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The sun rises over the Caribbean.

Two battle-weary fishing canoes rest under a palm by the Gulf of
Honduras, in the small town of Punta Gorda at the southern tip of
Belize.

The outspread top branches of the ceiba tree, sacred to the
Maya. For them, these limbs symbolized the heavens overhead.

The gated entrance to Chechem Ha, near Benque Viejo del Carmen,
about 10 miles from San Jose Succotz in the Cayo District of Western
Belize.

Cave guide and archeologist Gonzalo Pleitez at the entrance to Chechem Ha.
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by Nate McMahon
About 10 meters under the Belizean jungle, in an
ancient Mayan cave, I hung by my arms from a broken ladder. My feet
dangled in space and shards of pottery glinted on the ledge above my
head. My guide grabbed my ankles frantically and I wondered: Was the
cave about to claim another sacrifice?
I'd left my home near Portland, Oregon, on a cold,
wet day in February, with the pavement reflecting headlights in the
early-morning gloom. Seven hours later I stepped off the airplane on the
edge of the Caribbean, just outside Belize City. Warm, moist air
enveloped me like a benediction.
The acute change made my escape from traffic and
ringing phones more emphatic. But acute change brings apprehension, and
my airline seatmate was no help. Middle-aged and fit, with frosted hair,
she was en route from the slopes of Colorado to her condo on Ambergris
Caye (pronounced key), Belize's tourist-rich diving mecca. She had a
wealth of stories about inland violence and petty thievery. As I
explored the country, however, I came to realize that Belizeans are kind
and sociable. The only time I felt uncomfortable was when I found out
corn tortillas went well with 'quash'--that is, with coatimundi, a member
of the raccoon family.
Belize is a melting pot about the size of New
Hampshire (nine thousand square miles), on the Yucatan Peninsula. It's
bordered by Mexico to the north, Guatemala to the west and south, and
the Caribbean to the east. The day-to-day language is Creole (an English
patois), but nearly everyone speaks standard English and conversational
Spanish, and often a smattering of Kekchi or Mopan Mayan. About a
quarter of a million people live there.
Mayans dominated present-day Belize, Guatemala,
Honduras, El Salvador and southern Mexico starting in about 250 A.D.
Arriving in the 16th century, the Spanish didn't infiltrate Belize as
thickly as some areas of the New World, but natives who lived there had
another problem: British buccaneers. The Baymen, as the British in
Belize were called, used the 240-mile reef-sheltered Belize coast as a
place to rest and hide. The Spanish still claimed the land until the
Baymen won the rights to Belize at the battle of St. George's Caye in
1798.
Relations were rocky between Brits and Belizeans
and eventually the colonial system crumbled. By 1964 Belize was allowed
to govern itself, and in 1973 the name Belize replaced British Honduras.
In 1981 Belize finally achieved independence.
Most of the residents are mestizo, a generally
Spanish-speaking mix of Mayan and European. Until recently, Creoles
(like in Jamaica, mon) were the largest group, but refugees from
Guatemala and an exodus of Creoles to the U.S. shifted the balance. One
of the most distinctive groups is the Garifuna, its people descended from fiercely
independent Carib Indians and Africans exiled or escaped from eastern
Caribbean colonies in the 18th Century. Other visible cultures include
Latino, European, Asian and native Mayan.
The moment I left the airport I grabbed a cab for
Belize City. What crime and pollution there is in Belize is most
prevalent in Belize City, which used to be the capital and is still the
largest city. I planned-perhaps unfairly-to use it as a bus stop and
nothing more. My cab dropped me off at one of Belize's ubiquitous bus
companies, and within 20 minutes I was headed toward San Ignacio, the
largest city in Belize's western Cayo District. Bus travel is one of the
best deals in Belize, and the buses are a great way to connect with the
land and its people. They run regularly and reliably through every
corner of the country. The two-hour, 70-mile trip from Belize City to
San Ignacio cost $5 BZ ($2.50 US). It also was uncomfortable, crowded
and left me covered with a fine coating of dust, like a floured chicken
leg.
I arrived in San Ignacio after dark. It's a busy
town of steep hillsides near the Macal River. San Ignacio is a kind of
Dodge City in the jungle, minus the gunfights. The streets are narrow,
often unpaved. Two and three-story buildings flank the main drag, pieced
together with wood and stucco, balconies drooping, porches sagging.
It didn't take me long to find the best bar in Cayo
- Eva's. Eva's looks like a sleepy Southern diner. Screen doors and
windows are always open, checkered tablecloths cover the tables; beer
mugs are thick with condensation. The bar is a conduit to area guides,
and offers local food, drinks, a computer hooked to the Internet, and a
raft of information about activities in Cayo.
I ordered a tasty black molé stew, made with half
a chicken and a boiled egg. The dish came with half a dozen fresh corn
