Popol Vuh: A Retelling
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About this ebook
An inspired and urgent prose retelling of the Maya myth of creation by acclaimed Latin American author and scholar Ilan Stavans, gorgeously illustrated by Salvadoran folk artist Gabriela Larios and introduced by renowned author, diplomat, and environmental activist Homero Aridjis.
The archetypal creation story of Latin America, the Popol Vuh began as a Maya oral tradition millennia ago. In the mid-sixteenth century, as indigenous cultures across the continent were being threatened with destruction by European conquest and Christianity, it was written down in verse by members of the K’iche’ nobility in what is today Guatemala. In 1701, that text was translated into Spanish by a Dominican friar and ethnographer before vanishing mysteriously.
Cosmic in scope and yet intimately human, the Popol Vuh offers invaluable insight into the Maya way of life before being decimated by colonization—their code of ethics, their views on death and the afterlife, and their devotion to passion, courage, and the natural world. It tells the story of how the world was created in a series of rehearsals that included wooden dummies, demi-gods, and eventually humans. It describes the underworld, Xibalba—a place as harrowing as Dante’s hell—and relates the legend of the ultimate king, who, in the face of tragedy, became a spirit that accompanies his people in their struggle for survival.
Popol Vuh: A Retelling is a one-of-a-kind prose rendition of this sacred text that is as seminal as the Bible and the Qur'an, the Ramayana and the Odyssey. Award-winning scholar of Latin American literature Ilan Stavans brings a fresh creative energy to the Popol Vuh, giving a new generation of readers the opportunity to connect with this timeless story and with the plight of the indigenous people of the Americas.
Ilan Stavans
Ilan Stavans, a leading Jewish Mexican scholar and critic, is Lewis-Sebring Professor of Humanities and Latin American and Latino Culture at Amherst College.
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Popol Vuh - Ilan Stavans
Index of Illustrations
Creation
Q’uq’umatz in conversation with Tepew
The wooden people are ratified
Sipakna topples the roof on the 400 boys
Xibalba
Jun Junajpu and Wuqub’ Junajpu are tested by the Lords of Xibalba
The owls take Princess Ixkik’ to be sacrificed
A message for Junajpu and Ixb’alanke from the Lords of Xibalba
The hero twins reappear as men-fish and perform miracles
Sunrise
Humans are created
Heart of Heaven, Heart of Earth
A messenger from Xibalba speaks to the tribes
The people await the sunrise
Promise
Ixtah and Ixpuch bring Tojil’s capes to the noblemen
The progenitors defeat the tribes and K’iche’ people multiply
Izmaki, city of birds
Kikab and Kavizimaj tell Father Ximénez about the ancient book, Popol Vuh
Foreword
All Was a Feathered Dream
The Popol Vuh has been referred to by some as the Maya Bible, while the names given to the book by the K’iche’ lords have been variously rendered in English as the Book of Council, Book of the Community, Book of the People, The Light That Came from Beside the Sea, Our Place in the Shadows and The Dawn of Life. It is a complex narrative, giving mythical accounts of gods or superhuman beings taking part in transcendent events at an unspecified time in the past, and is replete with details about the natural world, its plants, animals, and environment, explanation of ritual practices and sacrifice, cyclic renewal, and marriage and funerary customs. The tremendous imaginative power of the book gives it credence.
For three millennia, from approximately 1500 BC until the arrival of the Spaniards in AD 1519, the cultures of pre-Columbian Mesoamerica flourished in present-day Mexico, Guatemala, Belize, Honduras, and El Salvador, sharing a 260-day divinatory calendar, religious beliefs and deities, and the practice of sacrificial bloodletting. They also shared the cultivation of maize, beans, squash, and chili peppers, the use of cacao as a currency and a beverage, a ritualized ball game, distinct architectural and artistic styles, and technology. Writing was first used in Mesoamerica by the Olmecs and Zapotecs in 900–400 BC.
Our knowledge of the myths, religion, history, and poetry of the pre-Columbian Mesoamerican civilizations comes principally through the extant pre-Conquest codices, the sixteenth-century texts of central Mexico, and the cosmogonic narrative in the Popol Vuh. Much information also comes from carved stone monuments, inscriptions on tombs, stelae, and painted ceramics.
After the conquest of the Aztec Empire by the Spanish in 1521, several missionaries, most notably Fr. Bernardino de Sahagún, sought to preserve the history and language of the Aztecs (or Mexica) by writing down in Latin what they were told by educated native informants. As the first modern ethnographer, in his General History of the Things of New Spain, Sahagún recorded the principal aspects of indigenous domestic and public life. He clearly expresses his belief in the humanity of the conquered peoples in the prologue to Book I of the History: It is most certain all these people are our brothers, stemming from the stock of Adam, as we do. They are our neighbors whom we are obliged to love, even as we love ourselves.
