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				India and Americas 
 Will Durant,  eminent American historian, in his book Story of Civilization: Our Oriental  Heritage, described India as the most ancient civilization on earth and he  offered many examples of Indian culture throughout the world. He demonstrated  that as early as the ninth century B.C. E. Indians were exploring the sea  routes, reaching out and extending their cultural influences to Mesopotamia,  Arabia, and Egypt.Although modern-day  historians and anthropologists might prefer to accept Egypt or Babylon as the  most ancient civilization, due to various archaeological findings, their  theories are by no means conclusive. The popular theory in the academic  community that the Aryans invaded India has also been disproved. Perhaps it is  easier for modern people to accept ancient Egypt and Babylon, whose ancient  civilizations have no living representation and thereby pose no threat or  challenge to the status quo.
 The New  Zealand pre historian, S. Percy Smith, tries to show in his Hawaiki - the  Original home of the Maori that the ancient Polynesian wanderers left India  as far back as the fourth century B.C. and were daring mariners who made, more  often than not, adventurous voyages with the definite object of new settlements.  A people who reached as far east as Easter Island could not have missed the  great continent ahead of them.
 Baron  Alexander von Humbolt (1769-1859), an eminent European scholar and  anthropologist, was one of the first to postulate the Asiatic origin of the  Indian civilizations of the Americas. He found that the systematic study of  ancient American cultures and was convinced of the Asian origin of the  American-Indian high civilization. He said: «if languages supply but feeble  evidence of ancient communication between the two worlds, their communication is  fully proved by the cosmogonies, the monuments, the hyeroglyphical characters  and the institutions of the people of America and Asia». (India and World  Civilization - By D. P. Singhal).
 Swami B. V. Tripurari asks, «What mysterious  psychological law would have caused Asians, and Americans to both use the  umbrella as a sign of royalty, to invent the same games, imagine similar  cosmologies, and attribute the same colours to the different  directions?».
 Dr. Robert Heine Geldern  anthropologist, has written that «Those who believe the ancient peoples of Asia  were incapable of crossing the ocean have completely lost sight of what the  literary sources tell us concerning their ships and their navigation. Many of  the peoples of South-eastern Asia had adopted Indian Hindu-Buddhist  civilizations. The influences of the Hindu-Buddhist culture of southeast Asia in  Mexico and, particularly, among the Maya, are incredibly strong, and they have  already disturbed some Americanists who don’t like to see them but cannot deny  them». «Ships that could cross the Indian Ocean were able to cross the Pacific  too. Moreover, these ships were really larger and probably more sea-worthy than  those of Columbus and Magellan. The Periplus of the Erythraean sea mentions the  large ships of Southern India which engaged in trade with the countries of the  East. A Chinese source of the third century A.D. describes vessels from Southern  Asia which were 150 feet in length, and had four masts and were able to carry  six to seven hundred men and one thousand metric tons of merchandise when the  Buddhist Pilgrim Fahien returned from Sri Lanka to China, in 414  A.D.».
 Geldern, in collaboration with  Gordon F. Ekholm, said: «Ships of size that carried Fahien from India to China  (through stormy China water) were certainly capable of proceeding all the way to  Mexico and Peru by crossing the Pacific. One thousand years before the birth of  Columbus Indian ships were far superior to any made in Europe up to the 18th  century» (The Civilizations of Ancient America: The Selected Papers of the  XXIXth International Congress of Americanists).
 Sir William Jones (1746-1794) judge of the Supreme  Court at Calcutta, was one who pioneered Sanskrit studies. His admiration for  Indian thought and culture was almost limitless. He has remarked: «Rama is  represented as a descendant from the sun, as the husband of Sita, and the son of  a princess named Kauselya. It is very remarkable that Peruvians, whose Incas  boasted of the same descent, styled their greatest festival Rama-Sitva; whence  we may take it that South America was peopled by the same race who imported into  the farthest of parts of Asia the rites and the fabulous history of Rama»  (Asiatic Researches - Volume I).
 Sir Stamford Raffles, the British historian, and  founder of Singapore as a British colony, expressed a similar view when he wrote  that «the great temple of Borobudur in Java might readily be mistaken for a  Central American temple» (India: Mother of Us All).
