Easter Island (Chile), 1991. Not Ordinary Experiences (N.O.E.) phenomenology during the archaeological excavations at Puna Marengo.

by Pietro Villari, 10 April 2023. All rights reserved.

 

In December 2000, the journalist Bruno Ragonese, editor in chief of the magazine "Grifone", a bimonthly magazine of the Ente Fauna Siciliana, after a few months of reflection, decided to publish an article of mine entitled: "Eindpunt, Tokerau and the old woman" (1).

The reaction of the members was not unanimous, from scandalized to enthusiastic, and sparked an intense debate between those in favor and against accepting, among the scientific contributions that reached the magazine, even those containing descriptions of phenomena at that time defined - tout court - paranormal. Some of the members argued that these stories were unrelated to the interests of our "naturalistic research and conservation association". The criticism struck me not only as a scholar, but also as manager of the Messina office of the E.F.S.

At that time, in Sicily, for an archaeologist specialized in prehistory, coming from naturalistic rather than humanistic studies, professional life was already made difficult as he was isolated with captious arguments, like an invader of the field. Publishing one's testimony of involvement in an unconventional experience during a scientific research - moreover carried out on the "mysterious" Easter Island - was tantamount to professional suicide. In practice, detractors were offered the possibility of discrediting and therefore delegitimizing the author in a serious and permanent way, and with it all his ongoing and future research activities carried out.

Even Bruno Ragonese had received his share of criticisms, aimed at undermining the seriousness of the issues presented to the readers of the magazine and the activities of the association. Yet, he had agreed to publish the article because he too had come across experiences in the course of his life which, with a typical Sicilian accent and slyness, he defined as "extravagances", in one of which he recognized the same disturbing dynamics present in my “pascuense” story .

For me and for that small but courageous editorial team anchored to scientific issues, sharing those data with readers meant venturing into terra incognita, going beyond the dogmas of the present, regardless of the accusations of heresy. A scholar cannot and must not fail to defend his own consistency and therefore also the exercise of the right to freedom of expression, even more so if he ends up among the pioneers of an entire field of study. Or, rather, in a gray area where the fundamental knowledge and the very effectiveness of the scientific methodologies and technologies used are at least questioned as "borderline".

This article therefore intends to be possibly usable in future studies of abnormal experiences (better known as not ordinary experiences, N.O.E.), bearing in mind that the most accurate descriptions of events and their typological cataloging constitute an important basis for the future, when research will have the means to arrive at full understanding.

Ragonese had understood the importance of independent journalism in collecting and trying to objectively describe these events, due to his innate ability to discover and support the dissemination of truth, even when he found himself in divergent positions from those of the island's dominant power. Almost a quarter of a century after the publication of the story, which occurred in 1991, today research in the field of N.O.E. it now has a large group of eminent members of the international scientific community.

As usual in this blog, the republication of the article is followed by two chapters respectively dedicated to insights and updates.

 

From “Grifone”, 20 December 2000: “Eindpunt, Tokerau and the old woman”.

October 1999. By train from Amsterdam to Eastern Europe. The conductor announces the station where I will have to get off: eindpunt van mijn reis. In the Dutch language the arrival at the goal is the end point. The journey is over, there was a departure, I was able to stay in a decent place and maintained relationships with other passengers. Some of them have long since gone down, others will go on without me. The journey as an allegory of life and death.

My scientific training allows no illusions: after death there is nothingness. Eindpunt, an expression that should eliminate most of my existential tension, if there wasn't a small gray area. I state that for work or for pleasure I have lived, on five continents, in many intensely suggestive places. Sometimes something unusual happened, but I always looked for and found a rational answer.

Perhaps, everything would be fine if I hadn't also stayed in Rapa Nui, which the natives prefer to call Te-Pito-o-Te-Henua, literally the Navel of the World, better known to Westerners as Isla de Pascua. A sort of basalt raft anchored in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, thousands of kilometers from the other Polynesian islands and the South American coasts.

I have no convincing possibilities to rationally explain what happened many years ago now.

