The Atlantis Encyclopedia

(Nandana) #1

M: Macusis to Mu-yu-Moqo 191


the embodiment of immortality, was Lemuria’s chief emblem. As millennia began
to fade clearer folk memories of Mu, the “Motherland,” Hsi Wang Mu’s palace
was changed to Kun Lun, the western paradise.

Mu-Lat


California Chumash for “bay,” implying a Lemurian influence.

Mu-luc


Literally, “Drowned Mu,” meaning “flood” in the Mayan language.

Mu-Mu-Na


In Australoid myth, the flaming rainbow serpent, also known as Mu-It, that fell
from heaven to cause a world flood. Mu-Mu-Na’s description and name reference
the cometary destruction of both antediluvian civilizations, Mu and Atlantis.

Mu Museum


In the aftermath of World War II, Reikiyo Umemto, a young monk, while
engaged in deep meditation at the southeastern shores of Japan, experienced a
powerful vision of the ancient land of Mu. More than some archaeological flash-
back, it transcended his traditional Buddhist thinking with the sunken realm’s
lost mystery cult, which he refounded as the “World’s Great Equality” in
Hiroshima prefecture. For the next 20 years, he lived and shared its principles
with a few, select followers, until some wealthy backers put themselves at his
disposal. With their support, he built a 12-acre temple-museum with surround-
ing, landscaped grounds closely patterned after structures and designs recalled
from his postwar vision. Work on the red and white complex adorned with life-
size statues of elephants and lively, if esoteric murals was undertaken at a selected
site in Kagoshima prefecture because of the area’s strong physical resemblance
to Mu and the location’s particular geo-spiritual energies. Construction was
completed by the mid-1960s.
A large, professionally staffed institute with modern facilities for display and
laboratory research, the Mu Museum is unique in all the world for its authentic
artifacts and well-made recreations associated with the lost civilization which bears
its name. Although open to the general public, spiritual services at its temple are
restricted to initiates. Reikiyo Umemto passed away in 2002 at 91 years of age.

Mungan Ngaua


According to chronologist, Neil Zimmerer, a Lemurian monarch who
perished with his son, Tundum, in the Great Flood.
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