[English]
No matter how the planets move across
the sky, there will always be an
infinite number of extinctions.
Intelligent species will disappear
forever into the abyss of time. This
cycle has been true for millions of
years of evolution. Our days as all of
our direct ancestors and cousins are
numbered. The question is, will they,
the ones that will come after us,
remember us in our story, or will they
forget us and simply assume they are the
supreme masters of life on Earth?
In Eastern Europe, high up the
Carpathian Mountains, there is a large
plateau flanked by rocks of gigantic
sizes. The most striking found in the
middle was long ago named the Carpathian
sphinx. Its name derived from its
resemblance and similar facial size to
the famous Egyptian sphinx. Is there a
very old connection between the
Carpathian sphinx and the great sphinx
in Egypt? Is there a possibility that
the Carpathian sphinx is the result of a
vanished civilization?
While doing her masters in Boston in
documentary film,
Wana Guillo did an independent
investigation.
Unsatisfied by her scientific findings,
Wana decided to leave the United States.
She returned to Eastern Europe, to
Romania, to the country she had left as
a teenager more than 15 years ago.
[Music]
Wana wanted to explore firsthand and
examine all the possibilities on site.
The Carpathian Sphinx was calling Wana
to unravel its hidden story.
Wana decided she had to try and solve
its riddle.
Is there a possibility
that the Carpathian sphinx and the
Egyptian sphinx speak to us of a larger
forgotten story of our world history?
[Music]
All the art we create today is a legacy
of what those people and other groups of
early humans around the world developed
during the ice age. The art did not come
out of a vacuum.
The Egyptian Sphinx is seen as the
greatest statue ever made by the hand of
man. Built from sacred stone, it's
considered to be one of the biggest
ancient wonders. The sphinx has a body
shaped like a lion and its head shaped
as a king or a god.
John Anthony West, an American
journalist and independent Egyptologist,
while researching the documents on the
Sphinx became convinced that the statue
had been highly eroded by rain, not by
wind, which was the mainstream
assumption. This meant that the Sphinx
had to be much older than the
traditional established date. To prove
its antiquity, West needed an
open-minded expert from a renowned
academic medium. After a long search,
West found credentialed geologist, Dr.
Robert M. Shock, a recently tenured
professor at Boston University, who
holds a doctorate in geology and
geoysics from Yale, a topranking
university. Although young, Dr. Shock
was an expert in the analysis of rock
erosion.
What I found was that West had one very
extreme idea that the Sphinx was
thousands of years older than the
Egyptologists thought. So I thought it
was a long shot. I thought maybe West
was on to something I thought was very
improbable, but it was worth looking at
further. I'm a curious type of person.
Alongside West, Shock embarked on a trip
to Egypt to evaluate firsthand the
antiquity of the Egyptian Sphinx. Shock
realized that the Sphinx had been highly
eroded by rains,
just as West argued.
The rain erosion was easy to spot. The
rocks weathered by heavy rains had a
rounded and undulated profile
in sharp contrast to the hard profile of
wind weathering.
This is classic textbook example of what
happens to a limestone wall when you
have rains beating down on it for
thousands of years. It's clearly rain
precipitation causing these erosional
features.
One thing I think one has to realize is
that the Sphinx itself is in very bad
shape in the 20th century. It's
deteriorating very quickly. You can
literally stand in front of the Sphinx
and watch stones fall off of it. Yes,
it's a very serious problem the modern
weathering, but the weathering that I'm
looking at is the ancient weathering,
the weathering that we see under ancient
repairs. And that's a whole different
ballgame. That's a whole different um
set of evidence than the modern
weathering. And this work that goes back
um almost two decades now for myself
personally really set the stage for much
of what has come later. And I'm not
claiming any credit here. I'm giving
credit to the Sphinx. Um, and it's also
changed my life. Um, sometimes I think
usually I think for the better,
sometimes I wonder what I got myself
into. So, I really started on the Sphinx
work when I was very young. This is me
about 20 years ago. Um, and what it
really indicate doing, at least for some
people, and this was part of the
controversy and part of why we're here
now is talking about, you know, if you
push the day of the Sphinx back, does it
mean that we have to view history
differently? Um, do we have to rewrite
history? Things were happening in Egypt
at a much earlier period than
conventional archaeologists,
conventional historians
have ever admitted or suspected. Take a
look at this. You can see the rolling,
weathering, the precipitation induced
weathering. And here you see very nicely
all these joints which are various fault
joints and whatnot. You don't see this
same type of joints opening up in the
wind induced weathering.
