Excerpt
andlt;Bandgt;Chapter 5andlt;BRandgt;The Grandsons ofandlt;/Bandgt; andlt;Bandgt;Inkarand#57122;r /andgt;andlt;/Bandgt;andlt;BRandgt;Explicit in the Q'ero version of the myth recounted below is the Q'ero's claim that they are descendants of this first Inka--they are lnkarand#55795; grandsons. What is not explicit is their belief that Inkarand#55330;estowed upon the Q'ero a unique and precious gift. According to our guides, Juan and Amand#40105;co, the Q'ero claim that Inkarand#55330;equeathed them mystical knowledge, designating them keepers of the ancient knowledge, a reputation they retain to this day among Andean paqos. In contrast to the Q'ero, the people of Cuzco, the imperial capital, were bequeathed the administrative and political knowledge that allowed them to build one of the greatest empires of the southern hemisphere.andlt;BRandgt;andlt;BRandgt;Don Julian Pauqar Flores was the bearer of the Inkarand#55341;yth for the Q'ero assembled in Urubamba. He told me the tale of Q'ero's founding with reverence and solemnity. After the telling of the tale, other Q'ero added variations they had heard from their relatives and ancestors, or added details that don Julian had missed. For the sake of narrative flow, I have merged these details into the tale proper. What follows is the story, passed down generation to generation, of the Q'ero's royal lineage and of the origin of their identity as master paqos and as the bearers of the spirit of the Inka.andlt;BRandgt;andlt;BRandgt;andquot;My grandfather told me that Inkarand#55336;ad a golden staff,andquot; began don Julian, andquot;and he threw the golden staff from Raya Qasa [a border town between the high plains and the mountainous regions of south-central Peru]. As Inkarand#55351;as trying to throw the golden staff, Qollari, the wife of Inkarand#56096;tickled him in his right armpit. Because she tickled him, the throw missed Q'ero. If the staff had hit the land of Q'ero, Q'ero would have been the qosqo [literally the andquot;navelandquot;--the center or capital city] of the Tawantinsuyu. But the staff missed Q'ero and landed in Cuzco, which became the capital of the Tawantinsuyu. And so Cuzco was founded. If this golden staff had landed in Q'ero, Q'ero would have been in a valley, rather than in such high mountains.andlt;BRandgt;andlt;BRandgt;andquot;In Cuzco, Inkarand#55330;uilt a huge temple. He also built many houses, grand houses such as Saqsawaman. He built a solar clock in order to measure the towns. He went to Machu Picchu, and there he built more grand houses. Returning from Machu Picchu, he built Ollantaytambo [a town near Pisac at which is located a magnificent temple of the same name]. Then he remembered Q'ero. He said, andquot;I will return to Q'ero to see my children.andquot; The proof of Inkarand#55795; visit to Q'ero is two footprints in stone, which are still there in Upispata [a hot spring near Q'erol].andlt;BRandgt;andlt;BRandgt;andquot;Inkarand#55332;id not live very long in Q'ero. He stayed only about a week. If he had stayed longer, he would have had to build a town. He was awaiting the arrieros, and when they did not arrive, he left. He went on to Ollantaytambo, and as he was building his house there, our God arrived. God appeared as a man to Inkarand#55329;nd told him, 'Inkarand#56096;I will give you more munay [capacity to love].' But Inkarand#55347;aid, 'What munay? I have my own munay.'andlt;BRandgt;andlt;BRandgt;andquot;God saw out of the corner of his eye that Inkarand#55351;as herding rocks with a crop, like we would herd llamas. Inkarand#55330;uilt houses this way, not by doing useful work but by saying to the stones, 'You must become a wall!' and the stones became a wall. But over time, the stones began to disobey Inkarand#56224;Seeing this and wanting to restore the stones' previous abilities, Inkarand#55346;emembered the person who had offered him more munay. Inkarand#55342;ow looked for this person, but the person had disappeared. And because of that, now men must carry stones only by the power of their own arms. We can no longer make the stones obey our will. If Inkarand#55336;ad received that additional munay, we could today build houses by commanding the stones to move.andlt;BRandgt;andlt;BRandgt;andquot;Inkarand#55340;eft Ollantaytambo and went to Paytiti. That is where Inkarand#55342;ow lives. Because of the will of Inkarand#56096;now the Vilcanota River carries the excrement of the llamas. When Inkarand#55347;ees the excrement of the llamas, he is reminded of his grandsons, the Q'ero, who herd llamas, and he weeps with longing for us. Because of all these things, we in Q'ero are known to this day as Inkas.andlt;BRandgt;andlt;BRandgt;andquot;We are the grandsons of Inkarand#56230;quot; andlt;BRandgt;andlt;BRandgt;When don Julian's story was translated from Quechua to English, I was mesmerized. The story's simplicity, beauty, and austere reverence moved me deeply. .and#160;. . Don Julian's words brought home to me the import of our project, of recording at least part of the Q'ero spiritual tradition before it was lost. I was grateful for the opportunity to hear this primordial myth of the Q'ero's mystical history from the paqos themselves, especially after having heard their version of their recent historical and political past. Both perspectives helped me more deeply appreciate the initiation stories I had already recorded during the previous two days of interviews. I now better understood how the Q'ero could so easily and seamlessly synthesize the best from both lineages--the Western, Christianized tradition of their conquerors and the animistic and magical tradition of their mythic forebears. The Spaniards may have founded Lima and birthed a nation, but Inkarand#55336;ad founded Q'ero and birthed a lineage of paqos. Each of the Q'ero who sat before me now had struggled to find his rightful place in both of these worlds, and their personal initiation stories, which follow in the next two chapters, reveal their individual journeys along the sacred path and into the heart of the mystery.