In full force of years, after a period of excavations in South America, I had reached Easter Island with the Dutch pianist Djellah van Walt van Praag, companion of many travels and adventures. Here an international archaeological mission financed by the Ligabue Foundation (Venice) was about to start a research campaign, in which I had been invited to participate as zooarcheologist and director of an excavation sector (2).

The research area was located in Puna Marengo, in the uninhabited part of the island, twenty kilometers from the only small village. It could only be reached on foot or better on horseback, the most effective means of transport. The first week we resided in the town, amidst the discontent of the natives. The Council of Elders was furiously against the excavation of that area, being tapu, forbidden. Legends tell that the first inhabitants of the island landed along the northern coast in ancient times. They had arrived there aboard small boats coming from the north, from the very distant Polynesian islands (3). Still according to the legends, dozens of kohau rongo rongo lie hidden in those places, wooden tablets engraved with the sacred prayers that reveal the origin of the world.

Recently, consulting the gravimetric charts, I learned that there is a strong magnetic anomaly, causing a negative sea level difference of twenty-one meters. I do not know how much this presence can influence the development and behavior of living beings.

Thanks to the intervention of the Chilean authorities and to the green color of certain miserable pieces of paper, the situation was finally normalized and we began excavations after guaranteeing the natives that no archaeological find would be removed from the island and that, if found, the bones of their ancestors would not have been collected, but reinserted in their tombs after being subjected to a rapid non-invasive scientific examination.

Someone was needed to settle in the excavation area, because we feared disturbing actions by a small group of diehards, opposed to our operations.

Together with my colleague Antonio Paolillo - author of years of prehistoric research in the Bolivian jungle - we openly showed deep respect for the reaction of those men, since in their place we would have acted in the same way finding ourselves in that situation. This caused friction with other members of the expedition. Together with Antonio we explained what our work consisted of, what emerged from the analyses.

Overcoming the diffidence, we were made participants of uses and customs that served to try to understand not only what came to light and give you the original Polynesian name, but above all to compare the current Pascuense daily life with that of the period prior to contacts with the world western.

Consider that until the 1950s, the island was reached by ship only once a year. At the time of my research, social life had not yet been contaminated by Kevin Kostner's film crew, who stayed for a long time for the filming of the film Rapa Nui, and by the tourists who subsequently flocked there.

Among other things, we learned that in those places ancient cannibalistic rites were still consumed, even if now rarely, which consisted in eating part of the flesh of wise or brave deceased, in order to assume their strength and establish a link with their new world. We were also invited to a seasonal ceremony held in a nearby cave, consisting of smoking herbs and ingesting certain fruits which, thanks also to the rhythm marked by heavy pebbles beaten against each other, would have allowed us to enter a land without time.

We politely declined the invitation, but we promised ourselves to report it to our anthropologist colleague Mario Polia, who in those years began those particular studies on shamanism which he continues with unchanged commitment to this day (4).

Being at that time, more than today, recklessly devoted to adventure and stray life, together with my partner we decided to "live" that isolated and mysterious land by camping for about a month in a small red tent, on the edge overlooking the area of excavation, a few meters from a prehistoric petroglyph depicting a “hombre-pájaro” (anthropomorphic symbol with a bird's head) (5). The other components of the mission preferred to reside in the village, or to travel about forty kilometers on horseback every day.

The director of the Anthropological Museum of the Island, the Chilean Claudio Cristino, came to visit us on the first day. He feared something serious might happen to us and he tried in vain to convince me to follow the example of my companions. Finally he left, leaving us his long reconnaissance machete (a few days later, during a feast, some young natives broke his arm). At night we were joined by two women from the village, one of whom was a middle-aged mestiza with Negroid characters, a self-referenced witch by descent in the maternal line, greatly feared by the inhabitants of the island. They reported that they had been sent by Cristino to protect us.

After a week, however, the two women left, leaving us Tokerau (a Pascuense term of Polynesian derivation, in English “the Wind”), a very singular guard dog to which the crone had effectively blatantly ordered to carry out our commands.

It seemed to me that I was enjoying heaven on earth. From late afternoon to morning and on weekends, I was alone with my beautiful companion in that lonely, poignant place. We went fishing and collecting malacological specimens along the reef. We went for long rides and walks, we enjoyed the beautiful blanket of the prairie, the white beaches and the unforgettable fiery southern sunsets.