This is clear evidence to me as a
geologist that this erosional feature we
see was caused by rain beating down on
the rocks.
We have a anti-deluvian civilization
with all the trappings of later feronic
civilization like the Sphinx with the
characteristic Egyptian headcloth with a
characteristic use of the lion in the
guise of the king and then you have
nothing. You have nothing for how long?
A thousand years, 2,000 years and then
it starts up again. Where's the link?
What ties this anti-deluvian culture to
what came later? Culture evolves in a
linear fashion. To accept the theories
that you're reporting means that you've
got culture A,
culture B,
and in between nothing.
And it simply doesn't work that way.
What's actually at stake are the
implications, the the impact it has upon
accepted views of the evolution of
civilization.
Daniel Russo, a Peruvian specialist in
prehistory,
became convinced about the existence of
a worldwide civilization,
now forgotten, that became extinct after
a major natural disaster.
According to Russo,
this civilization had left its
fingerprints on all the continents,
especially at higher elevations in
various mountain ranges of the world.
Russo believed its people worship
mountains and sculpted the rocks as an
expression of their religion and
spirituality.
[Music]
In 1968
during the communist regime of Nikolai
Chescu,
Russo was able to come to the Carpathian
Mountains.
Intrigued by the possibility that in
this mountain range were the best
preserved marks of those forgotten
peoples. In his words, in the Carpathian
Mountains
was the door to the treasure of a lost
peoples.
Russo and his team examined the
surrounding area of the Carpathian
Sphinx and he became certain he had
found convincing proof of the vanished
peoples.
According to Russo,
the Carpathian Sphinx is a prehistoric
monument
sculpted in very remote times,
partially destroyed in the face, highly
weathered by rain and wind.
The legacy of the vanished peoples.
Upon his return to Peru, Russo published
a study on his worldwide findings
entitled The Fantastic History of a
Discovery.
He concluded that the Carpathian
Mountains were a central location of
high significance
and that the Carpathian Sphinx was one
of its most important monuments.
[Music]
The Carpathian Sphinx is centrally
positioned above 2200 m on the Bukaji
massive plateau at the intersection of
major paths.
The gigantic rock has a number of phases
best seen when the sunlight changes
during the day all oriented in cardinal
directions.
One face resembling a modern human is
oriented north.
Another face resembling an early human
is oriented west.
Why does one face target the north and
another one the west?
Why does one face point to the northern
sky and another one to the setting sun?
Who does this gigantic bearded rock face
represent?
The mysterious enigmatic rock faces can
only be seen from certain angles,
especially at sunrise, sunset, and full
moon. Will the sun or the moon indicate
a secret direction? Russo believes these
rock sculptures indicated sacred
treasure hidden in nearby caves pointing
to a spiritual legacy.
Where should one look to find the
answers?
I think when we look for this lost
civilization, there may have been lost
civilizations, but they were not
necessarily what we expect or what many
people expect. That is, they were not a
mirror image in the past of what we are
today.
Russo thought the highly eroded rock
sculptures were guardians of an ancient
wisdom. They were a magical work
produced by people whose understanding
of the world was much different from the
present.
was this ancient lost civilization
actually what we would now call
Neanderthalss. Um so going back tens of
thousands of years into the last ice
age.
Is there a possibility that the vanished
peoples Russo searched for could be the
vanished Neanderl peoples?