 Edward Pococke (1604–1691), English Orientalist, has  written: «The Peruvians and their ancestors, the Indians, are in this point of  view at once seen to be the same people» (India in  Greece).
 Ambassador Miles  Poindexter states in his book, The Ayar-Incas: «Aryan words and people  came to America by the island chains of Polynesia. The very name of the boat in  Mexico is a South Indian (Tamil) word: Catamaran».
 Dr. B. Chakravarti author of The Indians And The  Amerindians has written: «It will be evident from a close study of the  texts of Indian Astronomy that Latin America was known to ancient Indians, who  called it Pataladesha. The Surya Siddhanta, a textbook of Astronomy, composed  before 500 A.D. identifies and describes Pataladesha in very clear and definite  terms in the chapter of geography (chapter XII)».
 
 
 The celebrated  astronomer Bhaskaracarya mentions the time difference between the important  cities situated in different parts of the world in his Siddhanta Siromani  (Goladhyaya) thus: «When the sun rises at Lanka, the time as at  Yakakotipura to the east of Lanka, will be midday. Below the earth at  Siddhapura, it will be twilight then, and at Romakadesa in Europe, the time will  be midnight».
 
 From such location of  places round the globe and the movement towards the east, it appears that many  Indian merchants used to sail frequently and some even settled down in Indonesia  and Indochina, who used to relay on to Polynesia and then further on to South or  Middle America, may be not a single ship and in a single effort, but after  stopovers at the important ports on the other islands-chain of which seems to  have existed then and some of which submerged later because of tectonic  movements. It seems that some contact with the cities mentioned by  Bhaskaracharya might have existed till his time.
 
 Alexander von Humboldt, who spent fifty years doing  research on Ancient America, said: «It is surprising to find, toward the end of  the fifteenth century, in a world that we call “New” the ancient institutions,  the religious ideas, the forms of edifices which, in Asia appear to belong to  the first dawn of civilization».
 
 Those  Indian ships that carried Fahien the Chinese historian and scholar through  stormy China waters could without difficulty proceed all the way to Mexico and  other countries. A thousand years before the birth of Columbus Indian ships  could carry hundreds of passengers.
 
 According to Donald A. Mackenzie writes in his book,  Myths of Pre-Columbian America: «Tezcatlipoca, was like Hindu god Kubera, was a  god of the north. The story of Yappan appears to be of Indian origin. The story  of the temptation and fall of Yappan is too like that of the temptation and fall  of his Indian prototype to be of spontaneous origin in the New World. The  conclusion drawn from the evidence of the Yappan myth that Hindu cultural  influences reached America is greatly strengthened when we find Acosta informing  us that certain Mexican ascetics, who assisted the priests, “dressed in white  robes and lived by begging”. The wandering Brahmin and Buddhist pilgrims in  India similarly begged their food».
 When Cortes  invaded the valley of Mexico he found that the Mexicans had the same word for  God that he himself had. His own (Spanish) was Dios, from Greek Theos, the  Mexican, as Cortes converted it to writing, was Teotl (Devata or Deva in  Sanskrit).
 The Indian myth of the  Churning of the Milky Ocean reached America. In Codex Cortes there is a  grotesque but recognizable Maya representation of the ocean churning. The  tortoise, however, is on the summit of the mountain-pestle instead of being  beneath it, and the other form of the serpent god appears above his avatar.  Round the mountain-pestle is twisted a snake, called “a rope” by Seler. Two dark  gods, like the Indian Asuras, hold one end of the snake-rope while the other end  is grasped by the elephant headed god. To the rope is attached a symbol of the  sun (Kin).
 The American writer and  explorer, Mr. John L. Stephens, who, accompanied Mr. Catherwood, an accomplished  artist, visited the ruins of Maya civilization in Central America in the middle  of last century, detected the elephant on a sculptural pillar at Copan, which he  referred to as an ‘idol’. A reproduction of one of the ornaments in question  should leave no doubt as to the identity of the animal depicted by the ancient  American sculptor. It is not only an elephant, but an Indian elephant  (Elephas Indicus), a species found in India, Ceylon, Borneo and  Sumatra. In India the elephant was tamed during the Vedic period. It was called  at first by the Aryo-Indians “the beast having a hand”. and ultimately simply  Hastin “having a hand”. An elephant keeper was called Hastipa. The Maya long  nosed god is regarded by those who favour the hypothesis of direct or indirect  Indian cultural influence in America as a form of the Indian elephant-headed  god, Ganesha. Professor Elliot Smith comments: «If it has been possible for  complicated games (like Pachissi) to make their way to the other side of the  Pacific, the much simpler design of an elephant’s head could also have been  transferred from India or to the Far East to America» (Myths of  Pre-Columbian America - By Donald A. Mackenzie).