Tokerau showed himself to be a dog of notable qualities, he seemed to intuit our orders even before we could pronounce them in full. In addition to Pascuense, one of the Polynesian dialects, it also included Spanish, the official language of the island. Sometimes he spent hours staring at the excavation operations with an impenetrable gaze, immersed in who knows what meditations. However, the more the excavation proceeded, the more restless he became.

Suddenly those cursed nights began that we will never forget. Black moon, the usual night rain and the wind that swept the prairie. We slept soundly. Tokerau was as always on watch in front of the tent. I woke up with a start, at the same time as my partner, both drenched in sweat. We had had the same dream: we were at the top of Terevaka, the highest peak of the island and an invisible force was pulling us down towards our tent. We agreed that it had to be the collateral outcome of the frugal dinner, raw fish and a basket of very sweet white figs (6), the latter notoriously having a hallucinogenic effect (divinatory, according to the ancient Greeks) if consumed in the evening, in abundance and on the stomach empty.

Without a doubt bad digestion. We drank some water and went back to sleep. We both dreamed of an old woman holding a child by the hand, in the middle of a sector of the excavation area, near an umu pae (outdoor hearth). They walked towards us slowly, looking sad. Without speaking, the old woman informed us that the child was the son of a young woman murdered in those places with stones, the body had been placed inside the hare moa (large lava stone chicken coop) before whose remains I had opened my excavation sector.

We woke up again at the same time, now drenched in sweat and with an abnormal heartbeat. Tokerau howled and growled horribly. He banged his muzzle against the zip of the tent and it was obvious that he was calling me. I took Cristino's long knife and feeling as my heart was beating in my throat I went out in the middle of the pouring rain and the strong wind, in the most complete darkness. The light from my lamp was absorbed by the darkness, ineffective. I had to retrace my steps, kneeling under the cover of the canvas in front of the tent. With my eyes closed I tried to catch suspicious noises.

Tokerau was at my side, his muscles tense and his head down, he was looking in the direction of the excavation. He seemed ready to spring towards the umu pae area at any moment. It took about an hour without anything happening, in the end Tokerau calmed down, affectionately licked my face and crouched down again in front of the entrance to the tent.

I returned to my bed and immediately fell asleep. I dreamed again. And it was one of those dreams that others would call premonitory, which remain very clear in the memory as they have something inexplicably different from the others. Who knows where the soul wanders, or psyche, when you sleep.

The following afternoon, the team in charge of excavating the sector where the dream had taken place found the first burial, i.e. they brought to light the skeleton of a very old woman, of small stature. By curious coincidence, after that discovery, all the members of that team had to resort to the care of the small village hospital, with serious dislocations or fractures as they were suddenly thrown from their horses, one a day.

The worst fracture was that suffered by the Chilean archaeologist Josè Miguel Ramirez, sent by the Fonk Foundation (years later he took over from Claudio Cristino in the direction of the Easter Island anthropological museum). Josè was a guy who had already spent most of his scientific career on horseback, exploring the boundless southern Chilean territories.

A bad dislocation was also that of the director of the Pre-Columbian Studies and Research Center, an architect who in the last twenty years had explored, on mule back, many remote Central and South American areas (in the Seventies on the Central Andes his long beard, strange clothing and the bizarre solitary life became so popular that the natives confused the character with the legendary Pistacho, a being with supernatural powers who fed on human flesh!).

The news spread through the village, where people became convinced that the akualu, or the tutelary spirit of Puna Marengo, was admonishing the foreigners. Conversely, my partner and I were considered welcome guests, as despite having lived there for some time nothing had yet happened to us.

We then decided to tell our dream during an evening banquet, offered by an elderly fisherman, believed to be one of the descendants of the last ruler of the island, the ariki-mau. His entire clan attended the unforgettable lobster dinner. They listened to our story in silence, nodding often, then the elders withdrew to talk to each other in Polynesian dialect. Eventually they re-entered the convivial circle and confided in us that everyone in the village had such experiences.