With the Neandertos, you know, when they
discovered them, they purposely made
them look, you know, more apish and and
how could that be a part of us, you
know, how could that be another kind of
human? I don't think it was, you know,
people weren't really ready to
understand. And I think you have to make
people ready to understand by
having it in the media and not in a
comical way. To not give this a chance
and to ignore it and to look at it and
go, I didn't come from that because the
Bible tells me so is is is
selling yourself short of your human
experience. Framing your world and
building a paradigm of existence and
what is reality based on. I think human
evolution is the utmost start is the
beginning of everything as far as
understanding ourselves where we are and
where we are going. There has to be like
monuments to Neanderthalss then you know
to our ances they're the they're the
immortal people they're in my mind
they're they're the thing that I think
is the closest to God you'll ever get
because they're the only existence you
have from a world that's being formed.
Stan Guch, a British psychologist and
researcher, developed in the 1970s an
original thesis based on a lifetime of
research, observation, and insights.
According to Gu, we modern humans are a
hybrid.
in part chromagnon, our direct ancestor,
and in part Neanderl. Gu's thesis has
been proven correct by genetic studies,
and we find ourselves today to be a
genetic combination of both Cro-Magnum
and Neanderl human species. We have
inherited about 20% of the Neanderl
genome into our current gene pool. And
every person in Eurasia and even North
Africa has between 2 to 4% of the
Neanderl genome preserved in us.
For Stan Guch Neanderthalss were their
own species. They had their own culture.
They had their own civilization. Even he
used terms like cities of dreams that
they built cities of dreams. They had a
dream culture. They had an advanced
sophisticated culture.
[Music]
Typically people had the concept of
Neanderthalss as being dark, brutish,
apelike if you would. and the
chromagnons, our ancestors were the
lightkinned
fair-haired individuals may be totally
opposite that in fact um the early
archaic homo sapiens were much darker
than the Neanderthalss that they came in
contact with in Europe. Gu predicted
this um long ago.
The Neandertols lived and flourished for
more than 300,000 years, much longer
than modern humans. They lived during
harsh climates and were physically well
adapted and acclimatized to the ice age,
being much fitter and more muscular than
humans today.
Recent discoveries show that Neandertols
had greater manual dexterity than modern
humans, which made them very well suited
for manual activities and labor such as
weaving, engraving, drawing, painting,
and sculpting.
The oldest construction work made by
humans, the Neanderls, was discovered in
Brunel Cave in France. Deep inside the
cave, a group of French spiliologists
found a construction built of concentric
circles weighing more than two tons.
These were used for ritual practices by
the Neanderl people more than 175,000
years ago, preceding any modern human
spiritual or artistic creation.
Neanderls wore jewelry and body paints.
They collected and kept crystals and
minerals for exchange. They had their
own language, lived in complex social
groups, and were at least on the same
cultural and mental levels as their
counterparts, our direct ancestors. They
had profound religious and artistic
systems,
and practiced holistic medicine largely
based on the healing powers of plants.
Hunting and producing weapons, things
like that, chromagnum was certainly
superior. But if you're talking about um
knowledge of herbs
uh then I would say Neanderthal was
superior. It depends what you're talking
about.
Gu points out that the cerebellum was
larger in Neanderthalss. He attributes
and I believe perhaps rightfully so
based on clinical evidence that the
cerebellum is really the seat of many
mental abilities, many mental processes
that we to this day have a very poor
understanding of. So for instance,
dreams may originate primarily in the
cerebellum.
um uh certain types of artistic
impulses, religious impulses, impulses
of the sacred um certain we could call
it loosely philosophical and psychical
impulses.