 Discussing the diffusion of Indian religions to  Mexico, a recent scholar, Paul Kirchhoff from the University of Frankfurt, had  even suggested that it is not simply a question of miscellaneous influences  wandering from one country to the other, but that China, India, Java, and Mexico  actually share a common system. Kirchhoff has sought «to demonstrate that a  calendaric classification of 28 Hindu gods and their animals into twelve groups,  subdivided into four blocks, within each of which we find a sequence of gods and  animals representing Creation, Destruction and Renovation, and which can be  shown to have existed both in India and Java, must have been carried from the  Old World to the New, since in Mexico we find calendaric lists of gods and  animals that follow each other without interruption in the same order and with  attributes and functions or meanings strikingly similar to those of the 12  Indian and Javanese groups of gods, showing the same four  subdivisions».
 Trilokinath, the Hindu  ruler of the three worlds, was known to the Mexicans by the name, until the  Spanish conquerors mistakenly changed the name into Tloque  Nahuaque.
 
 In a temple in Guatemala is  a statue of an incarnation of Vishnu as Kurma, the tortoise. The sculpture is  richly detailed and strongly suggests that it might have been wrought by Hindu  hands. In Palenque Temple of the Sun in Mexico Surya occupies the place of  honor.
 
 Even Yama, the god of death of  Hindu mythology, has found his way to Mexico and Peru, while typically Hindu  lotus and chakras motifs adorn the temples. Maya and Aztec architectural styles  are remarkably similar to those in India and South east Asia. In both areas the  chief structures were pyramid shaped, with serpent balustrades and  surmounted
 Sir Edward B. Taylor also  found the counterparts of the tortoise myth of India in ancient America. «The  striking analogy between the tortoise myth of North America and India is by no  means a matter of new observation; it was indeed noticed by Father Lafitan  nearly a century and half ago. Three greatest features of the Asiatic stories  are found among the North American Indians in their fullest and clearest  development» (Early History of Mankind).
 The Mexican  doctrine of the World’s Ages - the universe was destroyed four consecutive times  - is reminiscent of the Indian Yugas. Even the reputed colours of these Mythical  four ages, white, yellow, red and black are identical with and in the same order  as one of the two versions of the Indian Yugas. In both myths the duration of  the First Age is exactly the same, 4,800 divine years. The Mexican Trinity is  associated with this doctrine as in the Hindu Trinity with the Yugas in  India.
 
 
 Donald A. Mackenzie writes in  his book, Myths of Pre-Columbian America: «The doctrine of the World’s  Ages (from Hindu Yugas) was imported into Pre-Columbian America...the Mexican  sequence is identical with the Hindus… The essential fact remains that they were  derived from a common source… It would be ridiculous to assert that such a  strange doctrine was of spontaneous origin in different parts of the Old and New  Worlds». According to the Mayan calendar, which is extant, the time record of  the mayas began on 6 August 613 B.C. It is an exact date based upon complex  astronomical calculations, and prolonged observations. To work out this kind of  elaborate calendar must have taken well over two thousand years of studying  stars, and the Asiomericans must have been remarkably shrewd  observers.
 Donald A. Mackenzie and  other scholars, however, are of definite opinion that the ancient Mexicans and  Peruvians were familiar with Indian mythology and cite in support close  parallels in details. For instance, the history of the Mayan elephant symbol  cannot be traced in the local tradition, whereas it was a prominent religious  symbol in India. The African elephant has larger ears. It is the profile of the  Indian elephant, its tusk and lower lip, the form of its ear, as well as its  turbaned rider with his ankus, which is found in Meso-American models. Whilst  the African elephant was of little religious significance, it had been tamed in  India and associated with religious practices since the early  days.
