Travel & Adventure
Peru 2014
In 2014, I had the privilege of joining an extraordinary tour of Peru led by renowned elongated skull expert Brien Foerster, alongside Khemitologists Stephen Mehler, Yousef Awyan, and Patricia Awyan Lehman, who learned from Indigenous Wisdom Keeper, Abd’el Hakim Awyan (1930-2008), Yousef’s father.
Our journey began in Lima, where we visited the Larco Gold Museum. There, we encountered intriguing evidence suggesting the presence of ancient Greco-Egyptian travelers or possibly an older Khemetian culture predating Greek influence. This challenges the traditional historical narratives we are taught. Below are some oddities and examples found in Lima’s museums:
Records from 232 BC document that Admiral Ma’wi, his captain Ra’ta, and their fleet departed from Egypt, traversing the Red Sea and Indian Ocean. They are believed to have circumnavigated Australia, reached the north coast of New Zealand (as per Maori records), and continued across the Pacific Ocean. This journey would have taken them to Santiago de Chile, with trade currents likely guiding them north towards Paracas, Peru. They might have traveled further to Easter Island, Hawaii, Tonga, and other Polynesian islands before returning to Java and Egypt. Evidence suggests they also followed trade currents to Alaska, the Pacific coast of the United States and Mexico, and back to Hawaii. Polynesian legends mention a “God of the Sea” named Maui, who is said to have helped unite Polynesian peoples, as evidenced by similar glyphic art, totems, boat paddles, and fishing technologies found from New Zealand through Polynesia, ancient Peru, Hawaii, and up to Alaska.
Additional evidence includes the Gosford Glyphs, which depict two brothers and their fleet engaging in trade with Australia around 2500 BC. Remarkably, boomerangs have been found in Tutankhamun’s collection dating to around 1324 BC. Proto-Sumerian cuneiform writing honoring the goddess of fertility, discovered on the Magna Fuente bowl and dated to approximately 2500 BC, further supports these findings.
In the 1980s and more recently, Stephen Mehler uncovered what is known as the tomb of Maya (meaning “water” in the ancient Khemetian language). This tomb features depictions of a Central American traveler at the Temple of Isis and the Elephantine Island temple structure, wearing a Plumed Serpent headdress and presenting gifts to his Egyptian hosts. The dating of this tomb remains uncertain. The Temple of Maya also contains a series of painted glyphs on the ceiling, identified by Mayan elders as a star map or calendar glyph used by the ancient Maya. These glyphs are distinctly different from Egyptian/Khemetian hieroglyphs and resemble a lost Peruvian/Incan writing found in a tapestry at the Cusco Museum.
Our travels then took us to Cusco, situated at an elevation of 11,152 feet above sea level. There, we explored the famous Inca Roca wall, including the stone with twelve sides, and observed three distinct construction phases from different periods according to Peruvian researcher Alfredo Gamarra and his son Jesus, which they called the “three worlds”:
Hanan Pacha: Featuring intricate stone carvings integrated with local stone outcroppings, such as staircases and temple sites, representing the oldest cultural group in the region.
Uran Pacha: Characterized by precision-cut stone blocks and cyclopean structures that fit seamlessly, some weighing over 100 tons. This middle cultural group is evident at Machu Picchu, Sacsayhuamán, Ollantaytambo, and other sites.
Ukun Pacha: Consisting of plain river stones with mud-based masonry, typically used for repairs or smaller structures by the Inca, who inherited many sites and employed these methods for modern repairs.
While I thoroughly enjoyed all the sites we visited in Peru, here are some highlights and additional discoveries:
Lima Museums & La Estela Raimondi
In the Lima Museum’s there are also some interesting and out of place artifacts. Here is a depiction of an asian dragon on an ancient water gourd, an elephant or mammoth not recently indigenous to this region, and a four armed being performing surgery. These are OOPARTS, or out of place artifacts.
Cusco
Cusco was an amazing place. Reminded me a lot of Nepal with the Kichwa people, the 11,000-13,000 feet elevation, and much of the modern architecture. After Lima we flew into this site and toured around it before going into the rest of the Sacred Valley. Also much like Nepal, there are all sorts of natural and man made caves and tunnel systems connecting this site to other sites.
Sacsayhuamán
This site sites above Cusco at an elevation of 13,000 feet plus. Not for those who have never been in altitude. It was interesting a majority of the people on the tour were taking altitude sickness pills, and were still sick the entire trip. Myself, I stuck to the local remedy of chewing coca leaves or drinking the coca tea. This has been proven to oxidize the blood, unlike the street drug we all hear about. This site blew my mind based on the many cyclopian and unusually shaped block that fit together with unheard of precision. We are told that these were brought to the sites on wood rollers (100 tons is 200,000 lbs and requires about 2000 people to move if not more), interesting that this site is well above the natural forests and most of the trees in this region are not straight or large enough to support weight. there is a theory of “geopolymers” but this has yet to be proven and again would require a level of alchemical understanding not found in any of the Inca or Pre-Inca abilities that we know of. Perhaps these are from a much older culture which is suggested as well.
Ollantaytambo
By far my favorite site. There is so much going on here that makes no sense. There are a lot of lichen deposits which suggest the antiquity of this site being much much older than we are told. there are also rock removals that make no sense as you will see. How do we get a queen sized bed tabletop removal from an alcove that has about a half inch of missing material around all of the 4 sides. But then again how do you cut out the back with precision as well. Doesnt make sense but there it is. I was the guy jumping all the ropes to discover more as you will see. however when you get to the “Temple of the Sun” here you have a site that sits about 1500 feet+ above the Urabamba river, a raging river. The quarry for the 80-100 ton blocks that make up the temple come from the top of the mountain across the river, yet there are no fallen stones, or evidence any were dropped except for the “resting stone”. How were stones of this size and weight moved with precision from one mountain to the next?
Napa Iglesia
On the train route to Machu Picchu you find a site way up a cliff of shale rock about 1000 feet up. The cave shows all 3 types of Peruvian construction, but the most interesting part of the cave is the back wall. Its about 40 feet across and 15 feet high, and is clean cut out of the bedrock. The tollerance is about 1/100th of an inch which is near impossible with the human hand. There are 90 degree angles and perfect corners as well as a 3 phase sunken alcove in the middle. Who built this, when and of course why?
Machu Picchu
As Brien always said, it always rains at this site. So you can imagine a tour of 40 people got a bit drenched walking around for 30 minutes so they all went to the cafe to wait for the bus to return after seeing a small portion of the site. Myself, I thought “I paid good money to be here” so I had the site to myself for almost an hour. I even walked down the infamous Inca trail, with 2000 foot drop offs to the right to the right to the river below. Reminded me a lot of Nepal but very sketchy. Eventually alone I made it to the Inca bridge and the continuing Inca trail which was a bunch of logs and rocks hammered into the cliff side. The bridge had been barricaded off due to tourists jumping it and falling to their death, and fortunately one of the guards followed me to this site realizing I was the only person on the trail. So amazing to see and worth every penny.
Elongated Skulls
Peru has some amazing history from the Inca, to the many civilizations prior to this period we really are not taught about. In Paracas, The Sacred Valley, Cusco and other sites there is evidence of Elongated skulls. Today we are told they are all done through cranial binding and other mechanisms, however this is not the case with most of the skulls found. our head is a balloon in reference, the ballon only has a specific capacity, and we can manipulate the balloon into a variety of shapes, but the capacity remains the same. The elongated skulls of this region stem from fetus, to young child to adult and show that the cranial capacity in some cases is 1.65x that of our own skulls. They mostly have red auburn hair on them, and according to DNA analysis are3 closely related to the red headed Maori of New Zealand, the Basque of Spain and also the peopl around the Black sea, and in-fact the haplo group of their blood/DNA comes from this region, but the Elongated heads remain a mystery and were perhaps a lost civilization of humanity now dubbed Homo Paracas.
Overall these trips to Egypt and Peru shattered what I call my “BS meter” and posed many more questions than I had going to these sites. I am grateful to the Khemit School, Horus Rising and Hidden Inca Tours, for bringing me on these tours where I have experienced so many amazing sites. Below are the logos and links to these amazing tour groups I have been on. Please help support Brien Foerster (Hidden Inca Tours), Patricia Awyan Lehman (Horus Rising) and Yousef Awyan and Stephen Mehler (Khemit School) by going on a tour with them. They are amazing hosts and the tours are beyond expectations. You will not be disappointed!