Journey to Ecuador: Part 3, 1Journey to Ecuador: Part 3

Salcedo/Rumipamba, Otavalo
May 7-9, 2001
The Spiritual Traveler


        I arrived back in Quito Monday evening, in time to attend the HU chant at the Eckankar center.  I brought my digital camera, and after the chant stood up and started taking individual photos of all the people.  My actions created quite a sensation.  There was uncontrollable laughter that didn't die down for a long time.  The reaction was so different, so much more light-hearted than what one was likely to encounter in the United States.  There, one might have expected the people to grumble, to resent the intrusiveness of the camera, or to put up with the process stoically, but certainly not to laugh, to giggle like children.  It was clear that there was a far greater sense of innocence and joie de vivre here that in the States.
        Journey to Ecuador: Part 3, 2The next day, I decided to try to visit Don Alberto.  I didn't even know if he was in the country or still in the U.S., but I thought I might as well try, anyway.  I set out from my hotel in Quito around 10:30 in the morning, hailed a cab, and asked to be taken to the bus terminal.  The driver actually dropped me off at a bus stop, rather than the terminal, but there was a bus to Salcedo taking off right at that moment, so even though he'd only driven me half way I didn't mind paying the full fare.  There was about a two and a half-hour bus ride before I arrived in Salcedo around 1:00.
       Germán had told me to look for a camionetta to take me to Quilajalo, but I didn't even know what a camionetta was, although I assumed it was a small truck.  I stood awhile at the corner, and didn't see anything that remotely resembled a taxi or a truck that would take passengers.  So after asking a few people for directions, I finally picked up on the direction in which Quilajalo lay, and I started walking.  The day was still early, and I doubted the walk could be that long.
       After about fifteen or twenty minutes I saw a large arch on the left-hand side of the road with the name RUMIPAMBA written in a large arc across the top.  This was the village neighboring Quilajalo.  I crossed the road, and followed the main street under the arch and through the village.  Eventually, I came to a place where the road crossed a creek and went up a small slope.  I paused at this place, with an eerie feeling that it seemed familiar.
        Journey to Ecuador: Part 3, 3There was a jumble of ambivalent thoughts going through my head.  Why was I visiting Don Alberto?  What did I hope to learn from him, or from this experience?  What did he have to teach me that I couldn't learn through Eckankar?  It wondered if I was still suffering from the romanticism of the '60s, when people fantasized about setting off to far-off places like India in search of a personal guru.  But then my thoughts shifted, and I began to felt that my quest to visit Don Alberto was not so much a search for a guru as it was a visit to a spiritual friend.  Thinking about it this way, made is much less a matter of conflicting loyalties.  The idea of having a spiritual friend was useful because it worked to break down the artificial boundaries that separated different spiritual groups from one another.  As I continued my walk, I began to visualize myself not as a person, but as a light-a light that was simply on a journey to visit another light.
       I started on my way again, having left Rumipamba behind.  As yet, however, there was not another village visible beyond the surrounding fields.  A few trucks passed me, loaded with children dressed for fieldwork.  Then I met a curious group-a small native woman with two children and a comparatively tall young man with the features of a Norteamericano.  As I passed them, they stopped and asked where I was going.  I hesitated for a moment.  I was going to say "Quilajalo," but something told me that this was already taken for granted, and that their question was more specific.  So I said "Don Alberto."  There were smiles all round, and then the young man addressed me in English.   Journey to Ecuador: Part 3, 4I had run into members of Don Alberto's inner circle.  The woman, whose name was Florentina, ran a hostel on Don Alberto's property.  The young man, Nadav Tanners, was an American student from Swarthmore, on an exchange program in Ecuador.  He was working with Don Alberto, through Florentina, on a research paper on the indigenous religion.  
         "Is Don Alberto around?" I asked.
       "He's in the country, but he's in Quito at the moment.  He should be back in a day or two," Nadav told me.
       "Where are you headed?" I questioned them.
       "Otavalo," they said.
       "Can I come with you?" I asked.
       Nadav translated my request to Florentina, and the response was immediately in the affirmative.  A small pickup came by, and we piled into it.  It took us to a bus stop.  From there, it was another two-and-a-half hours to the Quito terminal.  I got into an intensive conversation with Nadav right away, and pumped him for information about Don Alberto.  Nadav said he was majoring in religion, and I proceeded to tell him about my own academic background, as well as my association with Eckankar.
