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| TAINO SCULPTURE |
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Treasure Hunting in Dominican Republic
Geographically our adventure is situated in Dominican Republic,
more specifically in Luperón, province of Puerto Plata:
everything there is very green and with little hills, a lot of
cows (and cheese), amazing landscapes, totally unlike the dry
and flat (south-)east. Time: early summer 2000
The entire project of "Treasure Hunting" started out
in New York, with hundreds (exaggerated) of visits we paid to
a store here specializing in metal detectors of any size or making.
We went to the store, peeked around endlessly, asked many many
questions - and never bought anything, until finally, with the
help of a friend, R. managed to buy the brand newest model: a
little plastic box revolving on a handle, with an antenna pointing
out, which should then lead towards gold (or if you switch a
button: silver). The thing came in a pretty silver-shimmering
metal box which kind of "irritated" those guys at the
airport's security check...
In December of the previous year, when I first had come to Luperón,
I already had received a first impression of these folk's way
of thinking: in one house out of two a treasure seems to be buried
- throughout the entire village! Treasures are a constant topic
there. As soon as the voice spread that R. had brought this mysterious
detector, people regularly asked him to do them the favor of
figuring out the exact location of "their" treasures.
These treasures could roughly be divided into three different
categories. One group consists of the Taino-Indian relicts, that
is objects left behind by the pre-Columbian native inhabitants
of the island. Then there are "historic treasures",
that is those buried by pirates. The bay of Luperón counts
among the safest natural harbors worldwide, and Columbus' first
settlement on the island is very close by (his first landing
was in "La Navidad" - today Haiti - however soon destroyed
by the Indians. On his second landing, with many thousands of
men, he founded the first settlement "La Isabela" (after
the Spanish Queen) at a distance of at about 18 km from Luperón.
Moving everything to the south coast and the foundation of Santo
Domingo (the current capital) was mainly inspired by an insect
plague, impossible to control (some say ants, some say mosquitoes)
- everybody just jumped back on the ships and fled to the other
side of the island.
A third group of treasure are those hidden by rich private persons,
who simply had no other place to store their wealth - there were
no banks, or times were politically restless (dictatorship of
Trujillo, etc.) These people would bury their "Onzas" simply
somewhere in the garden, some of them forgot the exact location,
others took their knowledge into their grave.
Here is where popular beliefs come into the game: a dead person
who had buried a treasure somewhere will not rest in peace, and
will be haunting until somebody lifts this treasure, and so gives
him/her peace. That is why it regularly happens that dead persons
visit people "in dreams": to give them their treasure,
with exact instructions about how to lift it. Besides these "given" treasures
there are as well those which no longer belong to anybody, treasures
which are simply lost in history...
Six weeks of treasure hunting have left us with all kinds of
different experiences and impressions, and a lot of stories told
by other treasure hunters (in Luperón there are actually
people who became wealthy all of a sudden...).
For example there was that story of a group of men digging a
hole on a lonely beach, in the night, suspecting to find something...
all of a sudden a boat approaches them, with antiquary uniformed
men coming towards them... a man decorated with strange chains,
approaches the digging in a way trying to scare the workers away,
but as nobody moves, he evolves into an enraged bull (which -
and this is funny - is wearing the same kind of golden chains
as previously the men...) The worker who told us this story,
said he would simply hide in the digging hole until the bull
had gone away, and then continue the work... That night however
they did not find anything. But some nights later other people
went to the same place - today owner of the gasoline station
and the local supermarket.
We then consulted with the local priest about his opinion on
the "dead persons protecting their treasures". But
he turned out do be a sober, western-thinking man, whose opinion
is that "dead is dead", and there was nothing to be
feared (except maybe the "living ones"). And, concerning
the holy water - actually this had been another reason to visit
him: we had been advised to carry holy water to all our digging
sites - we could have as much as we wanted from him.
I was very happy with all this advice, but R. was not yet too
satisfied, that is why he went on consulting with other "specialists",
that is "Curanderos" who are more close to what the "simple
folks" believe. These traditional beliefs are very related
with the many African gods, even though in Dominican Republic
no one calls them gods, but there are all kinds of "saints".
Each saint is assigned a certain color and activity, and one
can buy little bottles with colored water. The saint for treasure
hunting is p. ex. "San Elias", saint of the dead (as
you are looking for something which used to belong to s. o. who
now is dead) and its color is purple. Other instructions René was
given is to construct an altar, with self-made (black) crosses,
candles, holy water, weird crucifixes hung around the neck, a
black cloth wrapped around the hips... The number of people involved
in the excavation always must be even, and best either 2 or 4
or 8...
But after a while even R. got tired of so many rules, and lateron
we let go some details just for practical reasons (we run out
of purple water, I actually did rebel against these exaggerated
crosses, sometimes we simply were 10 people participating in
the digging...). Either way we never found anything...
Again, R. went consulting with one of the "Curanderos".
This lady sent him buy some mysterious substance a "Botanica" (a
kind of "herb store" - where all those little bottles
with colorful water are being sold). I was curious, so I came
along, and when the salesman arrived with the desired, he was
proud to show us, opening the capsule it came rolling out...
mercury! "Oh, said I, that's however poisonous!" -
What actually was poisonous was the way the guy looked at me,
and then he explained that this substance could not be poisonous
at all, because already there have been people eating such capsules
(yes, they actually look like any medicine), and that "which
was happened to those people was: nothing"... At our next
excavation this wonderful "Mercurium" was poured then
into the digging hole (environmental protection - no, thank you!)
- it was supposed of magically "lift" the treasure
towards the top - however then: nothing happened.
Just as previously said, one mystery after the other got worn
out. At the end we went digging in any constellations (10 people.
Or 5), without purple water or candles (I believe, in the beginning
there was even a bottle of ammonia - just in case someone lost
consciousness (o got possessed), but unluckily the bottle broke
in the trunk of the car - horrible smell for a couple of days...
The result of all these efforts: at about 15 holes, but no one
deep enough to definitely be able to say: "here is absolutely
nothing". At the same time so strange discoveries as well
as a "tangible" ones: a layer of "concrete", ½ m
under the sand - at a place on the coast where never ever anybody
lived (Columbus already knew a type cement/concrete, that was
used building his first settlement). At one such place, R. found
also a mysterious shoe (made out of leather, tipped, children's
size). At another excavation (also at the coast, also a concrete
layer underneath the sand), age old trees were pruned somehow
in a strange way, but had not died, but overgrown theirs cuts.
René estimates these trees and the pruning to be of 100
or 150 years of age - fact which was ridiculed by one of our
friends - as Columbus landed 500 years ago. Interestingly we
found out yesterday that the famous pirate Cofresi (whose treasures
a lot of people are seeking) just died 130 years ago...
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Nevertheless: we did bring an interesting
object from Dominican Republic: a little, very heavy figure,
in the style of the Taino Indian sculptures. Specifications
are:
Height: 7 ½ inches
Width (base) : 3 ¾ x 4 ½ inches
Weight: 4 ¾ pounds (approx.)
Volume: 750 cubic cm (approx.)
Material: unknown material. In relation to its size
the figure is very heavy. The material is furthermore
unlike the stones, that are used usually for Taino sculptures.
Our metal detector reacted strongly on the figure (it
smells gold or?? Money?) The material is shimmers silvery
and is very hard.
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| A mysterious shoe we
found at a remote beach. |
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Conclusion: We would love to go back to Dominican Republic on
Christmas. Negotiations with the driver of road building machinery
were led already - this little "help" would ease the
excavations substantially...
To be continued...
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