 Chacla in Mayan refers to force  centers of the body similar to the chakras of the Hindu Tantra. K’ultanlilni in  Mayan refers to the power of God within man which is controlled by the breath,  similar in meaning to kundalini. Mayan chilambalam refers to a sacred space, as  does Tamil Chidambaram. Yok’hah in Mayan means “on top of truth”, similar to  yoga in Sanskrit.
 The Makara motif,  a serpent head with upturned snout and with a human face in its mouth, from  India, Java, Bali and Sumatra, is comparable to the Mexican Xiuhcoatl, the fire  serpent on the Aztec Sun Stone.
 All  sorts of architectural elements are common to Mexico, Gautemala, India, Java and  Indo-China, the most striking of which are the pyramids with receding stages,  faced with cut stone, and with stairways leading to a sanctuary on top, also of  stone; in many there are surprising common traits such as serpent columns and  banisters, vaulted galleries and corbeled arches, attached columns, stone  cut-out lattices, and Atlantean figures, which are typical of Punuc style of  Yucatan. The most striking and highly specialized of these traits is the lotus  motif interspersed with seated human figures common to Chichen-Itza and  Amaravati, southern India. Amaravati is dated about the second century of our  era, but it exercised a powerful influence over the Hindu-Buddhist art of  Cambodia, Champa, and even modern Bali. It is significant that temple pyramids  in Cambodia do not antedate the eighth century, and only become important in the  ninth and tenth centuries, a time coinciding with the beginning of the Puncu  period of Yucatan according to Heine-Geldern and Ekholm, 1951.
 The buildings of Chichen Itza show certain influences  from Southeast Asia; for example, the lotus motif occurs in the Mercado (covered  market). The Mercado is strikingly reminiscent of the galleries so typical of  the Cambodian architecture that eventually blossomed into the galleries of  Angkor Vat. The lotus motif, interspersed with seated human figures, which has a  deep symbolic meaning in Hindu and Buddhist mythologies and as such is an  integral part of early Indian art, especially of Amaravati, is found at Chichen  Itza as a border in the reliefs of the lower room of the Temple of Tigers. The  similarity between the art of Amaravati and that of Chichen Itza is particularly  noticeable in reclining figures holding on to the rhizome of the  lotus.
 The Mexican Lion-throne and  Lotus-throne remind one of Indian Simhasana and Padmasana. The parasol, a mark  of royalty amongst the Mayas, the Aztecs, and the Incas, may be an adaptation of  the royal Chatra in us in India and Indianized Asia from the earliest  times.
 A kind of caste system  prevailed amongst the Incas of Peru. Peruvians worshipped an omnipotent and  invisible Supreme being, Viracocha, creator and preserver of the world. Imprints  of the Ramayana and the Mahabharata have been noticed on the poetry of Peru. The  official history of Mexico officially admits that «those who arrived first on  the continent later to be known as America were groups of men driven by the  mighty current that set out from India». Lopez, Spanish author of The Aryan  Races in Peru writes : "Every page of Peruvian poetry bears the imprint of  Ramayana and Mahabharata».
 In Indian  art the lotus rhizome frequently protrudes from the mouths of makaras, sea  monsters with fish-like bodies and elephants-like trunks. At Chichen Itza,  stylized figures of fish are found at both ends of the lotus plant, in the same  position as the makaras in India. Such a combination of highly specific details  cannot be accidental. It suggests the existence of some kind of relationship  between Maya art and not only Buddhist art in general, but the school of  Amaravati of the second century A.D. in particular.
 In 1866, the French architect, Eugene Viollet-le-Duc,  noted striking resemblances between ancient Mexican architectural structures and  those of South India.
 The only  plausible argument against cultural diffusion from southern Pacific is the  distance involved. It is asserted that it would have been unlikely for a large  number of people to have crossed the vast expanse of the Pacific without  well-equipped boats and skilful voyagers. The argument, however, falls, upon  close scrutiny. It would not be at all difficult for a large canoe or catarmaran  to cross from Polynesia to South America even at the present time, and the  ancient Asians were skilled and enterprising seafaring men.
