ing. Mauricio de Romaña Bustamante.

-Antrop. Pablo Masías Núñez del Prado.

-Sr. Guillermo Carlos Rendón Cuadros.

-Sr. Maurilio Amílcar Zúñiga Medina.

-Sr. Miguel ÁngelFernández Cayetano

-Sr. Walter Valderrama.

-Sr- Gonzalo Ruy Zevallos Portilla.

-Sr. Manuel Vera Mamani.

-Sra Sofia Chislla Callo.

THE BEST ADVENTURE TOURISM EVENTS

-Primera Expedición Peruano-Europea de Canotaje de Altura DISCOVERY (Colca Rafting)  
        
-Carrera de Ciclismo más alta del Mundo INKABIKE 2003 (Dircetur).

-Carrera de Ciclismo Sobredosis de Adrenalina 2004 (Dircetur).

-Raid de Campeones Mallku Jaqe 2005 (Dircetur).

-Raid de Ciclismo Uniendo las Maravillas del Mundo Colca-Cotahuasi (Municipalidad Provincial de Caylloma-Autocolca).

SPECIAL AWARDS

-Eloy Cacya Cárdenas declared as MOUNTAINCLIMBING GUIDE OF THE YEAR 2013.

-Unidad de Salvamento y Rescate de Alta Montaña USAM.

THE BEST ECOTURISM TV PROGRAMS

-Programa de TV El Caminante.

-Programa de TV Pureq Runa.

-TV UNSA.

-Programa de TV Reportaje al Perú.

THE BEST MUNICIPALITIES OF THE YEAR 2013

-Municipalidad distrital de Cayma

-Municipalidad distrital de Yanahuara

-Municipalidad distrital de Selva Alegre

-Municipalidad distrital de Mollebaya

-Municipalidad distrital de Quequeña

-Municipalidad distrital de Yarabamba

-Municipalidad Provincial de Islay

-Municipalidad distrital de Huanca

-Municipalidad distrital de Lluta

-Municipalidad distrital de Yura

-Municipalidad distrital de Sibayo

-Municipalidad Provincial de Cotahuasi –La Unión

-Municipalidad provincial de Castilla

-Autocolca.

THE INDUCTEES TO THE AQP XTREME SPORTS HALL OF FAME 2013

-Maurilio Amilcar Zuñiga Medina.(River Rafting)

-Gustavo Rondón Alvarez.(River Rafting and Kayaking)

-Guillermo Carlos Rendón Cuadros.(Mountainbiking)

Friday, August 2, 2013

Tragedia enluta sector turismo en Arequipa

Tragedia enluta sector turismo en Arequipa.

Propietaria de COMFORT TOURS SAC fallece en trágico accidente de tránsito

La propietaria de la agencia de viajes y turismo COMFORT TOURS SAC  YANETH VIDAL GOMEZ falleció de forma trágica el día 31 de Julio a las 17: 30 aprox en el kilómetro 792 en el sector de San Juan de Chorunga, al colisionar violentamente el  auto Toyota Yaris en el que viajaba con un camión de marca MACK que había invadido el carril contrario.

La colisión fué frontal y muy violenta, ya que según las informaciones, el auto Toyota Yaris de color rojo fue arrastrado varios metros por el camión dejando como saldo tres muertos: YANETH VIDAL GOMEZ, ALEX VIDAL GOMEZ ,y FLOR DE MARIA ZUÑIGA DE VIDAL pereciendo estos dos últimos instantáneamente. YANETH VIDAL GOMEZ fue rescatada por personal de la Policía Nacional y el Cuerpo de Bomberos con vida, pero debido a las severas fracturas y desangramiento falleció en el momento en que iba a ser trasladada al hospital de Camaná.

YANETH VIDAL GOMEZ era una conocida empresaria del sector turismo en Arequipa asi como en Cusco quien se hizo conocer por ser una madre abnegada así como una empresaria emprendedora muy querida por muchos.

Desde la redacción de The Colca Specialist enviamos nuestras más sinceras condolencias a todos los familiares asi como a todo el personal de la empresa COMFORT TOURS SAC de Arequipa y Cusco esperando que la Divina Gracia acoja en su seno a quien en vida fuera YANETH VIDAL GOMEZ.


The Colca Specialist

Sunday, May 19, 2013

Municipalidad de Arequipa y Embajador Cultural capacitan a estudiantes de turismo

The Colca Specialist


La Municipalidad de Arequipa a través de la Gerencia de Cooperación Internacional y Turismo viene organizando en coordinación con la Asociación de Guías de Turismo y Orientadores Turísticos de la Provincia de Caylloma una serie de charlas de capacitación dirigidas a los estudiantes de turismo de las distintas casas de estudio de Arequipa, esto a pedido del Embajador Cultural de la Provincia de Caylloma Sr Guillermo Carlos Rendón Cuadros  a fin de mejorar la calidad de los servicios turísticos a futuro.


La primera charla se dio el día 9 del presente mes en el cine auditorio de la Municipalidad Provincial de Arequipa y el tema central fue el Trekking en el Cañón del Colca.

