Sunday, September 2, 2012

Sacred Flower of the Incas #sacredsunday


Sacred Flower of the Incas #sacredsunday  
The Inca legend associated with the Cantua is the tale of two kings named Illimani and Illampu, and their sons. Both kings were powerful and wealthy rulers of a vast country in the Kollasuyo region (today's Bolivian Altiplano), and each had a beloved son whom the people held in great esteem. But as time passed, the kings became irritated at each other's prosperity, and eventually one of them attacked the other.
During the battle, the two kings mortally wounded each other, and were carried away. Each on his dying bed called his son and had him vow to avenge him, even if each son had been opposed to the war in the first place. Bound by their pledge, the sons prepared and led a second war even though they held no grudge against each other. History repeated, and each son inflicted a fatal wound on the other.
But instead of harsh words, the dying sons generously forgave each other, and asked that their servants place them side by side on the green grass of the battlefield. Then appeared Pachamama, Goddess of Fertility, who told the young kings before they died that they shouldn't have suffered from their fathers' unjustified enmity. To punish their dead fathers, their stars fell from the sky, and became the snow-covered mountains still named Illimani and Illampu, which are the highest peaks in the region.
The rivers of their slowly-melting snow are their tears of regret, and fertilize the valleys. The Cantua bloom symbolizes the people's unity, and bears the colours of the two kings' sons (red and yellow), as well as green (standing for hope).

1 comment:

  1. Once when I was on a Journey to Ixtlan, Atahualpa visited me in a vision, all the way from South America, and he delivered to me one of these flowers

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