We also learned that in that area, in the last century (7), the elders of such a clan hid when they felt that death was imminent and wanted to escape burial in the Catholic cemetery. They were led by relatives into the numerous small caves of the place, the entrance was closed with stones and then camouflaged. It was enough to sleep in those places or perform special rituals to get in touch with their spirits.

I asked the director for the task of exploring the narrow internal tunnel of the hare moa, which I entered and carried out the excavation together with the anthropologist Valentina Visconti di Modrone (8). The only other human bone remains of the entire excavation campaign came to light, pertaining to a child and an adult individual, most likely a woman judging by the characteristics of the few fragments of limbs, aged about twenty.

I stop at this point of the memories, because the rest could have a more convincing rationale. I believe that the evocative environment has acted as a catalyst for an extraordinary series of coincidences between the fantasy of dreams and the reality of facts. However, I cannot understand how it has been possible, for me and Djellah van Walt van Praag (9), to dream at the same time for several nights of events which later, even after several years, occurred independently of our will. Which mental mechanisms were established in us in those days and which ones in Tokerau's mind?

 

2014. The old suitcase found in a cavity of an English cottage.

The Djellah I knew disappeared in my arms in May 1992, in Amsterdam. In the late summer of 1993 I saw a letter delivered to the Italian Institute of Experimental Archeology in Genoa. She asked me to join her in an old delightful stone and wood house, hidden in the mountains of the island of Gran Canaria. I sensed that another of her personalities, the ones that dwell in each of us repressed by the dominant, had taken over in her after a horrendous operation performed in extremis, which had partially disemboweled her not only physically.

She had not only been a formidable companion on adventures. We shared one of those instinctive friendships that continue motu proprio, even without seeing each other. So it was that, fearing she was in serious problems, I took a plane and, once on the island, a taxi, with which I gave her a lift having met her by chance along the way, at the bus stop near Playa de las Burras. Her appearance saddened me deeply: she was a pile of bones, the shoulders hunched, the movements and veiled gaze of an old woman. I pressed a button to lower the window glass: “Want a ride? I'm going to El Caidero…”. She managed a weak smile.

Put this way, the story will seem rationally unacceptable to most readers, but for us it was not at all. We accepted those oddities without ruining the present. After the experience lived in Rapa Nui, we avoided looking for explanations.

Over the course of about a month, slowly, the will to live returned to her and to resume working as a musician and singer. At that point I decided that it was time for me to leave, as she was once again able to fend for herself. I first returned to Sicily and, after a few weeks, I left for Liguria to conclude and deliver a study carried out in that region, in order to collect a fair sum of money. From here I went to Holland (10).

Twenty years passed. One day, I think it happened in late 2012, I received an email from an acquaintance from the province of Viterbo, a lawyer who ran a successful blog. A young reader with an Irish surname had written to him regarding a comment of mine, published on the sidelines of an article on alleged murders in contexts where symbols of esoteric interest had been highlighted, or could be highlighted. In short, she asked him to pass me her e-mail address, so that we could communicate directly, regarding news about a globetrotting relative of her and the adventures that occurred many years ago during our relationship.

I did a quick online check and discovered that she was a valid and enterprising professional journalist (hereinafter referred to as Effe). We decided to meet in London, where I often went at the time, under the colonnade in front of the main entrance to the British Museum, the excellent custodian of what remains of the past.

I was glad to meet Djellah's niece. She was a young woman of singular beauty, whose eyes said everything about her remarkable human and professional qualities. She had also brought along her very young daughter, who seemed to me to have the same insight as her mother. Effe informed me that she had in mind to write a book on the stray life of her aunt, and of the sad circumstances of her death, which she told me happened years ago down in Kent, due to the aggressive reappearance of a cancer.

During her research, she had come across the blog containing a quote from me and had thus returned to the article published by the bimonthly "Grifone", remaining quite struck by the description of her aunt's experience on Easter Island. I gave her some details on the circumstances of our first meeting in Peru, in Lima, the period we lived together in Santiago de Chile, and on our other travels and residences, and finally the last period in the Canary Islands.