My view is that the antal and chromagnum
crossbreed in
central Europe some 30 35,000 40,000
years ago.
our culture, our um religious impulses,
many of our institutions,
um societal institutions are really a
combination of both Neanderthal
institutions or religious aspects, if
you want to call it that, and
Cro-Magnons. um that the Cromagnons
really
adopted or inherited or actually took
over many um Neanderthal concepts. Many
Neanderthal mental innovations for
instance maybe symbolism
um religious ceremonies
um many of what in a most deep-seated
way make up our culture, make up our
identity as we see it today. A lot of
our culture and our beliefs and our
disbeliefs come from the end. So we've
incorporated much of the Neanderl
material into our lives.
Nearby the Carpathian Sphinx, we find a
number of caves where Neanderl people
lived, practiced rituals, and hunted the
big game of the ice age.
A very high number of cave bear
skeletons have been found here in the
bear cave alongside Neanderl tools and
hearths.
Evidence of their gatherings and
extended stays.
Mean
in the Carpathian Mountains, a few
hundred kilometers from the Carpathian
Sphinx, The oldest cave bear ritual
arrangement has been discovered deep
inside a cave gallery.
Absolute
respective.
Carry out new excavations, not looking
for just the same old same old, but also
looking for new evidence with a new
view, with a new frame of mind. In
northern Spain, in ElCast cave were
discovered very old paintings, drawings,
and engraved signs made by prehistoric
humans. At first, these were assumed to
have been made by modern humans, but on
further analysis were revealed to have
been made by Neanderl artists more than
67,000 years ago. Neanderls were the
originators of their own cave art and
symbolic expression in Gibralar. Deep
inside Gorm's cave, Neanderl artists
sculpted unknown symbols on the floor.
These are enigmatic,
complex signs made out of 200 to 300
strokes, sequential and ordered. It is
believed to be some type of symbolic
mapping tool for the cave inhabitants.
[Music]
We're in Romania here. We're in the
Carpathian Mountains. Something that is
not very far from where we are currently
located is a incredible structure, a
rock formation up in the high peaks
known as the Carpathian Sphinx. I find
this absolutely amazing.
Yes. Everyone looks at one side of the
Sphinx and sees a face there. Looks like
a modern face. But if we walk around to
the other side, look what we have. This
is a face.
We have an entropoid looking face.
Exactly. But looks like a Neanderthal.
A Neanderthal face with a big eye
socket. Low forehead.
The You can see the mouth and the nose
here. And notice, and I think this is
very telling, very important, the way
it's facing. This face is looking toward
the west. And we're here in the evening.
The sun is setting. Look how the sun is
lined up.
Direct line to the eye.
Direct line to the eye. This Neanderthal
type face is looking toward the west,
looking toward the setting sun. Now,
it's been speculated that Neanderthalss
were a more nocturnal species. If that's
the case, what sun would they be
interested in? The setting sun, the sun
that sets as they come out for their
nocturnal activities, their ceremonies,
their rituals. So they would not be
looking toward the east as many modern
cultures do but toward the west the
setting sun which would be significant
and important to them because
essentially that would start their day
that would start their ceremonies and we
here we have a Neanderthalike face
looking toward the setting sun. Yeah.
Looking at this
face as a geologist,
looking at the types of rocks, you've
got several different layers of rock.
You've got more fine sandstones. You've
got conglomerates. You've got
rocks that are set within the rock.
That's all natural.
Yes. Like that one
like these pink rocks and these darker
blackish rocks. And then then you have
what looks like a little hat on top of
it, which is a slightly different rock,
different lithology again. So you've got
very complex interplay of different rock
types. And that's all natural.
Then you have them shaped into this
face, this profile, and that's where I
start to wonder, is that totally natural
erosional features
or
Is there the possibility
that it started to look like a face
because of natural erosional features?
Is it possible that maybe people came,
they pecked away at it, they modified it
a little bit to look more like a face?
