Today’s Enlightening
Entertainment will be
presented in Spanish,
with subtitles in Arabic,
Aulacese (Vietnamese),
Chinese, English,
French, German,
Indonesian, Japanese,
Korean, Malay,
Persian, Portuguese,
Russian, Spanish
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Greetings
brilliant viewers.
Today, we invite you
to join us on a visit to
an extraordinary museum.
The Banco de la República
Gold Museum in Bogotá,
the capital of Colombia,
is one of the largest
and most distinguished
museums of
pre-Hispanic metallurgy
in the world.
Visited by more than
500,000 people per year,
it has served as
a bridge of history,
collecting since 1939
masterpieces of gold,
pottery, shell, wood,
and textile produced by
the Colombian
pre-Hispanic natives.
This unique collection
of 33,000 finely crafted
metal pieces
helps us to understand
the way of life
and spiritual beliefs
of Colombia’s
indigenous people.
Mr. Eduardo Londoño is
the museum’s head
of outreach and
our knowledgeable guide.
The interesting thing is
that the indigenous
Americans
16,000, 20,000 years ago
came to this continent,
and when they
came to America
they did not bring
the knowledge discovered
much later in Europe.
The discoveries were
totally independent of
what had been done
in China, India
or in the Middle East.
So the natives
with their experience
with this gold metal found
in the sand of the rivers,
they started
to appreciate it and
learned how to work it,
how to purify it,
until it turned into
these beautiful objects
that we can see
in the museum today.
What tools did they use?
Most important of all,
was the strength
of their lungs, because
for melting inside
these ceramic containers,
several people
gathered together
with canes, blowing until
the metal was heated
to 1,053 degrees,
the gold fusion temperature,
and in this way
were able to purify it,
take away impurities
and work it,
either with a hammer,
or by smelting
until make these objects
we see in
the museum’s showcases.
American metallurgy
was not oriented towards
producing sharp tools
for farming, etc.
as it was so in other regions
of the world.
Rather,
it was used to produce
personal ornaments
and symbols, full of
shamanistic meaning.
Gold had a sacred meaning.
The main idea was
that this metal,
which for our societies
represents value and trade,
for them it represented
the vital energy force that
comes out from nature,
which is transmitted
by the cosmos, represented
in the Father Sun.
So the natives
who loved life,
represented it with the sun.
They saw in gold metal
the same brightness,
the same color,
and therefore they were
attracted to work
with these materials.
In Colombia,
reverence for the sun
even extended
to the natives’
plant-based food culture.
The main food
of all American cultures,
but in particular
for those who lived here
in Colombia and
in the ancient territory
of Bogotá, was corn.
They ate potatoes, other
tubers, beans, pumpkins,
but corn was the food
that was the basis
of their diet.
It’s a very interesting aspect
that corn has
the same gold color.
And in their cosmology,
corn was also associated
with gold and
with the power of the sun,
such that nature
through the sun gave
the pre-Hispanic natives
the corn.
Colombia is a land of
diverse cultures
of forests, mountains,
and coasts.
The Gold Museum
represents many of them
through their
beautiful crafts.
They include the Nariño
High Plains culture,
the Tumaco
on the Pacific Coast,
Calima, Tolima,
San Agustín
and Tierradentro
of Upper Magdalena,
Quimbaya and Cauca,
Zenú from
the Caribbean Plains,
the Tairona culture,
Urabá and Chocó,
and the Muisca
of the Eastern Range.
In all,
there are 62 languages
other than Spanish that
are spoken in Colombia!
The Muiscas,
who lived in the
ancient Bogotá area,
were known as traders.
Trading helped to maintain
harmonious relations
between tribes.
The Muiscas
created emeralds
from the mines located
also in this range,
but strangely they did not
have gold mines.
So in order to
obtain the metal
to make their gold work,
they got it by trade.
They made agreements
and peace was kept
permanently in the region,
that was one of the
most important activities
of the natives and
the chieftains at that time.
According to
indigenous mythology,
the sun god is the creator
of all things,
infusing them
with light and vitality.
Gold as a sacred metal
receives energy
from sunlight.
In turn,
the chief of the tribe
wore gold upon
as a symbol
of inheriting this power.
The symbols of this chief
were these ornaments
that we see
in the Gold Musseum,
the ornaments for the chest,
the nose, ears, the crown.
Besides the metal
ornaments, these objects
told the community
that the chief had
the power of the sun
to bring the community
together and organize
the collective work.
Both in pre-Hispanic art
and in present-day
Colombian
indigenous culture,
a shaman or person
of high status would
be seated on a bench,
a symbol of power.
A shaman would
meditate on the bench
to contact the Divine.
The shaman is
a religious specialist
of the community.
He sits on the small
wooden benches that
we see in the museum.