 However, Asian ability to cross the seas during this  period is undoubted. The art of shipbuilding and navigation in India and China  at the time was sufficiently advanced for oceanic crossings. Indian ships  operating between Indian and South-east Asian ports were large and well equipped  to sail cross the Bay of Bengal. When the Chinese Buddhist scholar, Fa-hsien,  returned from India, his ship carried a crew of more than two hundred persons  and did not sail along the coasts but directly across the ocean. Such ships were  larger than those Columbus used to negotiate the Atlantic a thousand years  later. According to the work of mediaeval times, Yukti Kalpataru, which gives a  fund of information about shipbuilding, India built large vessels from 200 B.C.  to the close of the sixteenth century. A Chinese chronicler mentions ships of  Southern Asia that could carry as many as one thousand persons, and were manned  mainly by Malayan crews. They used western winds and currents in the North  Pacific to reach California, sailed south along the coast, and then returned to  Asia with the help of the trade winds, taking a more southerly route, without  however, touching the Polynesian islands.
 In ancient times the Indians excelled in shipbuilding  and even the English, who were attentive to everything which related to naval  architecture, found early Indian models worth copying. The Indian vessels united  elegance and utility, and were models of fine workmanship. It was also known  that in the third century a transport of horses, which would require large  ships, reached Malaya and Indo-China.
 Professor Ramon  Mena, curator of the National Museum of Mexico and author of Mexican  Archaeology, called the Nahuatl, Zapoteca, and Mayan languages “of Hindu  origin”. He went to say, «A deep mystery enfolds the tribes that inhabited the  state of chiapas in the district named Palenque… their writing, and the  anthropological type, as well as their personal adornments… their system and  style of construction clearly indicate the remotest antiquity… (they) all speak  of India and the Orient». «The (Maya) human types are like those of India. The  irreproachable technique of their reliefs, the sumptuous head-dress and  ostentatious on high, the system of construction, all speak of India and the  Orient».
 A. L. Krober has also found  striking similarities between the structure of Indo-European and the Penutian  language of some of the tribes along the north-western coast of California.  Recently, an Indian scholar, B. C. Chhabra, in his Vestiges of Indian Culture in  Hawaii has noticed certain resemblances between the symbols found in the  petroglyohs from the Hawaiian Islands and those on the Harappan seals. Some of  the symbols in the petroglyphs are described as akin to early Brahmi  script.
 Indeed, the parallels between  the arts and culture of India and those of ancient America are too numerous and  close to be attributed to independent growth. A variety of art forms are common  to Mexico, India, Java, and Indochina, the most striking of which are the  Teocallis, the pyramids, with receding stages, faced with cut stone, and with  stairways leading to a stone sanctuary on top. Many share surprisingly common  features such as serpent columns and bannisters, vaulted galleries and corbeled  arches, attached columns, stone cut-out lattices, and Atlantean figures; these  are typical of the Puuc style of Yucatan. Heine-Geldern and Ekholm point out  that temple pyramids in Cambodia did not become important until the ninth and  tenth centuries, a time coinciding with the beginning of the Puuc  period.
 If the history of  pre-Columbian America, is obscure, it is because after the Spanish conquest, the  first Bishop of Mexico, Juan de Zumarraga, burned all the records of the Library  of Texcoco in Tlateloco market square as “the work of the Devil”, and religious  fanatics destroyed temples and statues. Zumarraga, gloating over his success,  wrote to his superiors in 1531 that he alone had five hundred temples razed to  the ground and twenty thousand idols destroyed.
 Fray Diego de Landa, the second Bishop of Yucatan,  following the pattern, reduced the Maya Library in Yucatan to ashes in 1562.  Post-Columbus history of America for 300 years was the story of ruthless  destruction and fanatics like Bishop Diego da Landa burnt a huge bonfire of  valuable documents and nothing but the three codices of ‘Chilam Balam’ could  survive the holocaust. He wrote Relación de las cosas de Yucatán, A Narrative of  the Things of Yucatan in 1566, Therein the states, «We found a large number of  their books of these letters, and because they did not have anything in which  there was not superstition and falsehoods of the devil, we burned them all,  which they felt very sorry for and which caused them grief» (Proof Vedic  Culture’s Global Existence - By Stephen Knapp).
 Landa, in his religious zeal, ordered all their idols  destroyed and all Mayan books to be burned; he was surprised at the distress  this caused the Indians. His orders to destroy all icons and hieroglyphics  obliterated the Mayan language forever, helping to undermine and destroy the  civilization he so vividly described.
