Cuba Santeria priests reject doomsday prediction
The Associated Press
HAVANA -- A body of top Afro-Cuban priests is predicting a year of
change and upheaval in 2012, but the group says fears the world will end
are wrong.
In their annual New Year's forecast, the priests warned the world could
see more earthquakes and increased global warming, and they cautioned
that people should also be vigilant against matrimonial discord.
That may not be a very cheery message, but it's a lot better than the
fire-and-brimstone prophecies that that some have attributed to the
Maya, whose calendar cycle ends on Dec. 21, 2012. The priests say they
see a spiritual end to old things, but not a physical end to the planet.
Believers around the world have furthered the theory, which stems from a
stone tablet discovered in the 1960s at the archaeological site of
Tortuguero in the Gulf of Mexico state of Tabasco that describes the
return of a Mayan god on that date, similar to the story of Judgment Day.
But Cuba's priests say that "what needs to die is not the world itself,
but rather the ways in which the world has lived until now:
confrontations, wars, misery and discrimination," said Lazaro Cuesta,
one of the island's leading Santeria priests, or babalawo. "For us, an
old world must end so that a new world is born .... It is not a physical
end."
Santeria, which mixes Catholicism with the traditional African Yoruba
faith, is followed by many people in Cuba, where about a third of the
11.2 million population is of African descent.
The Afro-Cuban priests have a mixed track record themselves, despite
keeping their predictions rather vague.
In January 2010, they forecast struggles for power, treachery and coups
d'etat, and said the world would see the death of an inordinate number
of political leaders. That would have been a better description of 2011,
which saw the upheavals brought on by the Arab Spring, as well as the
death of North Korean leader Kim Jung-Il.
The babalawo priests predicted more coups and wars in last year's
message, in addition to growing economic openness on the island. That
latter prophecy was a relatively easy call as President Raul Castro had
already announced plans for a major shakeup of Cuba's command economy.
This year, the priests also warned of the loss of many people to the
infirmities of old age, always a delicate message on an island run by an
80-year-old president and several octogenarian aides.
But the priests often make the same prediction, and they said their
message this year was not aimed at Cuba's leaders or former President
Fidel Castro, who at 85 is fully retired.
The priests also declined to weigh in on major events for 2012, like the
Mar. 26-28 visit of Pope Benedict XVI or elections in the United States.
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Associated Press writer Andrea Rodriguez contributed to this report.
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