We know from other places that does
happen. Now, when I've walked around
this, looked at it closely, it's so
badly eroded
that it's I would say virtually
impossible to tell if there's at this
point if there's any kind of
artificiality to it. There could have
been. I can't say for certain, but I
think more importantly, in a way, it
doesn't matter because you've got this
profile, you've got this structure. It's
clearly recognizable as a face, as a
human profile. When you walk around to
the other side, you've got another
clearly recognizable profile. They're
oriented
in important directions. this one toward
the north, the other face that looks
more Neanderthal toward the west. That's
significant in both cases. So whether
they're natural or whether they're
artificial or some combination of both,
I can see that they were incredibly
important. They would have attracted
attention in ancient times just as they
do now. Many sacred sites around the
world are natural and they're maybe even
considered more sacred because they are
natural. They're from nature. They're
from the gods.
Exactly. So it looks like a miracle has
happened.
That's right. That's right. That's
right.
Natural rock in the shape of a face or
an animal.
Exactly. So this
without any uh human touch human touch
any artificiality. So, in some ways, one
could argue that if this is fully
natural, it's even more spectacular,
even more important because it's an
indication of something that could be
considered from the God's sacred
divinity.
Exactly. If this is completely natural,
I'm a lot more impressed
and moved.
Exactly.
Um, than if it was sculpted by the hand
of man. What this is is sort of a
scooped out area.
It's almost a round
Yeah, it's a round sort of basin area.
If you put your hand in it, it's filled
with rain water now and sediment. It's
actually quite deep.
That is I mean that is deep. And I'm not
really touching the end.
Yeah, it's quite deep.
Sediments that
Yeah, it's just sediment that's
collected in modern times. But what what
I think we have here is really a
depression or basin area that would have
been perfect for ritualistic purposes
for different ceremonial purposes. It
may have started out as a natural
depression, but I believe it was
probably enhanced by people rubbing it,
scratching it. You see in more recent
ancient sites from only a few thousand
years ago, say at temple complexes in
Egypt, in Turkey, places where people
will rub the rock, they'll scrape it and
it makes depressions. They're trying to
get the sacredness, the power from that
sacred site. This may have been formed
initially the same way formed this
depression. This now serves for
ceremonial purposes. How many people
would you need?
Oh, many to create something like this.
A lot. If you're scraping like that over
a very long period of time,
thousands and thousands
of generations potentially if they're
doing it by hand and rubbing it or
scraping away it. But once you have it,
you've got this depression, this basin
that could be used for any number of
ceremonial purposes. Maybe it was filled
with water and used for some kind of
cleansing ritual. Maybe it was used for
some kind of sanctified or holy water.
We still have those concepts today.
Either cleansing rituals as you go into
a sacred place or holy water that brings
the power of the
sacred site and lets you maybe ingest it
or sprinkle it on yourself. Baptism. We
still use water from a basin from a
depression.
Maybe it was used to collect some kind
of sacrifice for the gods. Maybe it was
filled with liquid. Maybe um some kind
of drink. Maybe it was used to collect
blood if there were sacrifices of
animals. We saw a little bit higher that
basin area that may have been used for
ceremonial purposes. To me, this is very
similar. This is not exactly a basin.
Um, possibly it was at one point if this
is eroded back in more recent times. You
can see there's some breakage there. But
what looks like is an area that
eroded out. You can put your hand
because I really I I really can't I'm
not reaching the end.
No, it goes way back.
Probably up to
at least back to there.
And what it looks to me like is an a
place where people may have been
scraping at it. um removing material.
It's a slightly different
rock here in the general matrix. It
would have attracted attention. You see
sort of a orangish reddish color, but
like you see at other sacred sites of
more recent origin. It may have been a
place where people scratched it to try
to get a little bit of powder, a little
bit of the essentially power, the sacred
power of this spot.
[Music]
[Music]
Another feature that is on the plateau
that really struck me is what we can
call the bearded head or the bearded
man's head. It's a huge structure, very
powerful, very moving in my mind. And I
suspect that whether it's natural or
artificial or some combination of both,
this is something that may have survived
from a very long time ago
um geologically
and may have moved people and been
recognized by people specifically
Neanderthalss
um before the end of the last ice age
that they would have recognized this as
looking like a face as a bearded face
just like we do now. Um, it almost looks
to me like what some people's image of
God is, you know, a Judeo-Christian
bearded male figure. Um, interesting
that you find it up in the mountains and
you approach it and it seems to be in my
mind a sacred ritualistic setting.