En la primera parte de la charla Guillermo Rendón expuso de manera muy detallada y concisa toda la parte teórica así como los requerimientos para la práctica de esta disciplina, que en la actualidad se ha convertido en la más importante dentro del ecoturismo, siendo el circuito más importante a nivel nacional el denominado Inca Trail o Camino Inca localizado en la ciudad imperial del Cusco.

Cabe destacar que el número de turistas que vienen al Perú a practicar esta actividad es cada vez mayor, por lo que se hace necesario formular proyectos de desarrollo en base a las tendencias turísticas actuales, y no en base a caprichos de los políticos de turno cuyo desconocimiento sobre el turismo y su problemática es una muestra tangible de la terrible situación en la que se encuentra el sector turismo en Arequipa y que mejor que empezar capacitando a los estudiantes de turismo de Arequipa, quienes a futuro serán los llamados a hacer los cambios que este rubro tanto necesita.

En el caso de Arequipa, el Trekking en el Cañón del Colca es a la fecha el circuito favorito de los turistas extranjeros. Este circuito no ha sido creado por las autoridades sino más bien por los mismos turistas quienes se aventuraban a ir más allá de la Cruz del Cóndor.

A pesar de ser el más visitado en Arequipa, este viene siendo gestionado de la peor manera posible, lo que ha provocado que muchos turistas hayan sido víctimas de robos, violaciones y muertes, esto debido a la incapacidad de las autoridades representativas y en especial de AUTOCOLCA entidad que a la fecha hace agua por todos lados. Ni siquiera las portadas pagadas en los distintos diarios locales que constantemente anuncian falsos incrementos del número de visitantes al Cañón del Colca salvarán la imagen institucional ya dañada por ellos mismos de la manera más absurda posible. ¿Acaso no fueron los autodenominados “magisters” como el Sr Raul Gonzales Veliz,ex promotor turístico de AUTOCOLCA y autor de la campaña de promoción turística en base a la muerte del estudiante Ciro Castillo Rojo quien acabó convertido en escultura cerca a la plaza de Chivay?

Si esto hace un promotor turístico de AUTOCOLCA ya se imaginaran que es lo que vienen haciendo a la fecha los representantes de esta institución dirigida de forma chaplinesca por caricaturescos personajes convertidos en autoridades.

A pesar de haberse incrementado los costos del Boleto Turístico los circuitos de Trekking en el Cañón del Colca se encuentran en un estado deplorable sin señalización homologada internacional, llenos de basura y desperdicios plásticos lo que causa la indignación de los turistas quienes se sienten literalmente estafados al pagar un boleto turístico que en NADA CONTRIBUYE A LA MEJORA DE DICHOS CIRCUITOS. Ni que decir del rio Colca que se ha convertido en el vertedero de las aguas hervidas de los distintos poblados de la provincia de Caylloma. La pestilencia generada por el rio Colca en los meses de sequía en la zona de Sangalle es terrible, ocasionando la molestia de los turistas quienes se van decepcionados por la falta de conciencia ambiental tanto de los pobladores como de las autoridades representativas de la zona a quienes solo les interesa llenarse los bolsillos con el cuento del turismo.

Para colmo de males, los circuitos de Trekking en el Cañón del Colca cuentan con LOS PEORES GUIAS DE TURISMO ya que el 95% de los mismos son informales y no cuentan con identificación alguna, situación que atenta de forma directa en contra de la imagen del turismo en el Cañón del Colca y por ende de Arequipa. Y nosotros nos preguntamos: ¿Dónde están los presidentes acomodaticios de las Asociaciones de Guías de Turismo de Arequipa que no hacen nada al respecto? ¿Cuál es la contribución de estas asociaciones corruptas de guías de turismo de Arequipa al desarrollo del turismo en Arequipa? ¿Qué hace AUTOCOLCA con respecto a esta situación? Nada de nada. ¿Con que cara pretenden compara a Cusco con el Cañón del Colca cuando a la fecha ni siquiera pueden arreglar la carretera? ¿Cómo pretenden comparar a Cusco con el Cañón del Colca si ni siquiera pueden poner un alto a los guías informales?

Guillermo Rendón Cuadros a su vez descargó su artillería pesada no sólo en contra de las autoridades representativas del sector turismo, sino que el blanco de sus ataques fueron también los profesores de los distintos institutos de turismo, quienes en su mayoría no vienen dando una educación de calidad ni una preparación adecuada a los estudiantes de turismo.

Esta situación ha provocado que los pobladores del Valle y Cañón del Colca rechacen la presencia de los guías de turismo arequipeños debido a su desconocimiento de las culturas locales y por desinformar a los turistas con sus improvisadas y desactualizadas informaciones consideradas disparatadas, convirtiéndolos de esta manera en el hazmerreír de los pobladores de la zona.

Increíble pero cierto. Sólo aquí en Arequipa se dan situaciones como estas.

Felicitamos la decisión del Embajador Cultural de la Provincia de Caylloma Sr Guillermo Rendón Cuadros de organizar charlas de capacitación para los estudiantes de turismo de Arequipa quienes como mencionó él durante la charla son los llamados a cambiar la imagen apocalíptica que tiene el sector turismo a la fecha. Esperamos que asi sea por el bien de todos.