All the communities
have them and
it signifies the mental work;
to be in contact
with the higher worlds
and the lower worlds.
The natives and shamans
do meditation
and they have
different techniques,
but one is to use
repetitive sounds
of the maraca, which is
a sacred instrument,
or from the fern leaves,
shaking them,
in order to be
separated from this life
that we have today,
or from this cover
that we have, and
be able to get in touch
with Mother Nature.
We’ll find out more
about the cosmology
in indigenous
Colombian culture and
the symbolism of gold
when we continue our visit
to the fascinating
Banco de la República
Gold Museum
in Bogotá, Colombia.
Please stay tuned
to Supreme Master
Television.
Welcome back to
Enlightening Entertainment.
We now continue
our visit to
the unique exhibitions of
the Banco de la República
Gold Museum
in Bogotá, Colombia.
For the natives
the cosmos is composed
of two major forces,
that is the masculine
and the feminine.
They are
the masculine sphere
symbolized by the sun,
meaning what is hot,
is brilliant, is the light,
and the feminine sphere,
that is water, the land,
is what allows procreation.
Then,
between these energies,
the world we live in
is formed.
Gold metal is associated
with masculinity and
copper with femininity.
And copper, which
represents the woman,
was used in the alloy
that we call tumbaga.
This alloy
of gold and copper
allowed, on one hand,
to reduce
the melting temperature
in order to work the metal
more easily,
and on the other hand,
it gave colors.
So we will find
red objects,
which probably were seen
as feminine objects.
Golden objects were seen
as masculine strength.
But they also had
a whole range of pinks
that leads us to think about
the balance of the world,
which was a concern
of the natives.
The precious artworks
of the Gold Museum
clearly show
how much in tune
the natives were
with nature.
Some of the art pieces are
of mystical beings with
combined human traits
and animal features
such as wings or tails.
As humans were a part
of the greater cosmos,
much attention was devoted
to organizing the world
in its complexity
of relations,
such as through rituals.
Of course, gold was
an important element.
During the ceremony
of El Dorado, the chief
would be covered
in shimmering gold dust
as he threw gold and
other sacred elements
into the lake as an offering.
The Muiscas chiefs
and priests here
in the vicinity of Bogotá,
they knew a beautiful lake
that looks like
an amphitheater.
It’s a round lake
with the mountains
surrounding it.
And in this special place
so magical,
they performed the
ceremony of El Dorado.
It was held each year
to celebrate the pact
of the calendar renewal
or every time
a chief took office,
because that chief had to
make an agreement
not only with the society,
but also with
Mother Nature.
The Spanish say that they
never saw this ceremony,
but they described it.
We have in the Gold Museum
the privilege of seeing it
with this raft that
was made by a native
who saw the ceremony.
We can interpret
this ceremony
from the natives’
cosmological world,
which is still alive today
in our country,
and it is the Father Sun
uniting with Mother Earth
during this unique
ceremony of El Dorado.
It was very sacred
and probably
it was the symbol for life
to be able to continue
for another cycle
in this lifetime.
Today, the golden legacy
of Colombia
offers ancient wisdom
for the modern times.
It’s the treasure of a country
that is represented
in the metal gold.
The gold has no
important economic value,
but each culture
contributes their part.
And the natives are
talking about the contact
with nature,
in a world that has
forgotten these issues.
The natives still live
in the forests,
still live in the mountains
or on the coasts,
and they are in
direct contact with nature
that they have learned
to respect.
They know that
attempts against a forest
is a bad thing that
will be returned against
their own community.
So we must receive
that message
from the natives
and keep the balance
of the world.
What they represented
as masculine
and feminine forces
means that
we can’t harm the cosmos
in which we live,
because we were created
in the same day
that nature was,
and we are not
the owners of nature,
we are a part of nature.
We have to be one with it.
At the Banco de la República
Gold Museum,
the more we look into
these ancestors’
exquisite creations,
the more we can reflect
on ourselves.
A museum is a place
that brings you closer
to strange and
beautiful materials
from the past, and
makes us think seriously
about the destiny
we want to give
to our life or our society.
And I think
that is the subject
we should consider
when visiting
this Colombian museum
of diversity, this museum
of cosmological knowledge
from the ancient natives
of Colombia.
Welcome to the museum.
We thank
Mr. Eduardo Londoño and
the Banco de la República
Gold Museum
of Bogotá, Colombia
for graciously opening
your treasure collection
to all.
May the splendor of
the spiritual indigenous
people of Colombia
continue to be shared
with the world.
For more information
about
the Banco de la República
Gold Museum
in Bogotá, Colombia,
please visit
Golden-hearted viewers,
thank you
for your company on
Enlightening Entertainment.
Coming up next is
Words of Wisdom,
after Noteworthy News,
on Supreme Master
Television.
Wishing you
and your loved ones
abundant peace
and harmony.