I'm told that the name that's been given
to it is the metin. That's a name that
goes back, we don't know exactly how
long, but it's called the met, which
loosely translates as the church. And
this suggests right away that there's
something special about this area. What
is the met? It's this incredible
limestone formation, huge formation,
incredibly symmetrical.
And it appears to me as if it were a
stage or a podium, but of enormous scale
at a scale I think of giants. It's a
huge scale. And it's symmetrically
arranged. It itself is symmetrical. And
it sits in a little valley area that
forms in my mind a natural amphitheater.
This I can't help but think would form a
perfect stage for ceremonies, for ritual
practices, for initiation, for other
types of sacred and religious practices.
In fact, maybe at night it would be even
more dramatic if there were huge
bonfires on the met. If um various trees
like evergreen trees were thrown onto
bonfires and then sparked up like
fireworks, if there was drumming, if
there was singing,
music,
voices. So, I think this could be a very
powerful setting for ceremonial
purposes. All of the pieces in my mind
come together here to suggest that this
is a central location. The river, the
ancient name for the river which
effectively originates at the Met is
sometimes interpreted or translated as
divine river or the heavenly river. So
here we have more illusions to the
divine, to the sacred, but there's still
more. On one side of the valley, the
rock formations, the rock peak is
referred to as the origin peak or the
beginning peak. This suggests to me a
religious connotation of the origins of
the universe, the cosmos, of people. How
did things originate sort of in a
Judeo-Christian sense, Genesis? How did
life itself and the universe, the cosmos
originate? On the other side of the
valley, the formations are known as the
goddesses.
Clear
reference to divinity,
especially if we're talking about
Neanderthalss and they put a lot of
emphasis on women and goddesses. So
we've got the goddesses, we've got the
origins, we've got the Met, we've got
the heavenly or divine river. And then
if we keep going further north beyond
the Met to the highest peak, we have the
peak of the human being, which suggests
to me the origins of life, the origins
of humanity. processions would be
carried on going up the river valley
from the south up toward the Met. As you
ascend up the river valley toward the
plateau, you find the Met as a very
central location. There's nothing else
like this in the vicinity. There's
nothing like this in the area. There's
nothing like this potentially in all of
Europe. So perhaps this was a focal
point, a gathering place for ancient
Neanderthal people from a very broad
geographic region. I could see this very
much as a gathering place for sacred
rituals, for ceremonies. In fact, as
I've looked at the maps, as I've looked
at the geology and the topography, the
geography of this region, you don't have
anything like this anywhere else. You
don't have a place that's at high
altitude where from below it looks like
huge mountain peaks. In fact, we're in
the Carpathian Mountains. But then when
you get up to the top, it's like a
fortress and it opens up into this
plateau.
And in the middle of the fortress, there
is
structures like this
natural or artificial features.
Here it is. So this would be a gathering
point. I see it very much as a gathering
point, a ceremonial point. And I wonder
as I think about how widespread
the populations were that would gather
here periodically because there's no
other area that's as well suited as this
for I believe hundreds of kilometers. So
if we're talking about Neanderthal
culture and consistent rituals over a
large geographic area, consistent
beliefs, shared beliefs, shared
religious ceremonies, periodically they
would gather all together to exchange
stories, to participate in ceremonies
that would bond different communities
together. I think this is the perfect
spot for that. We know that there's a
strong Neanderthal presence here. We
have a number of caves. Caves that occur
along the river valley as you ascend up
toward the meta and up toward the
plateau. These caves to this day
preserve evidence of Neanderthal
presence, evidence of Neanderthal
rituals.
What's the behavior of ice age? What was
the behavior of ice age bears?