 It was Landa that gave the orders for all the Mayans  to bring all manuscripts to the public squares in Mani to be burned. All these  books contained what would now be priceless information on astronomy, medicine,  religion, and philosophy. What Emperor Theodosious of Constantinople did to the  library at Alexandria to save Christianity from the Greek and Oriental pagan  knowledge deposited there, these priests did in Central America with similar  motives but larger success.
 The  burning of manuscripts continued for decades. Soldiers were encouraged to  ransack palaces, public buildings, and private houses to find manuscripts. Pablo  Jose de Arriaga, the head of the Jesuit College in Peru, in almost unparalleled  fanaticism, caused the systematic and wholesale destruction of all state  archives, customs records, royal and imperial archives, codes of laws, temple  archives, and historical records. Less than a score of manuscripts escaped  annihilation. These libraries contained records of ancient history, medicine,  astronomy, science, religion, and philosophy.
 Beyond Mexico, the ancient Andean or Peruvian  civilization also suffered an even worse fate at the hands of the Spainard’s  than did their neighbours in Central America. The Spanish assault on the Incas,  the Spanish avarice of gold, and barbarities perpetrated in the wake of victory,  including the inhuman tortures publicly inflicted on the Inca King, Atahuallpa,  are illustrations of savagery seldom surpassed in history.
 Most people believe that Asiomericans were uncivilized  hordes with an occasional freak of knowledge, who had contributed nothing of  permanent value to civilization by 1492. Despite a good deal of information to  the contrary, there is resistance to accepting a change in this image.  Misconceptions multiply fast but die slowly.
 The Devastation of the  Indies – by Bartholome de Las Casas - excerpts — «The Devastation of the  Indies is an eyewitness account of the first modern genocide, a story of greed,  hypocrisy, and cruelties so grotesque as to rival the worst of our own century.  Las Casas writes of men, women and children burned alive “thirteen at a time in  memory of Our Redemeer and his twelve apostles”. He describes butcher shops that  sold human flesh for dog food (“Give me a quarter of that rascal there”, one  customer says, “until I can kill some more of my own”). Slave ship captains  navigate “without need of compass or charts”, following instead the trail of  floating corpses tossed overboard by the ship before them. Native kings are  promised peace, then slaughtered. Whole families hang themselves in despair.  Once fertile islands are tuned desert, the wealth of nations plundered, millions  killed outright, whole people annihilated.
 The papacy empowered the two crowns (Spanish and  Portuguese) to conquer and even enslave pagans “inimical to the name of  Christ”.
 The Spaniards killed more  Indians here in twelve years by the sword, by fire, and enslavement than  anywhere in the Indies».
 The  archaeological remains of ancient Maya civilization of Mexico are lying  scattered in the parts of Yucatan, Campeche, Tabasco and eastern half of Chiapas  as well as in the territory of Quintana Roo of the republic of Mexico. Covering  an area of about 125,000 square miles, its traces are to be found in the western  section of Honduras Republic, Peten and adjacent highlands of Guatemala and  practically in the whole of Honduras.
 Admiral Christopher Columbus mistakenly called the New  World inhabitants as Indians. Although he corrected himself subsequently, the  natives of Americas continued to be called ‘Indians’. During the course of his  third journey, Columbus came into contact with ‘Maya’ people.
 Many theories have been advanced by scholars to  explain the origins of these American Indians and if there were any links  between the ancient civilizations of the Old World and the New World. There are  historians who believe that the American civilizations were purely native in  origin and also those who maintain the theory of Asians crossing over through  Bering Strait via Alaska and reaching the American continent some 12,000 -  15,000 years ago. However, the antiquity of American Indians remains shrouded in  the veil of mystery. In spite of a great deal of investigations, explorations  and deep study by scholars and innumerable historians during the last many  centuries, what we know about pre-Columbus Americas is very little in comparison  to what we do not know. To quote Glyn Daniel from his bookThe First  Civilizations, «within 15 years, between 1519 to 1533, the Western world  discovered and brutally destroyed three civilizations - the Aztecs of Mexico,  Maya of Yuacatan and Guatemala and Inca of Peru».