I wished her success with the biography and it all ended there, or rather I hoped so, as I thought it sad that a beautiful woman illuminated by remarkable qualities wasted time in her promising life investigating, immersed in the mold of other people's memories, the complex existence lived from one of her relatives.

That said, the social utility of that mythologizing must be admitted. For readers looking for fictionalized biographies full of female adventures, Djellah's biography would have been an irresistible attraction, an easy and pleasant opportunity to escape into the imagination of their "other" experience. They would have tried the thaumaturgical experience of being taken by the hand, by the hologram of that extraordinary eccentric and "single" woman, and, ça va sans dire?, led to fascination, to fantasize adventurous, sexually emancipated and globetrotter in those exciting times now away from rampant machismo.

However, I was sure that Effe's intellectual honesty would find a way to make the readers think. As always, there was also the other side of the coin, here constituted by the evidence that Djellah's daily realities, those exhausting struggles to defend her freedoms, had also been studded with damningly negative experiences. A set of realities therefore much more complex than the one imagined comfortably in an armchair, made with the help of a book in hand, to be opened and closed, or leafed through by skipping unwelcome pages when you want.

In April 2014, after two years of silence, a new email from Effe reached me in which she informed me of a bizarre find that took place a few weeks ago in a Surrey cottage.

The narrative of the story fit well with Djellah's list of eccentric exploits, being the place where she had stayed before moving to Kent where she, her niece alleged, had died.

I did not verify the news of her death, as I preferred to leave open the possibility that at that time she was still alive, hidden under a new name in some remote part of the world. On the other hand, the idea that the entire narration of her death could even have been constructed to make her disappear was not at all far-fetched, due to the existence of dangers from her past. She had worked at the service of Western government institutions, and as often happens in that job, she also had relationships with competitor agencies. It perhaps was a dark side of her, but I doubt it hides an abyss.

I didn't know what to think about her fears, but that rumors were brutally confirmed in the spring of 1992, at the beginning of a job I carried out in Rome in some offices of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta.

Returning to the last few months prior to her disappearance, I report below the information received from Effe in writing. There had been a leak in one of the bathroom pipes in the cottage. During the restoration works, in the cavity behind a wall was unexpectedly found an old suitcase belonged to Djellah's father, and donated to her in the late 1980s, at the time of her departure for the long period lived in South America (11).

In the suitcase were found some novels, old women's clothes, and other objects kept as a reminder of the time spent in Peru and Chile, including a large Andean poncho that we often used over the course of several trips to protect ourselves from the cold. There were also letters received from friends and family during this period, a business card from my office in Sicily, and a small group of photos taken on Easter Island. Effe asked me if I wished to have them.

Perhaps to stay on the subject of eccentricity, I received them only two years later in an unexpected envelope, containing the photos and my old business card, accompanied by a handwritten letter from Effe apologizing for the delay. I didn't think it necessary to find out more, and that was all.

Thinking back to what happened on Easter Island, I find it useful to clarify that today the mediumistic phenomenology has been scientifically ascertained with laboratory tests (12). Although the causes and the type of "energies" involved have not yet been discovered. We will therefore have to wait for future studies which will probably involve both quantum theories and, inevitably, the application of artificial intelligence in this field of study.

 

Footnotes

1) Villari P., 20 December 2000, Eindpunt, Tokerau and the old lady, in “Grifone”, bimonthly magazine of the Ente Fauna Siciliana, year 9, no. 6 (folder 48), pp.6-7.

For further information on the important journalistic activity carried out in Sicily by Bruno Ragonese, I refer to the article: Villari P., 27 September 2020, Ghosts of trials never born: 1) "Archaeological sales: the bronze warrior" Published in Italian language on The Reporter's Corner: https://www.thereporterscorner.com/2020/09/fantasmi-di-processi-mai-nati-1-saldi.html

2) However, once I arrived in the Chilean capital, I agreed to be involved in the activities of the Ligabue Foundation, but directly appointed by the management of the Museo Nacional de Historia Natural (Santiago, Chile) to carry out zoological research (and therefore also archeozoological) sponsored by the Museum and paid for by the Director, Luis F. Capurro, as clarified in the certificate issued to me: “desarrollará en Isla de Pascua investigaciones zoológicas las patrocinadas por el Museo a mi cargo, con el compromiso de que el material estudiado pasará a integrar las colecciones de la Sección Zoología de esta istitución”. The certificate was delivered to me on 11 October 1991, with all the honors and good wishes of the occasion, the following day I left by plane for the Island, together with the members of the Italo-Chilean Hanga-o-Teo Mission (see also note 11 ).

