The Religions Book

(ff) #1

37


See also: Making sense of the world 20–23 ■ Created for a purpose 32 ■ Sacrifice and blood offerings 40–45 ■ Devotion
through puja 114–15


PRIMAL BELIEFS


People of the mountains
Since before recorded time, Andean
peoples have organized themselves
into ayllus, extended family groups
or clans, each attached to a specific
territory. Within these groups, they
worked the land, shared resources,
and worshipped at their huacas, or
animistic earth shrines. The focus
of worship was to pray to the earth
to feed them—vital assistance in a
mountainous region where farming
was a harsh and laborious process.
Running parallel to their entreaties
to the earth was a belief that, just
as the land had nurtured their
ancestors, it would, with the
intercession of those departed
spirits, continue to nourish them.
Each ayllu mummified and
worshipped the bodies of its dead,
believing that the ancestors would
help maintain the cosmic order and
ensure the fertility of the land
and the animals. The bodies were
wrapped in weavings and placed
in rock mummy shrines (chullpa
machulas) facing the mountaintop.
Once desiccated by the freezing,
dry air, the mummies would be


paraded around the fields during
rituals to make the crops grow.
Meanwhile, priests or diviners
at the huacas and grave shrines
offered up coca leaves, blood, and
fat, believing that if the spirits of the
land and the ancestors were fed,
they would in turn feed the people.

An enduring power
In the 17th century, Christian
missionaries burned many Andean
mummies to quash what they saw
as pagan beliefs. However, some
mummies have survived, and the
modern Quechua believe them to
be the first beings or ancient ones.
The chullpa machulas, now just
niches in the rocks, remain sacred
shrines at which contemporary
diviners still sprinkle blood and fat,
believing this to infuse the sites
with life and energy. Some groups,
such as the Qollahuayos Indians
(see box, below) may burn coca
leaves there, wrapped in bundles of
llama wool. The graves are believed
to retain their power, even without
the mummies that once occupied
them. The Feast of the Dead, on

November 2—marking the end of
the dry season and the beginning
of the rains, when crops can be
planted—remains a focus of the
Andean year, when the dead are
ritually invited to revisit the living,
and to take a share of the harvest. ■

An Inca mummy of a girl who died
five hundred years ago is still preserved;
the ancestors are revered and have a
central role among Andean peoples.

A mountain and a god


The Kaata of modern Bolivia,
who live northeast of Lake
Titicaca, form one of nine ayllus
of the Qollahuayas Indians.
The Kaata have a historic
reputation as fortune-telling
soothsayers; in the 15th century,
Kaatan diviners carried the
chair of the Inca emperor, an
honored task. The power of
these Qollahuaya ritualists
was thought to derive from the
graves of their ancestors on
Mount Kaata. In addition to

the ancestral graves on the
mountain, Mount Kaata itself
is venerated as if it were a
human being—a kind of super-
ancestor—and is also ascribed
physical human attributes. The
highlands are regarded as the
head, with grasses as hair, a
cave for a mouth, and lakes for
eyes; the middle region is the
torso, with heart and bowels
identified; and a pair of ridges
on the lowest reaches are the
legs. The mountain is a living
being that gives the Kaata both
sustenance and guidance.

The dead visit us
and assist us in
our work. They provide
many blessings.
Marcelino,
Kaatan elder
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