Right. And also
would it be natural for
would they would so many of them come
here to
to die?
Yeah. Yeah.
And they just all decided to come here
when they would were about to die.
It's also possible that perhaps they
were used in rituals.
That's what I'm thinking. You'd be using
tame bears.
Yes. And if this was this place was used
for performance,
it would make a lot of sense.
Yeah. that uh they would have the
dancing bears. Beautiful.
Really incredible space.
It's amazing
experience.
I don't know. For me, it creates an
experience that is extraordinary,
very moving, but it's hard to find the
right words.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. It's not easily
put in language.
[Music]
See, I'm wondering how they physically
following the river at this point.
Cuz the path would be 20 m down,
right?
And the river is
And the river is going through that
pass.
Yeah. And here
it would be almost the same.
But see what I'm saying? Where would
they be walking unless they're walking
right in the river?
That's what I would think that they
would be walking in the river. People
could have been coming from many even
hundreds of kilometers or more away
gathering a certain time. Maybe this was
something that happened every few years.
Maybe it was even major ceremonies that
occurred once in a generation and it was
a pilgrimage. And we can very much
imagine and I think it's more than just
imagination. And we can reconstruct
start to reconstruct how such
pilgrimages occurred and what practices
would have been carried out along the
way. Maybe initiations were carried out
along these the passage getting up to
the plateau.
[Music]
[Applause]
[Music]
The overall experience of one going into
this cave would be
sort of similar for a Neanderl.
Oh, I think it would be very similar.
Would have had incredible experience
here.
Especially if they had the better night
vision.
I was going to say that better night
vision. And also um what were they using
for illumination?
Even with really good vision, they had
to have some kind of illumination.
What's What's the What are the acoustics
in here?
Oh, well.
That's pretty good.
So, this place could be used for some
sort of
musical rituals.
Yeah. Worked well. You've got good
acoust acoustics potentially. You've got
sort of a natural chimney. You've got
water that you could channel through.
You probably keep a fairly um you know
temperature wise fairly close tolerances
year round naturally.
Mhm. Yeah.
It's
a perfect place to live.
It creates very interesting shapes. All
of a sudden,
things start to emerge.
Yeah. Yeah. Isn't that amazing? Just one
candle.
All of a sudden, for me, I don't know,
for you, everything looks a lot more
organic and alive.
Yeah, I agree. I agree. Because I think
the harsh headlamps and flashlights,
they they they sort of flatten
everything. You don't see the texture to
it. It washes things out.
And imagine
now a ceremony here. And
yeah. Yeah.
Musical performance.
Oh yeah.
With things like pine trees and whatnot.
If you brought in the pine branches, you
know how if you light them, they just
all of a sudden for a short period of
time, you have a It's like fireworks.
Exactly.
And I could see them doing things like
that for dramatic effect. And at certain
times, you know, during a ceremony, I
bet a lot of the hearts and a lot of the
fire remains that are found had nothing
to do with war. Was probably
ritualistic. I mean, they didn't they
were used to the climate.
Stunning.
It's really those are really stunning.
Yeah.
What a beautiful environment.
Yeah. This is really interesting how it
works.
A few candles and a few crystals and
suddenly you have an extraordinary
extraordinary
unexpected experience.
Yeah.
Away from modern life and time.
What do you think about this setting
with all the
and about 15 candles and
Yeah, it's beautiful.
I mean this is this is the first church
or sanctuary or
cathedral whatever you want to call it
very much. Yeah. It has the
the feel of a cathedral.
Yeah. I mean I think the modern
artificial churches and cathedrals and
that they're trying to imitate this
not vice versa.
Yes. It makes me really feel religion
but not
in a veryity deep and personal sense.
Yeah.
Yeah. Not like an organized religion but
a real deep feeling
of sanctity and spirituality. I would
say
it could have been some sort of um
ritual or pilgrimage that would come
here.
Right. Right.
Sort of a returning.
