Montreal Gazette

Countdown on to end of Mayan calendar

Dec. 21 has been called Doomsday

- JACK CHANG THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

MEXICO CITY — The clock is ticking down to Dec. 21, the supposed end of the Mayan calendar, and from China to California to Mexico, thousands are getting ready for what they think is going to be a fateful day.

The Maya didn’t say much about what would happen next, after a 5,125-year cycle known as the Long Count comes to an end. So into that void have rushed occult writers, bloggers and New Age visionarie­s foreseeing all manner of monumental change, from doomsday to a new age of enlightenm­ent.

The 2009 disaster flick 2012 helped spark doomsday rumours, with its visions of Los Angeles crashing into the sea and mammoth tsunami waves swallowing the Himalayas.

Foreboding TV documentar­ies and alarmist websites followed, sparking panic in corners of the globe thousands of miles f rom the Mayan homeland of southern Mexico and Central America.

As the big day approaches, government­s and scientists alike are mobilizing to avoid actual tragedy. Even the U.S. space agency NASA intervened this month, posting a nearly hour-long YouTube video debunking apocalypti­c points, one by one.

The Internet has helped feed the frenzy, spreading rumours that a mountain in the French Pyrenées is hiding an alien spaceship that will be the sole escape from the destructio­n. French authoritie­s are blocking access to Bugarach peak from Dec. 1923 except for the village’s 200 residents “who want to live in peace,” the local prefect said in a news release.

“I think this tells us more about ourselves, particular­ly in the western world, than it does about the ancient Maya,” said Geoffrey Braswell, an associate professor of anthropolo­gy and leading Maya scholar at the University of California, San Diego. “The idea that the world will end soon is a very strong belief in western cultures. … The Maya, we don’t really know if they believed the world would ever end.”

As the clock ticks down, scenarios have mounted about how the end will come.

Some believe a rogue planet called Nibiru will emerge from its hiding place behind the sun and smash into the Earth. Others say a super black hole at the centre of the universe will suck in our planet and smash it to pieces. At least two men in China are predicting a world-ending flood. They’re both building arks.

Lu Zhenghai has spent his life savings, some $160,000, building the 70-foot-by-50foot vessel powered by three diesel engines, according to state media.

China’s most innovative ark builder, however, may be Yang Zongfu, a 32-year-old businessma­n in eastern China.

His vessel, Atlantis, a threeton yellow steel ball four metres (13 feet) in diameter, is designed to survive a volcano, tsunami, earthquake or nuclear meltdown, according to the state-run Liao Wang magazine.

Jose Manrique Esquivel, a descendent of the Maya, said his community in Mexico’s Yucatán Peninsula will mark the date as a celebratio­n of their survival despite centuries of genocide and oppression. He blamed profiteers looking to scam the gullible for stoking doomsday fears.

“For us, this Dec. 21 is the end of a great era and also the beginning of a new era. We renew our beliefs. We renew a host of things that surround us,” Esquivel said.

 ?? ADALBERTO ROQUE/ AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Mayan leaders in Cuba to deliver speeches and perform ceremonies celebratin­g the beginning of a new era take part in a ritual at Bacuranao beach in Havana on Thursday.
ADALBERTO ROQUE/ AFP/GETTY IMAGES Mayan leaders in Cuba to deliver speeches and perform ceremonies celebratin­g the beginning of a new era take part in a ritual at Bacuranao beach in Havana on Thursday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada