Teotihuacan Guadalupe Vision
The first rays
of Primavera, Spring Equinox sunlight spread over the land to touch
the 20,000 pilgrims climbing the Pyramid of the Sun. Plumes of copal
incense filled the sky, as Aztec drums beat the ancient rhythms that
our bodies could not resist. Feathers of brilliantly colored birds decorated
the heads of lead dancers bowing into the circle of those ready to move.
Our feet began to pound and rise as we danced to the sun on Teotihuacan’s
ancient stone plaza, speaking our prayers to spirit.
And in stark counterpoint within this sacred ceremonial scene, black
military helicopters circled overhead on this first day of the Iraq
War, March 2003. Mexico was on high alert with armed militia standing
guard at every level of the pyramids of the Sun and Moon.
My friend and I climbed up the steep stone steps of the Pyramid of the
Moon to face the rising sun and pray for harmony as our country was
invading Iraq. As we began to chant to the World Mother and pray for
peace, my friend and I simultaneously saw her appear above us, floating
over the earth and spreading flowers and blessings--the more we chanted,
the more she multiplied as fractal images of herself spreading more
and more beauty and grace.
We continued on our Spring Equinox pilgrimage to visit the shrine of
Our Lady of Guadalupe at the Basilica in Mexico City, where we offered
red roses and songs. Thousands of families with children gathered at
her water shrine where the larger than life sized bronze statues of
Aztec warriors bow with offerings to her image at Tepayac, the hill
long sacred to the Aztec/Nahuatl deity Tonantzin.
When we returned a week later and walked into our home, we saw a most
extraordinary image of Guadalupe imprinted on our kitchen window. This
image stayed clearly visible for at least a month and gave us solace
during a very difficult time when so many humans were suffering.

Numinous
visitations from a beloved sister-mother
“It’s
no coincidence that She’s been appearing more often lately.
In times of crisis, She’s always there.”
Ruben Martinez, author, poet and journalist
Over the last two decades, there has been a dramatic increase in miraculous
apparitions of the Virgin of Guadalupe and her Marian sisterhood…she
appears on the walls of barrio churches and homes in Los Angeles. She
was seen in a perfect likeness in the clouds over Mexico City on her
feast day Dec. 12 several years ago. She has appeared in windows of
banks and churches and homes throughout North America, with her image
often lasting for weeks and becoming a temporary shrine and pilgrimage
site.

Mary in the
window of a Florida bank
C.G. Jung called the many Marian appearances ‘numinosity’.
Mary’s apparitions have been reported in Canada, Ecuador, Ireland,
Italy, Korea, Mexico, Northern Ireland, Switzerland, the Ukraine, Yugoslavia
and the United States. And many news reporters who go to refute the
sightings come back with profound religious experiences.
According to author Clarissa Pinkola Estes, Guadalupe appearances and
apparitions are: “…visits from a great and beloved
sister-mother, who because of long-standing love and familiarity with
you, comes through the door without knocking…bringing sweet nourishments
to you."

Our Lady of Guadalupe’s Spanish origins
The name Nuestra
Senora Santa Maria de Guadalupe was her Spanish christened name in Extremadura,
Spain. The word Guadalupe is a corruption of the Arabic meaning river
of light or river of love. She is among the oldest of Black Virgins
as she was given to Spain by Pope Gregory the Great at some date preceding
700 AD. According to Ean Begg in ‘The Cult of The Black Virgin’,
when the king of Spain was defeated by the Muslim Saracens in 711AD,
his knights fled with this highly regarded Madonna statue, and buried
her in an iron casket near the Guadalupe River in the region of Extremadura.
In 1326 a shepherd discovered the icon following a message and miraculous
appearance of Mary and her shrine was erected in Guadalupe, Spain. Interestingly,
Begg tells us that Guadalupe was formally crowned as a Black Virgin
in 1928 and was associated with the cult of Mary Magdalene. Guadalupe’s
name followed her into the Americas when Hernan Cortes, one of her many
fervent devotees, arrived from Spain to conquer Tenochtitlan, the center
of the powerful Aztec empire (current location of Mexico City).
Guadalupe’s Appearance at Tepeyac
“She grows her strongest roses in the soil where they
are most needed…
She will appear to you in the midst of upheaval and times when we feel
the sky is falling…
She is often most present when there is most need for order, strength,
fierceness, hope and vitality.”
Clarissa Pinkola Estes
Ten years after Cortes’ bloody conquest of the mighty Aztec civilization,
the native people’s cultural fabric was torn and their ceremonial
traditions scattered to the four directions. They were a people in crises
and in need of spiritual direction. On December 9, 1531 a Nahuatl native
named Juan Diego was walking past the sacred hill of Tepeyac, on the
northern edge of Tenochtitlan. He heard sweet melodic sounds like the
singing of multitudes of heavenly birds. As he looked toward the top
of the hill, he saw a shining white cloud with light as bright as many
suns and surrounded by a rainbow. As he watched with wonder, a beautiful
lady appeared in radiant glowing garments and told him,
“I am the
Ever-Virgin Holy Mary, Mother of the God of Great Truth.”
“Her Garments are as the Sun,
gleaming, glittering.
Even the boulder, the crag, on which She takes Her stand
sparkles in Resplendence,
like fine Emerald Jade on a Bangle when it shines,
like the swarming Glow of a Rainbow in the Gloom.
Even the soil, the brambles and prickles
and the rest of the varied weeds that struggle to survive there
are shining like Emerald,
like Divine Turquoise,
to the tip of every leaf;
are glittering like the Golden Scourings of the Gods
up every stalk and twig and thorn.”
(Nican Mopohua 16th century Nahuatl document)
Guadalupe, affectionately called La Morenita, or Little Darkling then
instructed Juan Diego to tell bishop Zumarago in Tenochtitlan that she
wanted a church to be built on the sacred hill to serve as a source
of loving compassion to all who seek her. Juan Diego followed her request
and traveled to give her message to the bishop, who was too busy to
listen to the ravings of a humble native man and sent him away. Juan
Diego returned to Tepeyac the same day and pleaded with Our Lady to
find a more noble messenger, one who might be believed. She instructed
him to again return to the bishop and tell him that he was sent by “the
Ever-Virgin Mary, the Mother of the God Teotl.” (Teotl is God/Goddess
head of the Nahuatl-Aztecs).
This time, the bishop told Juan Diego to return to him with a sign that
would substantiate his claims. Again the Virgin appeared to Juan Diego,
and told him to climb the hill and gather the flowers growing there.
He found Castilian roses which were miraculously blooming on the hill.
This was a variety of Rose only found in Spain, and they could not have
bloomed in December at that high elevation. He picked the fragrant roses,
which were shining with dew like hundreds of pearls and gathered them
into his tilma, or cloak woven of maguey. She instructed him not to
open his tilma for anyone until he was in the presence of the bishop.
When Juan Diego returned to the bishop’s office and opened his
tilma, the miraclulous roses cascaded onto the floor to reveal an image
of Our Lady imprinted on the tilma. The bishop and his assistants bowed
down and cried for forgiveness to the Blessed Virgin. Later that day,
the bishop journeyed to Tepeyac to learn exactly where Our Lady had
appeared, and soon the church and hermitage were constructed, which
is the current site of the Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe.
To the indigenous Nahuatl people of Mexico, Guadalupe was the welcome
return of their Mother Goddess after their feminine deities had been
driven underground with the male-dominated Aztec culture. Tepeyac had
previously been a sacred site for several Nahuatl female deities such
as Coatlicue (Serpent Skirt) and Tonantzin (Our Mother). The Nahuatl
historical records written in the Nican Mopohua tell us that some of
the local natives believed Guadalupe was Tlecuauhtlacupeuh: She Who
Comes Flying from the Light Like an Eagle of Fire. Others said she was
Tequatlanopeuh: She Whose Origins Were in the Rocky Summit.
“Known as Tonantzin among the Nahuatls, but also as
Saint Moon, Queen of Nature,
or Earth Mother in other parts of the Americas, la Guadalupana…
she returns as vessel of the indigenous spirit…
she returns speaking in the inflections of an ancient tongue,
before Christianity, beyond Christianity.
She is among the bearers of the myths, the rites, and the ancient quests.”
Luis Rodriguez, ‘Forgive
Me, Mother, for My Crazy Life’
Zumarago, the Spanish Bishop in Mexico during the time of Guadalupe’s
visitations at Tepayac, named Guadalupe as the daughter that was to
outshine her mother. Certainly this prophetic statement has come true
in the Americas.