       "Is there a tradition of reincarnation in the Andean tradition?" I wanted to know.
        Journey to Ecuador: Part 3, 1"Yes, there is," he replied.  "Spirits are believed to shed bodies.  The word 'spirit' is not an accurate translation.  The word is ushai."
       "I know.  Ushai is the fifth element-earth, water, fire, air, and ushai.  In Eckankar, we talk about the various planes of existence.  The first four, which we call the psychic planes, you'll find described in any kind of occult literature.  These are the physical, astral, causal, and mental planes.  Then there is the fifth plane, which is the soul plane.  The four psychic planes are represented by the four elements, and they also correspond to different faculties within the individual.  The idea is that these represent different levels of vibration exist within the same space, something like a radio band on which you can pick up different stations depending on the their wavelength.  The idea is also that we are existent on all these different levels of vibration.  We have 'bodies' on all these different levels that are like our physical body, except that they are vibrating at a different frequency.  The bodies are essentially protective sheaths that allow the individual to experience life at these different rates of vibration.  
         "Although we're experiencing simultaneously on all these levels, our consciousness is stuck at the physical level.  Our experiences on these other levels are therefore relayed to the human state of consciousness via the various faculties that correspond to these planes-emotion for the Astral plane, memory for the Causal plane, and thought for the mental plane.  It's sort of like information being relayed from a company's branch office to its main office.   Journey to Ecuador: Part 3, 6An executive can get certain information about what is going on at the branch offices, but does not receive the same information he would get if he went there himself.  Our emotions and thoughts tell us something about what we are experiencing on the astral or mental plane, but this is a far cry from experiencing those realms of existence in full consciousness.  Both Eckankar and Don Alberto's teachings seem to be oriented toward giving the individual some experience of this type.  The difference that I see is that Eckankar goes even farther and talks about many other planes beyond the soul plane.  These are pure spiritual planes-that is, they exist beyond matter, energy, time, and space."
       At the Quito terminal, I finally asked where we would be staying in Otavalo.  Florentina replied that we would be visiting the home of some musicians.  I remembered that the person who had given me directions to Don Alberto's village had also recommended that I look up a musical group called Pakarinka, and especially its leader, Oscar Santillan.  I had the names written on the same sheet of paper that contained directions to Quilajalo.  I showed the paper to Florentina and, sure enough, this was the group and person we were going to be visiting.  It wasn't that much of a surprise to me, since I assumed there was some connection between this musical group and Don Alberto.  Nevertheless, the moment was very similar to the one in which I had pulled out the flyer advertising Don Alberto's apprenticeship program and showed it to Germán, and seemed to make an impression both on Nadav and Florentina.  
         Journey to Ecuador: Part 3, 7From Quito it was another three hours or so to Otavalo.  By now it was evening.  We waited at the bus stop in Otavalo until some friends of the musicians arrived in a Jeep.  Then we bounced along a rutted cobblestone road in the moonlight.  The natives around us all spoke Quichua to one another, rendering Nadav, whose fluency was only in Spanish, as silent as me.  It was quite a turn of events.  At midday, I had been heading south from Quito, intending to visit Don Alberto in Quilajalo, and now I was bouncing around in a Jeep on the outskirts of Otavalo, far to the north of the capital.  I was sitting next to a student from Swarthmore, and surrounded by indiginas speaking Quichua.  I thought to myself that this is what I had intended my trip to be like all along.  I had wanted to see what would happen if I were to just travel without a plan, and sure enough, it was working.  Things were happening.
       We finally arrived at a house on the outskirts of the city, and were given a room to sleep in.  It was an Ecuadorian farmhouse, very primitive by Western standards.  The ceiling of the room appeared to by made of plywood, as was the floor.  The rooms were unadorned, except for a few calendar pages with Ecuadorian scenes pasted to the wall.  The bathroom, located on the other side of the courtyard, was clean but had no running water and the toilet had to be flushed with a bucket filled from a large cement trough in the courtyard, which was luckily just outside the toilet door.  Dinner consisted of rolls filled with white cheese.  Along with that was honey, a kind of thin, dark, soupy, vaguely sweet gruel made of quinoa that didn't appeal to me much, and hot corn water for tea.