Yeah. Yeah,
returning to the beginning.
Yeah, maybe certain times of year or
maybe there may even be times that even
bigger groups got together on a more
lengthy cycle, you know, cyclical maybe,
you know, based on a lunar cycle of the
what is it? The 19-year return or
something like that, which would
essentially be a generational thing. You
might have a huge
sort of congregation of different
people,
hundreds or if not more,
possibly thousands of people.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Which would have been
that you can visualize it would have
been really amazing.
And so you have this dichotomy between
religion and intuition with
Neanderthal's
reason and logic with Cromagnos
and Stan Gush says that it was sort of
monumental when the two met
also you had two different world views
coming together.
Neither really understood the other. So
Neanderthalss didn't really understand
these new Cromagnons that were invading
their territory. The Cromagnons didn't
really understand what the Neanderthalss
were doing with all these weird rituals
and ceremonies and dancing and singing
that was foreign to them. They tried to
figure it out what they called magic.
Exactly. And they probably How would you
um see these rituals? They would have to
spy probably at night.
Night. Yeah.
Try to figure out what's going on
from a distance.
It must have been very mysterious, very
scary to the chromagnons to see these
people doing all these things. You know,
when you don't understand something, you
fear it. In many cases, much of our
culture
and our beliefs
and our beliefs,
our religious practices,
that's an inheritance from Neanderthal.
We in a cultural sense carry on many the
Angal traditions.
[Music]
The Egyptian sphinx is part of a larger
complex just like the Carpathian sphinx
is part of a larger complex. So in both
cases, I believe we're talking sacred
ceremonial sites that held incredible
importance to their respective people,
to their respective populations.
[Music]
[Music]
They and other ancient, you know,
certain other ancient peoples, but we'll
focus on Neanderthalss for now, were
much more sophisticated
in
ways that we don't even have a good
language to describe.
I mean you have traditions around the
world of a golden age
which I think is not referring to
materialistic golden age.
[Music]
[Music]
[Music]
to judge
a culture like the Neanderthalss by the
gigante remains, physical remains.
It's It's sort of insane.
[Laughter]
Looking at the universe with its cosmic
rhythms, untold beauty, and great
dangers, they understood themselves as
part of something bigger than they
themselves were. They knew their place
in the order of things.
We need to recover that sense of the
world
in waking up to the new paradigm. We
recover something long lost, something
very old in ourselves.
It's as if you're approaching an
incredible cathedral, an incredibly holy
spot. And as you approach it, you come
to various points where you prepare
yourself for the ultimate
adventure, the ultimate religious
experience at the highest peaks.
So this entire complex
which in many ways is symbolized by the
Carpathian sphinx is a huge religious
ceremonial ritualistic complex that must
have been incredibly important to the
Neanderthal people for generations and
generations, probably thousands and
thousands of generations over
tens of thousands of years. Really
important to me to be able to come here
and experience firsthand the caves, to
experience firsthand the plateau, to
experience firsthand the Carpathian
Sphinx. To me, in fact, in some ways, we
can think of the Carpathian Sphinx as
being a symbol for a lost world,
literally a lost people, a lost culture.
The mountain is a lost cathedral and the
Carpathian Sphinx is the lost altar.
[Music]
[Music]
A lost culture,
a lost people.
People who understood that they were
part of something bigger than
themselves.
People who left us clues, mysteries, and
riddles. And the greatest riddle of all,
the Carpathian Sphinx, the forgotten
Sphinx.
Up the mountain of forgotten dreams
where Neanderl communities flourished
for thousands of generations.
The Carpathian Sphinx speaks to us of a
larger forgotten story of our world
history. We need to recover that sense
of the past and those forgotten stories
for they have the power to inform and
enrich our lives today.
[Music]
[Applause]
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[Applause]
[Music]
[Applause]
Yeah.
[Music]
[Applause]
[Music]
[Applause]
Where
are
you?
away.
[Music]
Glor.
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