Miraculous
Tilma
”Brushes not of this world painted this most sweet
icon.”
Pope Pius
XII
The image of Guadalupe was imprinted upon a rough natural fiber from
the maguey cactus and yet the image is as clear as if it were painted
on fine silk. According to Kodak of Mexico, the image is smooth and
feels like a modern day photograph. The colors have not faded and experts
say the loosely woven fabric should have disintegrated after 20-60 years,
yet it is still fresh after almost 500 years! Microscopic examination
has revealed that there were no brush strokes. For all those scientists
who have investigated the tilma, it remains a mystery and a miracle.
Much research has also been conducted regarding mysterious images that
appear in Guadalupe’s eyes. The images reflected in her two retinas
are of the moment when the Virgin left her imprint on Juan Diego's tilma.
According to Peruvian scientist Jose Aste Tonsmann, an expert in digital
image processing, the figures in her eyes’ reflection show those
historically known to have been present at the unveiling of the tilma
in 1531: Namely, Bishop Zumarraga, an interpreter and Juan Diego and
several family members.
Guadalupe’s tilma shows the radiant rays of the sun surrounding
her as she appeared, wearing a blue-green mantle for a queen of royal
lineage. Her feet rest upon a crescent moon, just as Isis and those
ancient goddesses before her. A four petalled flower rests on her womb,
signifying the balance of four directions and the Nahuatl four sacred
movements of the universe (Naui Ollin). She wears a black Aztec maternity
belt indicating she is with child.
“And a great portent appeared in heaven, a woman clothed
with the sun, with the moon under her feet, and on her head a crown
of twelve stars; she was with child…”
Revelation
11:19a; 12:1-6a

Most fascinating
is the pattern of stars strewn across her mantle. The pattern mirrors
the exact position of constellations on the day her image appeared on
the tilma, December 12, 1531, 10:40 am: The Boreal Crown is located
above the Virgin's head, Virgo is on her chest, in the region of her
hands; Leo is on her womb; Gemini the twins are in the region of her
knees and Orion is located on the Angel at her feet.
When calculating the astrological chart for Guadalupe’s appearance,
I was struck by the position of Venus at 26 degrees Sagittarius. This
degree point is known as our Galactic center. With Pluto currently approaching
this galactic core degree February-May of 2006, this indicates a powerful
transformation at our very roots. As it activates Our Lady’s Venus,
Pluto signals an unprecedented increase of Venus’ qualities of
beauty, love and the sacred feminine rising from the underworld. (Chart
calculation uses Julian time, in use until 1582, when the Gregorian
system was implemented).
Venus and Five Visitations—Five Questions
The cycles of Venus in the heavens create five perfect pentagonal shapes
in the heavens every eight years. Guadalupe’s shrine at Tepeyac
has a five-pointed star above Our Lady’s head. In December of
1531, she made a total of five appearances and she asked Juan Diego
five questions:
• Am I not here, your Mother?
• Are you not under my shadow and protection?
• Am I not your foundation of life?
• Are you not in the folds of my mantle?
• Is there anything else that you need?
The principle of beauty is inherent within the pentagram--it’s
proportions are PHI Golden Mean ratios, reflecting the harmonious ordering
of creation. The pentagram has a long association with the inner mysteries
of the occult and the goddess. I believe her message to us now is, create
beauty and harmony and practice loving compassion. As Dostoevski once
said, “Beauty will save the Earth.”
Banner of Compassion
“Our Dark Madonna of the Americas is not a docile
meek mother.
She is a warrior with her roots growing deep in the Nahuatl Tonantzin
of the sacred hill at Tepayac, and deeper still her roots connect us
to Coatlicue,
Serpent Skirt, the darker fierce mother goddess of the Aztecs”.
(‘La Diosa de las Americas’ ed. Ana Castillo)
Our Lady of the Marian sisterhood gives strength to those who feel disempowered
and disenfranchised. Guadalupe has been the standard-bearer for many
liberation struggles. She has been the glue that holds together families,
communities and countries. Like Joan of Arc, whose banner flew in the
French rebellion with the Templar words Jesu—Maria, Maria-Guadalupe’s
banner was raised by Poncho Villa and Emiliano Zapata during the Mexican
Revolution. Her banner was proudly carried by Cesar Chavez in the California
farm workers’ movement and by the Chiapas Zapatista revolutionary
movement. She is not a quiet, docile presence, this Madonna, and she
is gaining recognition just like her sister Mary Magdalene. Will the
voice of the wise feminine be heard and will her presence within us
turn the current tide of political and environmental suicide?
Pope Pius XII pronounced Our Lady of Guadalupe to be Empress of the
Americas, from Alaska to Tierra del Fuego, South America. The cult of
the Black Virgin, who has its roots in Isis, Inanna Ishtar and Mary
Magdalene is alive and well in the Americas. She is La Morena, the dark
one, rooted in indigenous hearts and elevating all who are missing Mary!
The following poem by Clarrisa
P. Estes paints our Guadalupe as the girl we adore:
“Mi Guadalupe is a girl gang leader in heaven.
She is unlike the pale blue serene woman.
She is serene, yes like a great ocean is serene.
She is obedient, yes, like the sunrise
is obedient to the horizon line.
She is sweet, yes,
like a huge forest of sweet maple trees.
She has a great heart, vast holiness
and like any girl gang leader ought,
substantial hips.
Her lap is big enough
to hold every last one.
Her embrace
Can hold us,
All….”