        Journey to Ecuador: Part 3, 8After dinner, Nadav told me a little about the paper he was writing, which mainly described the rituals, beliefs, and traditional practices he had encountered while living in Don Alberto's compound at Quilajalo.  Rituals in Don Alberto's community consisted of morning exercises, called cuyuris, as well as blessings given before each meal, called manyai.  There were also cleansing ceremonies, or limpieza (a Spanish word), of which I had experienced an example in Michigan.  The shaman gathered certain medicinal plants, builds a fire.  He placed the plants over the fire until they smoked, and then held them in front of the person, shaking them occasionally, while chanting in the native tongue.  The same was done to each side and in back of the person, so that all four directions were addressed.
       "Of course, the cleansing is done only after the person has been diagnosed with a guinea pig," Nadav added.
       "What do you mean, with a guinea pig?" I asked.
       "They cut open the guinea pig and look at its internal organs," Nadav replied.  "They did that for Florentina.  She was concerned that she had picked up some contaminants from the environment, so they placed the guinea pig in front of her, then killed it and looked at its internal organs.  They particularly look at the adrenal sack.  Guinea pigs are supposedly great at absorbing energy, negative or otherwise."
        Journey to Ecuador: Part 3, 9I was somewhat taken aback by this.  "I didn't expect that Don Alberto's diagnostic methodology was quite so primitive.  Why do they have to sacrifice a guinea pig to diagnose someone?" I asked Nadav.  "Why can't they just use the tarot or some other oracle?"  
       Nadav shrugged.  "That's nothing compared to the bee sting therapy," he said.
       "Bee sting therapy?"
       "Yeah.  They use the guinea pig to find out what's wrong with you, and then they use bee sting therapy.  They used seven bee stings on Florentina."
       "They got the bees to sting her in specific places on her body?"
       "Yes."
       "How do they do that?" I wanted to know.
       "They just pick up the bees, and place them on the spot where they want them to sting.  It's pretty easy, really.  The bees are just walking around.  Some of them get stuck in honey.  They particularly like to place the stings on the vertebrae.  The medicinal effects of bee venom are well known.  There are books about it.  The idea is that it strongly stimulates the body's auto-defense system."
       Nadav then outlined some of the indigenous beliefs, which included myths of the creation of the world and the origin of the Inca Empire.  The word Pachakamak, he said, was used to represent the ruling force of the universe, and Pachamama the feminine essence of the universe.   Journey to Ecuador: Part 3, 10The word Inti represented the sun, Cuilla the moon, and Allpamama the mother earth.  Then there were the beliefs in the life cycle.  Life was broken up into periods of seven years.  There were, of course, the four elements, and the importance placed on dreams.  There was also a belief in astrology.  According to Nadav, astrological knowledge was very well developed among the Incas.  The Inca Calendar was a lunar one, divided into thirteen months with 28 days each, with an extra day every year.  There were also beliefs in omens.  Birds flying in certain patterns, as in ancient Greek culture, were said to foretell certain types of events.
       Finally, there were traditional practices, particularly relating to food.  The indigenous tradition was to keep salty and sweet foods separate, somewhat the same way Jews kept apart meat and milk products.  Sweet foods tended to be eaten for breakfast and dinner, with salty foods eaten at lunch.  Acid foods were to be eaten apart from everything else, so that if one were to eat oranges, pineapples, or grapefruits at any time, that would constitute the entire meal.  Some foods were associated with the sun, others with the moon, and the intention was to strive for a balance of these foods in the body.  Finally, there were certain traditional agricultural practices, such as alternation of crops.  Corn and potatoes were planted in alternate rows.  The plants were considered to complement one another, and this had to do with the properties of each food.  Corn and beans were planted right on top of one another so that the beans could wrap their runners around the corn.  Care was taken to leave certain plants native to the habitat exactly in the places that they were found, because the properties of these plants could indicate what other types of plants could be grown there.
        Journey to Ecuador: Part 3, 11"The relations between the people in Don Alberto's group and their neighbors is also something I'm going to address in my paper," Nadav said.  "What they're doing is reviving ancient traditions that have been lost.  Even among their own people, they can be viewed as renegades.  They believe that the Western and Northern countries are going to come to a bad end because of their way of life, and that when the way of the Eagle declines, the more balanced way of the Condor will gain influence in the world."
       "It sounds like a kind of apocalyptic vision," I remarked.
       "Well, I may have overstated it," Nadav replied.  "Basically they're saying: Look at the North.  People are not happy with their way of life, and what we have down here is something that we have to offer them."
       "What most impresses you personally about them?" I asked Nadav.
       "It's a group of people who genuinely live according to a culture that's their own, and in which they take pride," he responded.