The Colca Specialist

Sunday, April 28, 2013

MPA ORGANIZA CHARLAS DE CAPACITACION SOBRE TREKKING EN EL CAÑÓN DEL COLCA


por The Colca Specialist

La Sub-gerencia de Turismo de la Municipalidad Provincial de Arequipa viene organizando  una serie de charlas de capacitación a fin de mejorar la calidad de los servicios turísticos en la Provincia de Caylloma y la Región Arequipa. Dichas charlas están dirigidas a todos los estudiantes de turismo de nuestra región y esta es la primera vez en la historia de Arequipa que se dan estas charlas de capacitación a estudiantes de turismo ya que hasta la fecha nuestras esclerosadas autoridades del sector turismo no hacen nada por mejorar la calidad de los servicios turísticos en Arequipa a pesar de la terrible problemática en la que la “industria sin chimeneas” arequipeña se encuentra.

La primera charla se llevará a cabo este 9 de Mayo a las 10:00 am en el Cine-Auditorio de la Municipalidad Provincial de Arequipa en donde el conferencista principal será el Embajador Cultural de la Provincia de Caylloma Guillermo Carlos Rendón Cuadros quien dará una charla acerca del trekking o turismo de caminatas en el Cañón del Colca. Dicha charla altamente didáctica tiene como objetivo informar e instruir de manera veraz a los estudiantes de turismo acerca de esta actividad como es el trekking o turismo de caminatas en el Cañón del Colca, un tipo de turismo que va en aumento cada vez más a nivel nacional siendo el principal circuito de trekking el denominado “Camino Inca” en la ciudad imperial del Cusco.

Además de informar e instruir a los estudiantes de turismo estas charlas tienen como objetivo principal no sólo el de mejorar la calidad de los servicios turísticos en este rubro sino el de EVITAR Y REDUCIR LOS ACCIDENTES Y LAS TRAGICAS MUERTES OCURRIDAS EN EL CAÑÓN DEL COLCA EL AÑO PASADO siendo la muerte del estudiante CIRO CASTILLO ROJO el caso más controversial de todos los ocurridos hasta la fecha.

Menos Harlem Shake y más capacitación- pidieron al unísono los guías locales de Caylloma al alcalde Elmer Cáceres Llica quien a la fecha se viene comportando como una prima donna  sin que hasta la fecha de una solución a los problemas del sector turismo. La problemática del turismo en la provincia de Caylloma requiere de medidas urgentes y no payasadas mediáticas, ni titulares fraudulentos, ni tampoco desfiles de modelos veteranas como FASHION SHOW cuyo objetivo principal no es el de difundir ni el de incrementar las ventas de la artesanía cayllomina sino más bien satisfacer las bajas pasiones de un alcalde paparazzi de provincia y malversar los fondos de AUTOCOLCA de la manera más burda.

Son muchos los pobladores de la provincia de Caylloma que vienen mostrando su descontento ante la pésima gestión de Elmer Cáceres Llica. Con carreteras llenas de huecos, con poblados que se hunden no solo víctimas de las inclemencias de la naturaleza sino también de la economía actual es absurdo que AUTOCOLCA venga despilfarrando el dinero de los boletos turísticos en eventos que no tienen ningún impacto directo en la mejora de los servicios turísticos ofrecidos en la Provincia de Caylloma ni en la calidad de vida de sus pobladores. 

Friday, February 15, 2013

An andean transcendental anthropology



By Juan Nuñez del Prado

I give myself license to write the following as I believe that this text can contribute with certain knowledge originating form a peculiar discovery that can be of a lot of help to guide the politics of inter-religious relations in a more understanding and constructive directions, especially now that these have come to be so important worldwide.

My profession is that of an Anthropologist. I have dedicated myself to researching “The Supernatural Andean World” from 1968 until today. From 1971, until the date of his death, I maintained a fraternal, personal, intellectual and sometimes controversial dialog with the Jesuit priest and anthropologist, Manuel Marzal S.J. who, to my understanding is the main authority in Religious Sciences in Andean and South American studies. A short time before his death, Manolo asked me to contribute with an article for the fourth volume of the Iberian-American Encyclopedia of Religions; I will use this as a reference in certain parts of this article.

Like the majority of South Americans I was born into the Catholic Church, but because of different circumstances between the ages of 18 and 31 I declared myself atheist. At the age of 31, during the year of 1976, because of a deep personal crisis I returned to the Christian faith and to the Catholic Church by means of “the Catholic Pentecostals” post-conciliating movement.

The hypothesis that I want to propose is founded on the allegation that Jesus Christ “was like us in everything except in sin”; this allows for a possibility of a “Christians Anthropology”. It is also founded on an idea proposed by an eminent Brazilian priest who I once had the opportunity to meet, which states “modern theology relating to inter-religious relations normally relies on the findings of “Religious Sciences”.

In 1979, I came into contact with and became apprentice of Don Benito Qoriwaman Vargas, Don Melchor Deza, Don Andres Espinoza and Don Mauel Quispe. All of them were indigenous Andean instructors, who are traditionally called “Alto Misayoq”. They considered and declared themselves Catholic; they practiced the sacraments and privately participated in certain peregrinations the Andean sanctuaries dedicated to the Lord and to Holy Mary. Their believes made up a synthetic system, which Priest Marzal called “Cultural Christianity”. It combined fundamental Christian believes with believes and rituals originating from the sophisticated Pre Columbian animism of the Incas.