In practice, I had received carte blanche on any zoological or zooarchaeological research and studies wanted to carry out on the island, and I could possibly have used it in subsequent years as well, as no time limit was specified in the document.

To better understand part of Djellah's tragic personal story, I must clarify here how my presence on the island had passed directly under the post-dictatorial Chilean government, after having attended a dinner at the home of Don Luis Capurro - which he immediately held in mention the Genoese origins. Other personalities took part in the pleasant evening, including a young officer and two elderly gentlemen already belonging to the top management of the Chilean aviation and navy. Although she was not invited to the dinner, the event - I learned from Djellah's father several months later, in a village near Antwerpen, Belgium where he lived with his new wife - had been organized by friends who also had strong ties in that new Chilean government. I didn't like that at all, but it was too late now.

Two days after dinner, I was summoned to the National Museum of Natural History where, surrounded by his very active collaborators, I received from the hands of Don Luis himself that certificate which, even today, would constitute the dream of every archaeologist or zoologist on the planet and which instead I decided not to use it in the following years. Maybe it was a mistake, but it's unpleasant to be manipulated without your knowledge even if it's for a good purpose. I even refrained from mentioning it to Thor Heyerdahl (see also note 5) when, about two years later, we met in the Canary Islands briefing him about the offspring of my bioarchaeological excavation and sampling, one of the firsts on Easter Island. As a member of several clubs in the South Pacific area, he certainly should contextualize the facts and therefore clarify certain dynamics of the political, economic and military spheres. In general, a piece of advice to young colleagues, these questions are to be avoided in certain areas of geopolitical interest, as one's name could be added to the blacklist of busybodies or unwary idiots and be treated accordingly.  

As expected, this supervening power of boundless scientific freedom of action on that island alarmed the architect in charge of the expedition sponsored by the Ligabue Foundation, as the certificate placed me in a condition of total independence. The problems were resolved momentarily, both agreeing on the importance of separating our areas of intervention in Puna Marengo and my right-duty to direct, sample and publish - on behalf of the Chilean Museum of Natural History - the excavation of a structure of zooarcheological interest located a few meters from the remains of the prehistoric hut excavated by his group.

Years later, the team that had worked under the aegis of the Ligabue Foundation published a volume dedicated to their research on Easter Island, where the architect took his opportunity by refraining from mentioning my name, the excavations and the results of the searches carried out at the same time a few meters away from those of him. However, he was unable to prevent the testimony of the documentary made on Easter Island by a RAI1 crew during the excavations, which was broadcast in prime time on the Italian national television network. Some shots also show me digging at the hare moa while busy at work. Djellah allowed to be filmed only from behind, in the recovery operations of archaeological finds from the sieving of the excavated soil.

In 1996 I had the opportunity to meet Prof. Omar Ricardo Ortiz-Troncoso, late Chilean colleague at that time professor of South American Archeology at the Albert Egges van Giffen Instituut voor Prae en Protohistorie of the University of Amsterdam. We decided to meet again in the Institute, and later in his house located in Kerkstraat, where I showed the certificate issued to me by Luis Capurro. After reading it with emotion for the memory of his dear colleague, he asked me to write an article on the stratigraphic and archeozoological data from the excavation area I explored on Easter Island in 1991. The article was published in full, in Italian from the Ultramarina Foundation magazine of which Omar was editor:

Villari P., 1997, Excavation essay in the area of a "hare moa" located in Puna Marengo (Isla de Pascua, Chile), Ultramarine Occasional Papers, Number 3 (November 1997), pp. 1-12.