       "Can't you say that about a lot of indigenous groups around the world?" I asked.  "There are still tribal enclaves in places like the Amazon or Borneo, for instance."
       "Well, I'm talking more about indigenous populations that are more integrated into modern culture, and therefore more threatened," he said.
       "So they're hippies, really," I replied.  "They're rebelling against modern culture."
        Journey to Ecuador: Part 3, 12"Yes, except that the problem with the hippies in our country was that they didn't have a strong cultural base on which to base their alternative lifestyle.  That's why the hippie lifestyle eventually collapsed.  But Florentina, for instance, has had to take the same kind of disapproval from the local people that the hippies did from the majority of the population in the U.S. in their day.  The locals used to call her 'Florentina Loca' (Crazy Florentina) because she wouldn't eat meat or drink alcohol.  What Don Alberto is engaged in is basically a native cultural revival."
       "But aside from his little community in Quilajalo, is this being taken up by any other people in the country?"
       "It's still a very small group," Nadav replied.  "But it's very well-connected.  They obviously have a lot of connections with foreigners, but the real focus is on working with the local community."
       I got up at about six the next morning.  It was still dark, and I passed through the primitive-looking courtyard, where the chickens and dogs were still barely moving, to get to the bathroom.  When everyone else had woken up, there was a breakfast of fried wheat-cakes, boiled corn with fat kernels, the ubiquitous honey, which I passed up in favor of salt to flavor the corn, and a weak herbal tea that smelled pleasantly of barnyards and grasses.  Oscar Santillan then arrived and took us to his home, where he demonstrated his music and the instruments used by his group.  We sat on benches arranged in a circle that looked like they were hewn from some kind of palm.   Journey to Ecuador: Part 3, 13Oscar said that they were made from a type of cactus that was used to make many things, including a popular drink that Florentina had carried in a large plastic bottle all the way from Quilajalo, as well as many of the instruments, and certain kinds of hats.  The flowers, Oscar said, were also eaten.  It was important, he noted, that the cactus be harvested during the full moon to ensure that the material would be of maximum utility for whatever purpose it was used.
       Oscar and his assistant then demonstrated some of his music, which was made entirely with flutes and drums.  The flutes were of several types-small and medium-sized panpipes, as well as middle-sized and very large flutes called sachachas.  All were made of single reeds, except for the panpipes, which were made from several reeds of different lengths bound together.  Oscar showed us how, in the case of the panpipes, the joints of the reeds were utilized as the bottoms, since they were already sealed.  Then the individual pipes were simply cut at varying lengths from the joint.  The panpipes differed from the other flutes because the sound was achieved simply by blowing across the top of the pipe.  Each reed was essentially a sealed tube, as opposed to the other flutes, which were open at the end.  The drums were of far more complex construction, but no artificial materials were used.  Goatskin was used along with the same cactus material used for the benches.  A flute could be hand-made in a day or two, but the drums took two or three weeks to make.
        Journey to Ecuador: Part 3, 14From Oscar Santillan's house, we visited another friend of Florentina's who was a weaver.  He showed us a loom on which he worked, made almost entirely of wood, the form of which must have remained more or less unchanged since the sixteenth century.  We had another meal of large-kernel corn in the courtyard of the house, and played with the affectionate dogs.  Then we went to the market in Otavalo.  The items displayed were mainly woven fabrics of sheep, llama, or alpaca wool.  The market was very quiet, with few tourists in sight.  
       While I was out wandering around, trying to find the market, Florentina evidently placed a call to Don Alberto.  When I came back, she said that he would be coming back to Quilajalo that night, then going to Quito for a day, then back to Quilajalo for the two following days.  It was Wednesday, and I had only three more days left in Ecuador-Thursday, Friday, and Saturday.  The end game was coming quickly.  My goal was to at least see Don Alberto before I left-whether on my own, with Germán, or ideally, with Germán and someone who could translate for us.  That could only be Nadav.  Nadav was going back today to Quilajalo with Florentina, but was leaving the next day to go to Quito and then fly back to the U.S. on Friday.  In addition, I had only one more good chance of seeing Germán-at 6 pm at the Eckankar center in Quito that evening.  I had Germán's phone number, and stopped at a telephone center in Otavalo to try to call him.  The woman at the telephone center dialed for me, but it came up the wrong number.  I also now had Don Alberto's cell phone number, which Florentina had given me.   Journey to Ecuador: Part 3, 15If I could get hold of Germán, I could give him the number, and ask him to call Don Alberto.  In addition to all these factors, I still had all my gear sitting in the hotel room in Quito.  With no way to contact the hotel, I would surely be charged for the room, whether I was there or not.  I was also by now very tired of the bus travel.