What I learned with them was also a series of sophisticated spiritual practices, which I called “spiritual Andean Art” (but the details are not relevant at the moment). I also learned a hierarchical system, that can be considered as “Transcendental Anthropology” and that is described in the seventh epigraph of my article “The Return of the Inca, form Colonial Times to Globalization” in pages 246 to 249 of the fourth volume of the Iberian-American Encyclopedia of Religions that appears in the bibliography. I find this second aspect pertinent, therefore I will discuss it below.

It entails a mystical, complex sacerdotal hierarchy, partly virtual and partly prospective. This mentor hierarchy is parallel to the hierarchy of the beings that make up the religious universe in the Andes, as well as to a series of social groups of scalar dimension which constitute the Andean ethno- sociology.

The first sacerdotal level is made up by “Ayllu Alto Meshayoq”. This is the priest who has had an experience of seeing and being a part of the power of “Ayllu Apu”, spirit of the mountain, protector of a district. For example, for the area of Cusco, Apu Pikol and Apu Pukin are the guardians for the “Ayllus” of San Jeronimo and Santiago.

The second level is made up by “Llaqta Alto Meshayoq”, who has had the experience of seeing and being a part of the power of a “Llaqta Apu”, spirit of the mountain, guardian of a micro-region. For example, for the area of Cusco, Apu Saqsaywaman or Apu Wanakauri are guardians of the whole “Ayllu” of the Cusco Valley.

The third level consists of “Suyu Alto Mesayoq”, who has had an experience of seeing and being part of the power of the “Suyu Apu”, guardian of a region. For example, for the area of Cusco, Apu Ausangate and Apu Salqantay are the guardians of the extensive regions that begins in the South, in La Raya and extends North until the Pampas River, in the West until the Apurimaq River and in the East until the Yavero River.

The fourth level is made up by “Kuraq Akulleq”, who has had an experience of seeing and being a part of the power of the “Apuyaya” of “Taytacha”, alternative names given to Christ, the guardian of the universe. For example, the area of Cusco has the Taytacha Temblores, the Taytacha Qoyllurit’I, the Wanka Taytacha, Torrechayoq Taytacha or the Papak’uchu Taytacha, etc.

These are the four virtual sacerdotal levels, which have a training and an initiation process and also currently have working priests, who are capable of conferring their knowledge to other learners.
The fifth, sixth and seventh levels are prospective levels, meaning that currently there aren’t any priests exercising them and as a result, there is no one that can confer them. But, the levels and their characteristics are known for potential candidates.

The manifestation of these three new sacerdotal levels is part of the beginning of an era called “Taripay Pacha” or the encounter and wholesomeness of humanity, which according to the Andean point of view, should be more magnificent, fulfilling and satisfactory for humanity than that of the past Inca times.

The fifth level is called “Mallku Inka” and its meaning could be understood as someone being a part of the Inca’s bloodline. The property that someone in this level should have is to be “Tukuy Hampeq”, meaning, the person has to have power to cure any ailment, no exceptions, with the touch of his hands.

The current Andean priests are only “Hampeq”, meaning they have the capacity to cure ailments through miracles or rituals. But they recognize that their powers are still ambiguous or insufficient since sometimes they works and sometimes they don’t. A “Mallku Inka” should be able to show a miraculous curing power that always works and has results that can be visible and confirmed for all ailments and in all circumstances.
The sixth level is called “Sapa Inka”, which can be translated to “the singular Inca”. It’s the same title that was given in the XVI century to the leaders of the Tawantinsuyu Empire, or the title that the aspirers for Tawantinsuyu leadership gave themselves in the XVIII century. The quality that he must have and for which he will be recognized is called “Kánchaq” meaning that he has the capability of shining. To be recognized as such, a Sapa Inka should be able to shine in public in a visible manner for the onlookers.

The Sapa Inka will be able to conjugate “Taqe” between willingness and love, ”Munay”, work and creative labor “Llankay” and knowledge “Yachay” of all the towns of the ancient Tawantinsuyu and be able to reconstruct them, filling them with “Kausay”, vital forces; giving initiation with these actions to the adulthood of the Taripay Pacha Golden Age, in which the “Paytiti” will manifest itself in this world or the metaphysical city of the Andean eschatology.

Recently, Jorge Flores has identified the meaning of the word Enqa, as the title that is given not only to one particular person, but also as a spiritual quality in which an individual is able to concentrate vital energy in himself in order to redistribute it. At the same time, Jean Szeminski has suggested that one of the basic notions of which the organization of the Tawantinsuyu is made up was that of the capability and duty of the leader as much as of the imperial apparatus for the concentration and redistribution of life.

The seventh level is called “Taytanchis Rantiy” which means “the equivalent of our Father God”. The tasks which the individual in this level will do are not known, but its coming will be associated with an advanced era of the Taripay Pacha. The meaning of the word suggests a type of representative of God on earth, which could be compared to the eschatological expectation of the second coming of Christ of some Christians.

The manifestation of these three new levels in the hierarchy is reserved for the Taripaypacha era, which in the Andean eschatology is a new era that is coming. As is known, the temporary –contemporary Andean eschatology classifies history in three stages, whose symbolic denominations usually derive from the Joaquinista eschatology. As it seems, it was assimilated by the Andean civilization in the XVI century through the messianic movement of the “Taki Onqoy”. The first stage is called “Dios Yaya Pacha” or the time of the Father God. It was initiated with the founding of the Inca Empire by Manko Qapaq or Inkari, depending on the case, and it expanded during the duration of the Tawantinsuyu, ending with the death of the Incas Waskar and Atawallpa.

The second stage called “Dios Churi Pacha” or the time of the Son of God, began with the conquest and has lasted until our days. The third stage or “Holy Spirit God Pacha” which is also called “Taripay Pacha” is probably starting and it is in this one in which three hierarchies will manifest themselves,through the “Mosoq Karpay” or new initiation, which has to be directly distributed by God to those people he considers appropriate to be carriers of the new capacities. *

According to the Andean scatology, the vehicle which carries this new initiation should be the “Siwar Qenty” or Royal Humming Bird which, according to the Andean System, is the bird that has access to the center of the Hanaq Pacha, where the person of God is found.

Between the first and the second stages, and the second and third stages, there are essential “Pachakuti” or cosmic transmutations, through which the coming of the era is prepared, with a re-ordering of the cosmos.
According to the contemporary instructors, the last Pachakuti has already taken place and was produced between the first of August 1990 and the first of August 1993, so we are already in the initial part of the Taripay Pacha, that has to have an initial period of seven years, followed by another of twelve which will be the maturity stage and afterward, the manifestation of the new age will be produced.

During this period, the “Paqo’s”, the name given to the Andean priests, as well as to the town of the Andes, have an active participation in the preparing of the necessary conditions for the manifestation of the three new hierarchy levels and the coming of the persons that will guide the new age.

In reference to the first (the paqo’s), their contribution is made through the practice of traditional rituals and the passing on of the knowledge and initiation rituals of the Andean priesthood career in the diverse hierarchies that it is composed by . According to the tradition of Don Benito Qoriwaman, a “Kuraq Akulleq” or priest of the fourth level of the Valley of Cusco, the most important contribution of colleagues of the same fourth level consists of becoming “Inka Mallku”, through a ritual that lasts ten days, that takes place in a group of traditional sacred places in the region and that includes Machupicchu from below to the Wiraqocha Temple on top, in the Valley of “Willka Mayu” and the Valley of Cusco itself. According to Juan Ossio’s opinion about the description of this ritual: it’s about the process of a coronation of a sacred king. This process is called the Hatun Karpay.

The participation of the Andean towns and their contribution to the birth of the new era happens through their participation in the traditional religious festivities, especially through their involvement in diverse sanctuaries of regional importance.

Among them we can consider the sanctuaries of Señor de Torrechayoq in the province of Urubamba, el Señor de Wanka in the province of Calca, el Señor de Qoyllorit’i in the province of Quispicanchis or el Señor de Pampak’uchu in the province of Canchis and of course, in the involvement in the celebration of the sanctuary of the “Taytacha Temblores” in the province of Cusco, all of them in the region of Cusco.

The findings of the hierarchical system of the seven sacerdotal levels that I have mentioned before, wouldn’t have been more important than another piece of etiology data, if in 1985, Mr. Juan Murillo Valdivia, a friend of mine, connoisseur of the Bible and a very devout Catholic, hadn’t pointed out to me according to one of his findings, that there exists a parallelism of extraordinary meaning,between the spiritual hierarchy that I had just discovered and the first seven levels that appear in the 3 first chapters of Saint John’s Apocalypses in the Bible. This Bible’s seven levels are introduced as “the message of the seven churches”. I have dedicated myself to the analysis and study of this parallelism from then, until now.

As a matter of fact, both hierarchies appear to be parallel to a spiritual development process that Carl G. Jung called “an individuation process”. In the case of the Andean scale, the spiritualprogression is explicit, since it is considered part of a spiritual career. This career ends ideally, in the level of “Taytanchis Rantiy” since this level means “equivalent to God on earth”. This can be translated by a Christian to “the reproduction of Christ”.

In the case of the seven churches of the apocalypse, in the message to the first the Lord says to the visionary, “If you win, I will feed you with the fruit form the tree of life that is in my God’s paradise”. This, according to Saint Pablo decoding the symbolic language form the Bible means, to become a second “Adam with no sin”, since the one who was supposed to eat “fruit from the tree of life” was Adam and he couldn’t do it because ate “fruit from the tree of the knowledge of good and bad” beforehand. In the message to the seventh church, the Lord says to the visionary “if you win you will sit on my throne, like my father has sat me on his throne”.

According to Christian theology, the only one who has sat on the Father’s throne is our Lord Jesus Christ, meaning that the decoded message to the seventh church means “be like Christ”; according to an invitation from Saint Paul directed to the believers of the first century of our times.

The possibility of legitimately comparing the Andean and Christian levels is permissible in the Catholic Theology, according to the “Semina Verbi” principle established by Saint Augustine. On the other hand, from my scientific information, I interpreted the concordance between both systems as a “second independent verification”, since between my Indian Instructors and the visionary of the apocalypse, there were almost 2,000 years of history and the void of cultural context that exists between the Hellenic civilization form the beginning of our times and the contemporary Andean civilization.