The conquerors deemed the suppression of Aztec culture necessary for the conversion of the people to Christianity. Even Sahagún’s work was seen as dangerous, and in 1577 King Philip II instructed his representative in Mexico to confiscate all copies of Sahagún’s transcriptions, adding that you are warned absolutely not to allow any person to write concerning the superstitions and ways of life of these Indians in any language, for this is not proper to God’s service and to Ours.
Throughout the sixteenth century, temples and images in conquered Mesoamerica were destroyed to root out idolatry,
and hieroglyphic codices were particularly slated for destruction. In his capacity as the Franciscan provincial in the Yucatán, Fr. Diego de Landa oversaw an Inquisition in the city of Mani that culminated on July 11, 1562 with the burning of dozens of Maya codices and thousands of images in an auto-da-fé.
In his Relación de las cosas de Yucatán Landa wrote: These people also make use of certain characters or letters, with which they wrote in their books their ancient matters and their sciences, and by these and by drawings and by certain signs in these drawings they understood their affairs and made others understand and taught them. We found a large number of these books in these characters and, as they contained nothing in which there was not to be seen superstition and lies of the devil, we burned them all, which they regretted to an amazing degree and which caused them great affliction.
Years ago the horror of such devastation inspired me to write this poem:
Archbishop building a fire
with the books of the Mesoamerican Indian
turns the words into smoke
while the painted characters
twist in the flames
as if they were alive.
Archbishop building a fire,
howls.
During the Classic Period (AD 250–900) of Maya civilization, a number of city-states that were also religious centers emerged, first in the forests of Chiapas and the Guatemalan Petén and later on the Yucatán plains. Maya country is found in present-day Chiapas, Tabasco, Campeche, Yucatán and Quintana Roo in Mexico, Guatemala, and parts of Belize, Honduras, and El Salvador. There were invasions by Nahuatl-speaking groups around AD 400, between AD 700 and 900, and by the Aztecs in the Postclassic period. Aztecs first demanded tribute from the K’iche’ in 1501, and in 1510 they began paying tribute to Moctezuma in quetzal feathers, gold, gems, cacao beans, and cloth. Moctezuma sent an emissary to the K’iche’ in 1512 to warn them about the Spaniards, and they continued to pay tribute until the Aztec Empire fell, in 1521.
A native of Badajoz, Extremadura, Pedro de Alvarado came to know Hernán Cortés in Santo Domingo, on the island of Hispaniola, and joined him for the conquest of Cuba and years later in the conquest of Mexico. While acting as commander of the Spaniards in Tenochtitlan, the capital of the Aztec Empire, he was responsible for the slaughter of Aztec nobility in the patio of the Great Temple during the feast of Toxcatl, held in honor of the supreme deity and god of war Huitzilopochtli, in late May 1520. Indigenous accounts describe the stabbing, spearing, dismembering, and beheading of the celebrants. Three years later, Cortés entrusted him with the conquest of Guatemala, and he set out in December 1523 with some five hundred Spaniards, one hundred and sixty horses, and between seven thousand and ten thousand Mexican allies. He entered Guatemalan territory on February 13, 1524, and made the Kaqchikeles, rivals of the K’iche’, his allies, following the tactics of Cortés, whose alliance with Tlaxcalans, Totonacs, and Texcocans had enabled the defeat of the Aztecs.
On March 7, 1524, Pedro de Alvarado and his army seized Kumarkaaj, and the Spaniards subsequently conquered the highland Maya region. The Aztecs had dubbed him Tonatiuh (Nahuatl for sun
), as his hair and beard were red, and scholars have suggested that his arrival could have been seen as symbolizing the appearance of a new sun, replacing the previous world that had departed.
In one of two letters to Hernán Cortés about the conquest of Guatemala, Pedro de Alvarado wrote: And seeing that by fire and sword I might bring these people to the service of His Majesty, I determined to burn the chiefs who, at the time that I wanted to burn them, told me, as it will appear in their confessions, that they were the ones who had ordered the war against me and were the ones also who made it. They told me about the way they were to do so, to burn me in the city, and that with this thought (in their minds) they had brought me there, and that they had ordered their vassals not to come and give obedience to our Lord the Emperor, nor help us, nor do anything else that was right. And as I knew them to have such a bad disposition toward the service of His Majesty, and to insure the good and peace of this land, I burnt them, and sent to burn the town and to destroy it, for it is a very strong and dangerous place, that more resembles a robbers’ stronghold than a city… . And as far as touched the war, I have nothing more at present to relate, but that all the prisoners of war were branded and made slaves, of whom I gave His Majesty’s fifth part to the treasurer, Baltasar de Mendoza, which he sold by public auction, so that the payment to His Majesty should be secure.
The apogee of the Maya began toward the fourth century AD. Religion became organized, and the achievements of Mayan art show they were the most gifted scientists and artists of all the Mesoamerican peoples. Highly developed in astronomy and computation, they were also superb painters and stone-carvers.
The Mayan language family is extensive, descending from the Proto-Mayan