       I had several choices.  The first choice was to go all the way back to Quilajalo with Nadav and Florentina, where I wold be sure to see Don Alberto that evening, and could also have Nadav present as translator.  But I would also be very tired, would have no way to contact Germán, and Don Alberto might be very preoccupied himself, since he would be leaving again for Quito in the morning.  The other choice would be to part with Florentina and Nadav in Quito, and meet Germán at the Eckankar center.  Then I could find out whether he wanted to get together with me and Don Alberto and, if so, ask him to call Don Alberto and make arrangements to meet in Quito the next day.  All sorts of things could go wrong with this plan, however.  First of all, Germán might not be at the Eckankar center.  Secondly, he might not have time to get together with Don Alberto and me in Quito the next day.  Thirdly, Don Alberto might not have the time to meet with us, or Germán's arrangements would have to be coordinated with Nadav, as well.  If all plans to meet with Don Alberto in Quito fell through, I could still visit him in Quilajalo on Friday or Saturday.  According to Florentina, I had an open invitation to come on those days.  But in that case, I would not have the benefit of a translator.
        Journey to Ecuador: Part 3, 16There was a third possibility-that I could stop in Quito, visit the Eckankar center, make arrangements to move my stuff out of my hotel room and store it in the hotel's locker, and still make it down to Quilajalo on a late bus.  But the time frame for that was very tight, and I couldn't quite see myself making the walk from Salcedo to Quilajalo in the dark, looking for Don Alberto's house, and possibly arriving when everyone was already in bed.  All these factors were swimming around in my head.  With my typical indecisiveness, it seemed impossible for me to sort out the virtues of one choice and compare it to the virtues of another.  Eventually, I gave up the struggle, telling myself that I still had the bus ride from Otavalo to Quito to make up my mind, and that it might make the decision easier if I just stopped thinking about the alternatives for a while.  This strategy worked.  By the time we got into Quito, I was so tired of bus riding that I had made my decision.  I said good-bye to Nadav and Florentina and headed back to my hotel.  
         I got back just in time to shower, change, and make it to the discussion group at the Eckankar center.  Germán was not there, but I stayed for the discussion.  I couldn't follow too much of what people were saying, but I was aware that various aspects of spirituality were brought up in the course of the discussion.  These included the need to maintain an attitude of neutrality in all situations, the necessity of giving freedom to others, and most importantly, the importance of love.   Journey to Ecuador: Part 3, 17I wanted to say that I felt that all these things were the same, but this would have been a difficult concept to express even in English.
         At the end of the discussion, I gave Don Alberto's to one of the members of the group, who promised to relay it to Germán that evening.  A few hours later I got a call from Germán saying that he had called Don Alberto and had arranged to meet him in Quito the next morning.  There was a possibility that we could meet in the afternoon, and he told me that he would call between one and two in the afternoon the next day.
       The next morning I woke up with the memory of a dream still fresh in my mind.  In the dream, Don Alberto had appeared to me and told me rather sternly that he couldn't talk to me.  His appearance in the dream was unlike his appearance in real life, but I definitely identified the vision as that of Don Alberto.
       I was surprised, therefore, when Germán called at the appointed time to say that Don Alberto would be in Quito until the next morning, and that we were all invited to Quilajalo in the afternoon.   Journey to Ecuador: Part 3, 18 We would meet at my hotel at 2:30 and take the bus to Salcedo.
       This seemed like good news.  I would finally get my meeting with Don Alberto in the company of Germán.  
       "The only thing," I said to Germán, "is that I might like to rent a car for a day instead of riding in the bus."
       This idea didn't seem to matter to Germán, who, on the contrary, seemed pleased at the prospect that he would be spared the tiresome bus ride.  So I went to the rental car agency and arranged to pick up a car at 2:00 the next day.  Feeling the pressure of the limited time available to me in Ecuador, I also called Marco and arranged for a small trip to the summit of Pichincha in the morning.  Cotopaxi, the only major destination that I still wanted to include on my itinerary might be possible see on the way from Quito to Quilajalo, or on the way back on Saturday.
 
Copyright © The Spiritual Traveler, 2001