Scientifically, there exist two independent, parallel and concordant descriptions, from the same process; it is assumed that behind both descriptions lays the action of “A Natural Law”. Given that in both levels the final objective can be interpreted like the “reproduction of Christ”, that can be reached through 7 steps, such “law” couldn’t be anything else, but the one that directs the spiritual human development to Christification.

In conclusion, I have the hypothesis that the Christian scale wouldn’t be only in the first seven levels of the Saint John’s apocalypse, but that in some way it would also be in the gospel. Actually, it appears to be expressed in a symbolic manner in a series of acknowledgements of the Lord during his private life and in some culminating passages of his public life.

This way, the Lord is recognized, first like “Pastor of the Pastors” by the pastors, who inspired by the angels, go and worship him in the manger of Bethlehem. Secondly, he is recognized as “magician of magicians” by three kings of the orient, who offer him gold, incense and myrrh. Thirdly, as “Prophet of Prophets” by Simeon and Ana, when he is introduced in the temple and this couple prophesizes about his ministry. Fourthly, he is known as “the wisest of the wise”, when he was 12 years old and is recognized by the “wise” of Salomon’s temple. These remarks referring to the Lord’s private life.

After circa 18 years, the prelude of the Lord’s public life is his recognition as messiah, by John the Baptist, who according to Jesus himself, has a superior rank to any other prophet of Israel, when the Lord says: “from the ones born of women, there is no one better than John”. Afterwards and according to this arrangement, the Lord acquires a fifth degree when he is “anointed” by the Holy Spirit, after John baptizes him in the Jordan River, at the beginning of his public life. He acquires a sixth degree when he is visited by Moses and Elias; he is “transfigured” and shines in front of some of his disciples in Mount Tabor. Finally, the Lord acquires the seventh degree, when after his passion and death he is “revived of death”. This degree would be the one that differentiates the qualities of Christianity from all other superior, metaphysical religions, according to the statement made by Saint Paul, when he says “If Christ did not revive, meaningless is our faith”.

Again, due to my scientific upbringing, I was informed of the “Ontogenetic Recapitulation Law of Filogenesis” that operates in biological evolution, cultural evolution, and according to Sigmund Freud and Carl G. Jung, it operates also in the evolution of “depth psychology”.

This led me to suppose that what happened in the Lord’s life, must have had antecedents in the “preparation of his arrival”, meaning in the Old Testament. And, as a matter of fact, I could also establish another correlation.First, the patriarch Abraham, the first historical character of the Bible, is a “Pastor of Pastors”. Secondly, Joseph, who was sold by his brothers and was later made the minister of the pharaoh,when he defeats his magicians, is made “Magician of the magicians”.

Thirdly, when Moses meets the lord for the first time, he is made a Prophet. Fourthly, when Salomon asks from God and receives from him the gift of knowledge, he is obviously made wise. In my point of view, this implies a correlation with the four first levels of the scale, corresponding at the same time to the acknowledgements received by our Lord during his private life.

About the “Ontogenetic Recapitulation Law of Filogenesis” that I am freely attributing to the life of our Lord, I am justified by the statement expressed by his sanctity John Paul II when in one of his trips to Mexico City he mentioned to a group of compromised laics “Christ is the recapitulation of all creation”.

Moses and Elias, in my point of view, should be treated in a particular way. About Moses, the classification I have made about him as a prophet corresponds in my point of view to the initiation of his spiritual development process, which appears to have been taken much further later. Elias and Moses are directly related to fire, which in biblical terms is the symbol of the Holy Spirit. The fire instructs Moses in the episode of the “burning bush” and responds to the expectations of Elias in the episode of his confrontation with priests of Baal, where in favor to Elias, the Lord lights the holocaust of his offering. Such relationship types appear to suggest two successive degrees of a relationship of the believer with the Holy Spirit. Nevertheless, such difference is in a certain way circumstantial, facing the fact that in some point in their career, both become great thaumaturgies, meaning, they performed miracles, an aptitude that in the bible is related to the third person of the trinity, the Holy Spirit.

According to the Bible, Moses, as well as Elias, don’t seem to have left their bodies on earth. It is said that Moses was “snatched” leaving this event a mystery. Elias is also “snatched to heaven” in a car of fire, in the presence of Eliseo.

From this it can be hypothetically concluded, that in two different and independent times of history, Moses and Elias have taken spiritual development to Israel successfully to the fifth and sixth levels.
Being the first one a pioneer actor and the second an actor of the recapitulation of the process. In this way, both would have been “prefigurations of Christ”, concept, which to my understanding isaccepted in Catholic Theology.

This interpretation seems to be corroborated by the fact that a time after giving “the commandments” to the city, Moses ascends to the mountain and returns shining. And, also for thefact that in the transfiguration of Christ, it’s Moses and Elias who appear simultaneously to our Lord Jesus Christ and all three, shine in front of the disciples of Jesus, who were permitted to go up the mountain.