The following year I was asked to write a second article, this time on my excavations of archeozoological interest that I had conducted in the late summer of 1991 in the Great Pyramid of Cauhachi (Nazca, Peru) which was published by Ultramarina Newsletter. It was translated into Spanish by Prof. Troncoso, enthusiastic, as it was one of the first excavations carried out in South America, with properly archeozoological techniques and methodologies.

Here I would like to briefly recall the figure of Omar R. Ortiz-Troncoso (1939-2021), an extraordinary gentleman with a vast culture and passion for archaeological research in the field. He was one of the pioneers of studies on prehistoric settlements, which he himself adventurously discovered between the beginning of the 1960s and the first half of the 1970s, in the coastal area of Patagonia along the Strait of Magellan. Between the ages of twenty and thirty-five he supported himself by working as a teacher in a high school (Pedagogy and Geography) in Punta Arenas. After having obtained a research doctorate in France, at the Sorbone1-Paris University, on the subject of his finds, he was called to teach at the University of Amsterdam at the beginning of the 1980s. Here he immediately organized a brilliant period of excavations, studies and prehistoric research along the coastal strip of Colombia, and later on sites of the colonial age in Venezuela.

In conjunction with the drafting of this article, I re-read some letters of our correspondence, which took place in the last years of the last century, where his qualities emerge as a scientist of international standing with a crystalline personality, associated with humility, acceptance and instinctive inclination to good.

3) Currently, it is considered likely that the first inhabitants came from the Marquesas Islands.

4) at the time of writing, October 2000.

5) Since the middle of the last century, the presence of this symbol on Easter Island has raised fundamental questions on the origin and maintenance of occasional contacts with other populations of the Pacific Ocean. The recent (2020) morphological analyzes of the cranial characters and DNA carried out on some human finds dating back to an age prior to the arrival of the first European travellers, has demonstrated plausible a first population of the island by populations coming from the coasts of present-day Colombia.

The origin of the presence of the hombre-pajaro symbol on Easter Island, faraway in the south-eastern Pacific Ocean, intrigued me a lot as I had already noticed the affinities during my participation in excavations and research carried out in Peru from 1989 to 1991. In 1993, during the surveys carried out in the El Caidero area of Gran Canaria (Canary Islands), informed in advance by a telephone call from a friend of ours, prof. Santo Tinè, I had the opportunity to discuss it with the Norwegian anthropologist and ethnographer Thor Heyerdahl (who at that time occasionally resided in the Island of Tenerife with his new wife). It was a positive meeting, consolidated by the discovery that we both came from a solid foundation of naturalistic university studies, particularly zoological and geographical, and from the experience on Easter Island.

Heyerdahl was firmly convinced of the presence of truth in the ancient legend that had been handed down from the Incas to European chroniclers in the early fifteenth century. According to this, a group of tall, white-skinned men who survived a violent invasion, led by their leader Viracocha, had been forced to flee their peaceful settlement in Peru, directing their boats towards the West (the place where the Sun God plunges into the ocean to begin the daily nocturnal journey into the dark realm of the dead, to then rise again in the East among the very high peaks of the Andes).

The recent archaeological finds in the Gambler Islands (Mangareva site) and in the Pitcairn Islands (Pitcairn and Henderson sites), show a strong similarity in the production of the lithic industry and in the megalithic achievements present in Easter Island. They seem to bear witness to the ease of movement of the Polynesian populations over great distances, to the point of making us guess a real exploration in search of new habitable Southern Pacific islands, possibly around the year 1000 AD. In this regard, it is worth mentioning the experimental journey carried out in 1999 with traditional Polynesian boats, which made it possible to ascertain that only seventeen and a half days were needed to move from the Island of Mangareva to Easter Island.

6) the old tree grew on the right edge of the tent, born within a gaping fracture of the rock.

7) the story took place in October 1991, so by "the last century" I mean the nineteenth here.

8) To avoid unwelcome reactions, we decided not to inform the other members of the expedition of our experience, with the obvious exception of the Responsible Director and Antonio "Toñito" Paolillo, who was my initial liaison at the Council of Elders of the Island.

9) What happened to us in Puna Marengo greatly influenced Djellah's religious beliefs. When she was diagnosed with the aggressive and rapid return of the tumor, she wanted to travel from the Florida resort where she resided to Brazil to consult a healer. He was able to do nothing but confirm the rapid and implacable approach of her death, advising her to accept it as the end of an experience in this material world.

