The history of peoples is made by the unwritten history of great travels
and world travellers – a history that began long before Herodotus or
Marco Polo, in the Neolithic or even earlier, in some fantastical age of
mankind. Perhaps even at the dusk of the primordial Golden Age, with
glaciation or flood, and with the first in a series of catastrophes
faced by the human species. Then followed eras of the migrations of
peoples and races. If we believe Plato, then the Atlanteans were the
first colonists in the world, and they came from the West. Others say
that their ancestors were the Hyperboreans, who fled snow and ice in the
Far North of the continent.
Over the course of subsequent
history, peoples would move from North to South and from East to West –
and not otherwise. This constitutes their course through history – a
path of aging, degeneration and, at times faster, at times slower, of
inexorable decline. This is how great conquests began, those that
encompass immense regions, entire continents, and this is how great wars
start, like the one that raged under the walls of Ilium – or was this
only a shadow of some mythical war waged in the far deeper past, during
the mythical age of the Earth? Perhaps at the beginning of time, “in
illo tempore.”
They did not rush towards unknown and exotic
lands, but towards their lost homelands, towards mythical lands of the
beginning, towards the riches of the Golden Age. Towards primordial,
Edenic abundance. Towards Paradise Lost, such as the biblical one, which
we have not stopped searching for here on Earth even today.
One
Islamic mystic, Suhrawardi, claimed that after death the soul returns
to the homeland, for merciful Allah himself commanded this, and this
would not be possible if he had not previously resided in it. This
mythical homeland is to be found somewhere in the “spiritual East.” In
order to find the strength for this, we must start from the spiritual
West, the “Western wells of exile.”
The true journey, true
adventures of the spirit, this Sheikh taught, start in the West. This is
a place like a grave, a stockade of the burial-place. Arriving on the
soil of an unknown continent, Christopher Columbus thought he had
discovered the New Earth mentioned in the Apocalypse of St. John. The
famous seafarer believed he was in the Gulf of Paria, and in its fresh
currents had discovered the origin of the four rivers of the lost
heavenly garden, Eden itself. “God made me the messenger of the new
heaven and the new earth, of which he spoke in the Apocalypse of St.
John, and before that through the mouth of Isaiah,” Columbus proclaimed
to King Juan, “and he showed me the place where to find it.” ...<<<Read More>>>...