 The unique elaboration of the Mayan civilization has  been a challenge to the imagination of explorers and students of history. The  Mayans had attained the highest maturity in art, craft, sculpture and  hieroglyphs. Innumerable theories exist about these ancient people. Their  magnificent achievements in social, economic, political and religious fields,  their calendar and hieroglyphic writings, reasons of the sudden collapse of  their classic culture everywhere in Mesoamerica, the reality of ‘Kulkulkan  Quetzal-Coatl’ myth are some of the riddles of Mexican history challenging  modern research. The Maya Indians spent thousands of years in building their  magnificent monuments and Mayapan, Palenque, Copan, Tikal, Kaminalijuyu and  Piedras Negras were the centres where Mayan culture flourished in splendour. How  and why these places were deserted in the past is still a mystery. Although  modern scientists have achieved significant success in deciphering Maya calendar  system, none has been able to decipher their hieroglyphic system of  writing.
 «Sri V. Ganapati  Sthapati», read Deva Rajan's fax to our Hawaii editorial office from Machu  Picchu high in the rugged Andes Mountains of Peru, South America, «has just  measured with tape, compass and a lay-out story pole, two ancient Incan  structures at Machu Picchu: a temple and a residence. He has confirmed that the  layout of these structures, locations for doors, windows, proportions of width  to length, roof styles, degree of slopes for roofs, column sizes, wall  thicknesses, etc., all conform completely to the principles and guidelines as  prescribed in the Vastu Shastras of India. Residential layouts are identical to  those found in Mohenjodaro. The temple layouts are identical to those that he is  building today and that can be found all over India». These startling  discoveries came during a March, 1995, visit of the master builder to the  ancient Incan and Mayan sites of South and Central America. Ganapati Sthapati is  India’s foremost traditional temple architect and perhaps the first true expert  in sculpture and stone construction to personally examine these ancient  buildings. To do so has been his dream since the 1960’s.
 The fundamental principle of Mayan’s architecture and  town planning is the “module”. Buildings and towns are to be laid out according  to certain multiples of a standard unit. Floor plans, door locations and sizes,  wall heights and roofs, all are determined by the modular plan. More  specifically, Mayan advocated the use of an eight-by-eight square, for a total  of 64 units, which is known as the Vastu Purusha Mandala. The on-site inspection  by Sthapati was to determine if the Incan and Mayan structures did follow a  modular plan and reflect the Vastu Purusha Mandala. He also intended to examine  the stone working technology-his particular field of expertise.
 Amidst the crowds, Sthapati, Deva and Thamby again  unsheathed their tape measures and closely examined the Pyramid of the Castle.  It too conformed to the Vastu Vedic principles of Mayan. The temple structure at  the top was exactly 1/4th of the base. And the stepped pyramid design derived  from a three-dimensional extension of the basic eight-by-eight grid system. The  temple room at the top was also modular in design, with the wall thickness  determining the size of doorways, location of columns, thickness of columns and  the width and length of the structure.
 As in Mayan buildings, Indians have been using lime  mortar for all of their stone and brick buildings. This can been seen in the  monumental creations in Mahabalipuram and also in the stone temples of Tanjor  and Gangai Konda Choleasuram in Tamil Nadu. The outer surfaces were plastered,  embellishments worked out in lime mortar, then painted. This method was  strongest among the Mayas at Tikal and Uaxactún, where all of the structures  once had a plaster coating painted with many colours.
 Sri Ganapati Sthapati postulates, after deep thought  from his journey to the land of the Mayans and a lifetime study of South Indian  architecture, that Mayan, the divine architect of Indian tradition, came from  Central America. Ancient Tamil literature speaks of lands to the south of India  30,000 years ago, at the time of the first Tamil Sangam. According to scientists  160 million years ago India did lie physically close to Africa, South and  Central America, but has since moved away as a result of continental drift. At  that date, it would have been dinosaurs and not Mayans who wandered from the  Americas to India, but perhaps the time frame for the continental drift is not  correct. Architecture aside, there are significant similarities between Hinduism  and the native religions of both Africa and the Americas.
 There are other explanations. The simplest is boats.  In 1970 the Norwegian Thor Hyerdal sailed a reed boat from Africa to the  Americas in 57 days using no modern equipment. The boat, Ra II, was built for  him by the Aymaro Indians of Lake Titicaca, Peru, neighbours of the ancient  Incans. The double-hulled catamarans of India are also capable of long sea  voyages. Historians discount contact between ancient people, but many cultures,  such as the ancient Hawaiians, had remarkable sea-faring skills.
 
				 
 
  
 
  
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