That would imply for that moment a “mystic participation” between Moses, Elias and the Lord in the manifestation of the sixth degree of spiritual consciousness.
I think that an interpretation of this kind, is not too different from the Catholic Church’s tradition and practice today, since according to Mario Escobar Moscoso, in the text of “the Seven Dwellings” by Saint Teresa del Avila, developed and written in the XVI century, a hierarchy of spiritual progression can be discovered, similar and corresponding to the seven levels described her. The Holy Spanish woman has been declared by our church a Mystic Doctor, meaning expert in the process of spiritual development. At the same time, inside of our church, there are the practices of the “Neocatecumenado”, founded by the Spanish man Kiko Arguello, whose practice I would consider also “a Spiritual Art”.

It consists of seven steps of descending to the baptismal faucet, considered a purification process; and seven steps of ascending going out from the baptismal faucet, considered like “a process of spiritual development, following our Lord Jesus Christ”.

According to Arguello, the “Neocatecumenado” recuperates practices that were transmitted to the Christian novice as part of his training and intitiation process during the two first centuries of the history of our church. Recently, because of Arguello’s petition and after a very prolonged procedure and exhaustive testing, the “Neocatecumendado” has been admitted, not as a church movement,but as an “initiation inside the church”.

Despite being up to a certain point in concordance with theology, this argument does not pretend to be Theological, since, as the reader can see it’s the result of the application to the Andean ethological material as well as to the Bible text of the usual techniques of the concomitant variation method and symbolic decodification, used in Anthropology. It can be said then, that it is, from the Religion Science point of view, simply “a documented work hypothesis”, relatively in concordance with the contemporary catholic theology.

On the other hand, and widening the meaning of my discovery, Cesar Cornejo Zavaleta, showed me the existence, inside the Sufi tradition –mystic branch of Islam- of another comparable seven levels, coded in terms of the “flight of the birds through the seven valleys”. Later research taught me that slao, according to the Sufi tradition, Mohamed, after he had written and given the Koran to the town, went up the mountain form which he descended shining. 

This implies an extraordinary similitude to what happened to Moses. Also, during his illumination, Mohamed was raised and he saw the seven heavens, during this experience he had a repetitive discussion with Moses about the obligations that were to be required of the believers of Islam.

Between both events, it was suggested that during his mystic appearance in the VI century of our times, Mohamed would have had access to the hierarchical seven and that the prophet of Islamwould have had established the sixth degree of spiritual development, due to the fact that he shined as much as to do to his diacritical dialog with Moses, which according to what we have suggested is representative of the sixth degree. In this way, the phenomenon of his body being “snatched” from this earth would also be accessible to him, as it is claimed by Islamic tradition.

In this manner, if Moses and Elias symbolized “representations of our Lord”, Mohamed would have been a recapitulation of the of the “Christian Manifestation” process of Moses and Elias and of the Lord himself, up to the sixth level. This seems reasonable since Mohamed “converts” to monotheism, due to the preaching of a Christian monk, and according to the Islamic tradition, his purposed would have been to translate the high moral message from the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ into a group of direct and particle rules, in concordance to the mentality of the Arabian town of those days.

The result inspired by such objective, is from the Islamic point of view, “The Koran”, whose composition is considered from their point fo view, the “only miracle” done by Prophet Mohamed during his life. Finally, and again inside the Sufi tradition, Jesus Christ our Lord in honored as the “identifying mark of the Perfect Saints” and Mohamed as “Identifying mark of the Perfect Prophets”.

If it is possible to agree that the members of all three monotheist religions worship the same and only metaphysical God, under slightly different names, it would be possible for a Christian to believe and publicly declare that:”Allah is the only true God and Mohamed is his Prophet”, without the lessening of his faith nor of his church’s faith, which would only mean he is honoring the prophet of another religion in his due magnitude. In fact, we already do it with Judaism considering Moses and Elias as “True Prophets”.

From the strict historical point of view, supported by the English historian Arnold J. Toynbee., Judaism is a “fossilized” social religious segment of the ciriaca civilization was frozen in its evolution process, autonomous for a space of ten centuries, as a result of the conquests by Alejandro Magno. As said by Toynbee, such civilization would have continued again, from the point from which it was detained, the preaching of Mohamed.

I had the opportunity to be in the Scandinavian countries during the time in which, in my opinion, there was a very violent and angry reaction to a production of some comic strips about Prophet Mohamed. I think that the Muslim world in the Islamic countries as well as the Islamic residents in Europe are extremely sensible to what Christians could suggest or mention about them, their culture, and especially their prophet, whether it’s positive or negative. This context of extreme susceptibility originated the recent reaction to the words of the Pope Benedict XVI during his visit to Germany.

Both Islamic reactions appear to be sharp reactions of what Samuel P. Huntington denominated “the Clash of Cultures”, which in my opinion is the closest “Geo Religious” approximation to the world that is born, after the successive obsolescing of the rationalist ideologies, communist first and capitalist after.

There are two aspects that I consider fundamental in the geo religious approximation of Mr. Huntington: First that the critical factor of the international confrontations has displaced from“Economic Politics” (“Dictatorial Socialism” vs. “Liberal Capitalism”) to “Cultural Religious” predicaments or “Civilizations”. Secondly, that in the numbering of the possible civilization actors resulting from the “Worldly Reconfiguration” , Mr. Huntington considers “5 living Civilizations”, already identified in the 40s by Mr. Toynbee, and also, considered new and independent actors: “The African sub Saharan civilization”, “The Buddhist civilization”, and “the Latin American civilization”.

