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by Zecharia Sitchin
The ruins and remains of Mexico's pre-Columbian
civilizations enchant, intrigue, fascinate and puzzle. Of them the oldest and
earliest, that of people referred-to as Olmecs, is the most enigmatic -- for
they challenge present-day scholars to explain how had people from Africa
come and settled and thrived in this part of the New World, thousands of years
before Columbus.
The Discovery
We know how they
looked because they left behind countless sculptures, marvelously carved
in stone, depicting them; some, in fact, are stone portraits of Olmec
leaders; colossal in size, they immortalize in stone what, to many, has
been an unpleasant enigma.
The first colossal stone head was discovered in the
Mexican state of Veracruz back in 1869. Its discoverer reported it in the
Bulletin of the Mexican Geographical and Statistical Society as "a magnificent sculpture that most amazingly represents an Ethiopian."
The report included a drawing clearly showing the stone head's
Negroid features; and that doomed the discovery to
oblivion...
The Re-Discovery
It was not until 1925 that the existence of the Olmecs was
reaffirmed when an archaeological team from Tulane University found another such
gigantic stone head in the adjoining Mexican state of Tabasco; it measured about
eight feet in height and weighed some twenty four tons.
In time, many more such
colossal sculptures have been found; they depict distinctly
different individuals wearing helmets; they also clearly depict, in each
case, a person with African features -- black Africans.
As archaeological discovery followed archaeological
discovery, it became evident that in a vast central area of Mexico
stretching from the Gulf coast to the Pacific coast, these "Olmecs" built
major urban centers, engaged in mining, were the first in Mesoamerica to
have a calendar and hieroglyphic writing, and established what is by now
recognized as Mesoamerica's Mother Civilization.
The Unpleasant
Problem
The problem that this posed was twofold: Not only the issue
of Negroid Africans somehow crossing the Atlantic Ocean and settling in the New
World before others; but also the incredible antiquity of such arrival.
This problem was dealt with by first suggesting that the Olmecs appeared after
more famed peoples such as the Mayas; then by grudgingly acknowledging earlier
dates B.C. --250 B.C., then 500 B.C., then 1250 B.C., then even 1500
B.C.
Faced with such evidence, the solution was to deny that
these were Africans... Even now a noted scholar, writing in the official
catalogue of the Museum of Anthropology of Jalapa, states in regard to the
individuals depicted in the sculptures: "in spite of the general similarity of
features--flat noses with flaring nostrils and thickened lips (leading some to
falsely claim an African origin for the Olmec)," etc.
So: "To falsely claim an African origin for the
Olmecs"!
And this brings me to the Case of the Missing
Elephant.
An Elephant Among the
Wheels
Jalapa, a gem of a town, is about two hours' drive from
Veracruz (where the Spanish Conquistador Hernan Cortes landed in 1519). Its
museum is undoubtedly second only to the famed one in Mexico City; but unlike
Mexico City's which displays artifacts from all over the country, the Jalapa one
exhibits only locally discovered artifacts--predominantly Olmec
ones.
Dramatically and effectively displayed in an innovative
setting, the Museum boasts several colossal stone heads as well as other stone
sculptures. It also displays smaller objects found at Olmec sites; among them,
in special display showcases, are what are considered to be Olmec "toys." They
include animals mounted on wheels -- a visual and evidentiary negation of the
common claim that the people of Mesoamerica (and America in general) were
unfamiliar with the wheel.
And included in the same display case were elephants--"toys" made of clay.
Gone - Where and
Why?
I, and some of my fans who accompanied me, saw them on
previous visits to the Museum.
BUT when I (and again some of my fans with me) was there
recently -- in December 1999--the elephants were nowhere in sight!
I could find no one in authority to obtain an explanation
from. But that the elephants were once there was a fact indeed, here is a
photograph of one, shot on a previous visit.
Now, here is the significance
of this small artifact: There are no, and never have been, elephants in
the Americas. There are and have been elephants in Africa. And a depiction
of an elephant could have been made only by someone who has seen an
elephant, i.e. someone who has been to Africa!
At this and other museums later visited in
December 1999, guards have asserted that objects that I wished to
point out and that were written up in my book The Lost Realms
but somehow vanished, were loaned for an overseas exhibit.
Perhaps. But that such a hard-to-explain depiction of
an elephant would be selected to highlight Mexico's ancient heritage, is
either unlikely or highly significant.
I suppose one will have to
revisit Jalapa and find out whether the little elephant is back among the
"toys."
© Z. Sitchin 2000 Reproduced by permission.
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