| CHAKANA, ANDEAN CROSS |
| Tours Exotiques discovering the Andes |
| CHAKANA, SYMBOL OF POWER IN THE ANDES One of the most outstanding virtues of the Andean people and their Masters, was that of respect for the Earth. They integrated with it as no other society or culture of their time ever did. This communion enabled them to identify within the Earth a higher being wielding paramount rule over all others, and called it Pachamama (Mother Earth). Ultimately, she is our Mother and through her openings she reveals to humans the signs of Heaven. This is how they understood that we are the microcosm, the reflection of a world progressively infinite and eternal. It is within this ascending scale that they defined their world and the universe into levels or dimensional planes, which became a vital necessity for the organization of their own societies. As the knowledge and understanding of both humanity and Cosmos evolved, the Andean Sages created a cosmic view that was highly farsighted as well as comprehensive. This interpretation of visible and invisible reality enabled them to define in stone, clay, ceramic, metal, textile and wooden form, the semiotics and codification of a higher rank that would be utilized by the initiated in their magical and ceremonial phases. In Andean people have a number of important symbols, one of them having come to be known as the "Chakana." This word derives from the Quechua "Chaka" meaning bridge and, we can see that the function of a "bridge" makes it possible for us to cross from one place to another. But a more important meaning is the one that refers to the Chakana as a "stepladder for passing from one place to another," which in time has derived into "stepped," hence, the "Stepped Symbol." Within the context of Andean iconography, this symbol has been interpreted into many stepped designs that in turn has led to its name "the Square Cross," or "Andean Cross." We must remember that in the firmament, the "celestial vault," during many months on very clear nights, we can observe the majesty of the constellation of Crux, more commonly known as the Southern Cross. This celestial cross was utilized as a reference point for orientation by navigators and travelers as well as great Sages who used its four primary visible stars to plot various geometrical projections. More importantly, they made it the basis for the creation of the most important symbol of the Andes: The Square Cross. Chakana, the Square Cross When traveling through the Andes and coming upon artifacts and cultural evidence left by our ancestors, we discover that the symbol of the Square Cross is present in the majority of their works and creations. We find its presence expressed in the most resistant materials as well as in the most fragile ones. This reflects that their conception of the world and of the Cosmos must necessarily move progressively, and that nothing exists in static form. The world and the Cosmos are an endless system of connections and influences which, in order for us to understand, requires that we ascend through progressive stages, just like the steps that form the Square Cross, or Chakana. The Masters and Andean Initiates did not limit themselves only to the number three, by which I mean the chakana of three levels, because they possessed a cosmic projection that was not confined or did not stop at the point of the single unit, but rather moved on unceasingly. Nevertheless, they gave shape and material expression in the form of certain numbers to those codes accessible to the common folk. That is why the number three became the most popular. Within the hermetic circles, they worked with the number one and all of its possible projections. In a masterful vision, their span encompassed the numbers from one to seven and they established these configurations in their temples, palaces and ceremonial instruments of higher ranking. The Universe is like a great spider web, in which everything is communicated and linked, through a most diverse means. The spirit cannot be constrained in any way, shape or direction, and in the chakanas we discover the magical world of the People of the Sun. |