Such implication seems to be corroborated in reference to “the Buddhist civilization” due to the ever increasing authority of the Dalai Lama, starting from the decade of the 60s. In reference to the “Latin American Civilization” because of the variety and wealth of spiritual phenomenon that happen here and that are described exhaustively in the works done by Father Manuel Marzal, already mentioned before and specially in his work “Enchanted Earth”, also published by the Trotta editorial company.

For a comprehensive and productive treatment of the Latin American phenomena, our church counts with the approximation of “the Encultural Theology”. I have the impression, that this theology is already being applied to the African case.

Returning to the circumstantial subject of the Islamic reactions, I believe that a public announcement like the one I have considered according to this hypothesis, I considered it possible for a Christian, it would take place in the Islamic world, in reactions to of similar intensity, but of contrary direction to the ones produced by the incident of the comic strips or by Pope Benedict XVI mentioning the speech by Emperor Byzantine of the XIV century.

What I wouldn’t dare to foretell, is what would happen inside the Catholic Church, which is a unique organization, extremely big and extremely complex: I think only someone who participates in the instances of knowledge, belonging to the great Catholic religious orders or the ecclesial hierarchy, would be capable to be in such position and capacity.

What was mentioned here could contribute to the design of political “inter-religious” relations for the future. Such politics could use as an instrument of contextualization and characterization, the already mentioned work by Mr. Huntington “The Clash of Civilizations” and as an impartial understanding of the religious content, the work by Mr. Huston Smith, titled “The Religions of the World”, which is to my understanding the best and better understood compendium of information about superior religions, that encourage contemporary living civilizations.

Father Pierre Teilhard de Chardin S.J. was able to make a skillful co pagination about creativity and evolution for the Catholic faith, expressed in a special manner in his works: “The Divine Means” and “The Human Phenomenon”. Father Manuel Marzal S.J. made an adaptation of these works to the requirements of the investigation of Anthropology of Religion, in affirming that “The revelation is the movement of God towards human kind and as a result of an object of study of Theology, while religion is the creative response of humanity to revelation, and as such, a cultural creation and object to be investigated in Anthropology.

 As part of this intellectual context, we can add that Pope John Paul II, said on a certain occasion “Culture is a gift from God to humanity”. It can be said; that Judaism, Christianity and Islam, are other cultural responses to the revelation, and also the seven levels that make up part of their respective doctrines. If as it appears from this analysis, the cultural complexity of the hierarchy of the seven levels makes up a level of the psychic process needed for Christianization or “the omega point”, of the cosmos-vision of Father Teilhard de Chardin, they have as an common objective which has not fully been accomplished yet to contribute to the spiritual development of their particular human communities in the following of Christ and aiming towards Omega.

The acknowledgment of a common objective in this way, could in the long run constitute itself into an instrument of peace in the geographical civilization space occupied by the three monotheist religions; Judaism, Christianity and Islam, in which the raising Latin American civilization and its Andean counterparts are also included.

Finally, I would like to mention, that due to personal reasons that I have mentioned at the beginning of this article, Father Marzal S.J. had reservations in the “impartiality and objectivity” of my points of view. He explicitly expressed such reservations himself in the third paragraph of his article which introduces volume 4 in the “Iberia-American Encyclopedia of Religions”, between pages 31 and 32. I will mention the paragraph below:

“The second work about the return of the Inca is done by Juan Nuñez del Prado. Because of the topic, I supposed that this work could incur in messianic repetitions and I was right. Nevertheless, it contains different elements and also it’s useful to encounter the two points of view about such a discussed subject. 

Nonetheless, the perspectives are somewhat different, because while Ossio focuses on the scientific field and exposes the forms taken by Andean messianism in Peruvian history; Nuñez del Prado, in spite of the great amount of information he has and his extensive occupation in the country as a Quechua speaking native, situates himself in a different field and at times, he is more than a scientist of the Andean Culture, he seems to be a believer of Andean spirituality; in this position his personal relationship with various altomisayocs has with no doubt influenced where he has discovered a persistent hierarchy of Andean specialists and a spirituality that seems to tune with certain religious currents of the postmodern world, which explains the success of spiritual tourism in the region of Cuzco (Jenkins, 1999)”

At the same time, I am fully conscious that everything I have said up to here could simply be the result of my personal need to solve the conflict between my Christian faith and my academic reasoning, something natural for someone who migrated from Pre Conciliar Catholicism to Rationalized Atheism, to finally return to Catholicism subsequent to Vatican Concilio II.

Cuzco, October 12, 2006
Juan Victor Nuñez del Prado Béjar

Bibliography:

Manuel M. Marzal (editor). Religiones Andinas. Enciclopedia Iberoamericana de Religiones. Vol. 04. Editorial Trotta. Madrid. 2005
Huston Smith. The World’s Religions. Harper San Francisco. 1986
Elizabeth Jenkins. Initiation. Putnam. New York. N.Y. 1997
Samuel P. Huntington. The Clash of Civilizations and the remaking of World order. Simon& Schuster. New York 1996.