10) which became my port, or rather the seat of the hearth to which I have always returned from my travels in the last thirty years.

When in April 2002 prof. Santo Tinè phoned me from Genoa to inform of Thor Heyerdahl's death, he also specified the terrible cause - a brain tumor - and that he had preferred to starve to death rather than treatment. I felt profound sadness for his disappearance, with Tinè we shared horror for what Heyerdahl had to face due to the aversion perpetuated by a multitude of powerful academics, sometimes with fierce malice. And all this for his innovative theories and adventurous scientific expeditions that aroused so much interest in international public opinion. Prof. Santo Tinè died eight years later, following the long aftermath of a severely disabling ischemia.

11) From what I had learned in Rome in 1992, in the 1980s Djellah had lived in various European countries with a Chilean political refugee, a member of the opposition movement to the government of the Military Junta headed by General Augusto Pinochet. I was also made aware of the fact that the General's son owned properties in Easter Island, rich in rare mineral deposits and, even more interesting for understanding the scope of work carried out with skill by Djellah: in 1991 in the Island there was someone or something that posed a danger to the new government.

Djellah had attended all the main meetings of the adherents of the exiled group, traveling with his companion in England, France and West Germany, establishing relationships of personal friendship with the adepts and becoming aware of many secrets, due to the fact that he had entertained intimate with several of them. All run smooth until news came up regarding a couple of artists, who were former informants of the Stasi, with whom her Chilean partner had maintained relations in East Germany (DDR). Their home had been subjected to a brutal raid by the police of the new German federation. Perhaps this was the reason for Djellah transfer to Chile after the fall of the Berlin Wall, after having left his companion in a blatant way - she claimed - in conjunction with suspicions advanced by some elements of the Chilean refugee group, that the latter was doing double game for hostile intelligence services.

In this regard, I take the opportunity to remind that during our stay in Santiago at the beginning of October 1991, one evening we went to visit two middle-aged Chilean sisters, who lived in a small apartment located in the artists' quarter, the Baquedano. Djellah had lived with them as soon as she arrived in Chile from Europe. Their family had been seriously affected by the phenomenon of the disappearance of many relatives (desaparecidos) as they were linked to a left-wing party that had been in power until the military coup.

Together with them we went to a large square nearby, where among thousands of people we attended the performance of the Illapu, a group of musicians linked to the Resistance. It was thrilling to witness the silence of the weeping audience when the song Historia de Manuel was intoned, followed at the end by a roar of applause, liberating shouts, and choruses of slogans dating back to the times of the Cuban revolution. During the demonstration, an elderly woman approached Djellah who hugged her in tears, she was introduced to me as the Pasionaria of the Chilean resistance. Then the woman was taken away by some kind of protective service that surrounded her.

The next morning, residing in a room shared with Djellah at the Hotel Londres, I was awakened by a loud knock on the door. I opened drenched in sweat and exhausted by the alcohol I had swallowed during the evening in various live music venues in Baquedano. He was the director of the Italian-Chilean archaeological mission, and behind him was Johnny de Isla Quadrado, a young Peruvian colleague whom I respected also professionally. At the same time as offering me a cigarette, the architect asked what I was doing the previous evening in that square, surrounded by a bunch of "dangerous political fanatics". I replied that I had gone to listen to some music for free and he replied giving me a grin. After that he invited me to get dressed: I had been summoned, alone, to the Institute for Easter Island (or similar denomination), to have delivered some military geographical maps useful for my excavations. Well, I stop my memories here.

12) In Italy, for example, the experiments conducted by researchers of the Department of General Psychology of the University of Padua, following scientific protocols of accredited international use, should be mentioned. Here, after having passed the exams conducted by the specialists, it is possible to request the issue of a recognition of "certified medium" valid for all legal purposes.

 

Archaeological Centre-Villari Archive: pubblicazioni scientifiche

In questa sezione è presentata una selezione di pubblicazioni scientifiche di Pietro Villari (monografie, articoli editi da riviste speciali...