tortillas. Within an hour I'd made friends with Bob the bartender, a
tattooed veteran of British service, and a smattering of locals and
tourists. A bonus at Eva's - and, joyfully, at every bar in Belize - is
the excellent local brew. Called Belikin, it's available in lager or
stout. The bottles feature a Mayan temple; if you drink a lot of
Belikin, you really do see Mayan temples.
Gonzalo, a hip half-Mayan, half-Latino, half-drunk
guide, was one of my new friends. He worked as an archeologist and guide
at Chechem Ha cave, about 15 miles south of San Ignacio. The cave winds
for miles under a thickly forested hillside. For more than 1,000 years
the Maya left pots of corn and other offerings inside caves, which they
believed were sacred entrances into the underworld, Xibalba
(zhi-bal-BA). Other offerings were more sanguine.
The Mayans believed the gods gave them a
responsibility to keep the world in order, and a tool for doing so.
Bloodletting - both from willing donors and sacrificial victims - was an
integral part of Mayan life. Blood was offered to keep the Mayan world
balanced. The Mayan Tree of Life, the ceiba, symbolizes this balance.
The ceiba has a straight trunk with smooth gray bark. Its branches are
confined to the uppermost reaches of the tree, where they stretch out to
receive the sun's rays. The wide-reaching branches of the ceiba
symbolize the heavens overhead. Its quick-growing trunk is the middle
world, where humans live. Its deep roots symbolize the underworld. Every
evening when the sun sinks, it disappears into Xibalba. There, Jaguar
escorts it from west to east through the nine layers of the underworld,
so it can rise safely in the morning.
To get to Chechem Ha, I rented a small, battered
mountain bike and embarked on an 11-mile ride. My bike came nowhere
close to fitting my 6-foot, 5-inch frame, and the seat was loose. The
hot sun sapped my strength. The dirt road I traveled headed up and never
down, a Newtonian violation I considered unacceptable.
The only thing to dull my pain was the raving
beauty of the surroundings. Groups of butterflies, sparkling in the sun,
flitted around like jeweled tiaras. Piercing flowers sprang boldly from
the jungle, challenging the patterned greenery for superiority. Parrots
squawked overhead like tuneless trumpets. The ride would have been
pleasant if not for the quivering pain in my quadriceps and the chafing
between my legs.
I found the turn-off to Chechem Ha and dodged cows
along a double track until I reached the Morales farm. William Morales
discovered the cave about 10 years ago on his parents' farm, and the
government gave the family the right to run the site. They've built a
small restaurant and some cabañas around a cheerfully rippling stream
under the jungle hardwoods. About 100 yards from the restaurant the
stream plunges over a bank into a beautiful, 50-foot waterfall.
Gonzalo met me at the restaurant. After we said
hello, he led me past a tame spider monkey and into the bush. He guided
me about a mile and a half through the secondary jungle, among cohune
palms and tangled underbrush, to the entrance of the cave. A square hole
about as high as my waist peeked out from a hillside, secured with a
locked metal grate to keep out looters.
Gonzalo unlocked the gate with a flourish and we
crawled through, flashlights at the ready. The cave opened up until we
could stand comfortably, and we immediately spotted ochre potshards at
our feet. The cave twists and winds, doubling back, climbing and
falling. Parts of the cave can only be accessed with ropes, and ladders
made of sawn-off tree limbs lead to hidden ledges.
On the ledges, in corners, under overhangs, among
fat white cave spiders and beneath clusters of bats are the riches of
the cave: more than 1,000 years of pots, many fully formed and intact,
some with dust from the original corn offerings still inside. In the
cave's central chamber, a small stele and altar were built. This
indicates sacrifice, according to Gonzalo, and means Mayan nobles
visited the cave.
The cave also contains painted plates with tripod
legs, designed to catch blood during rituals. One pot was painted with
the figure of a man, arms outspread, head suspended above his torso.
Gonzalo said the floating head symbolized a sacrifice.
Which brings us back to my predicament. As I was
climbing down from a pot ledge on one of two side-by-side wooden
ladders, about ten feet off the ground, two rungs broke under my feet. I
was left hanging in midair from an unbroken rung. I dangled for only a
few seconds before my feet found purchase on the ladder. Gonzalo
assisted, and when I dismounted said, "I was going to tell you -- the ladder you came down is for smaller people. The one next to it is
for bigger people.
"I've never seen anyone break a ladder
before," he added.
When we were again on speaking terms, Gonzalo
talked of the wonder and possibility inherent in the cave. He and his
fellow archeologists haven't been inside very long, and treasures still
hide in the cave's crevices. Every year the rainy season shuts the cave
down, delaying further exploration. When the archeologists are done on
the surface they plan to excavate, which could reveal more layers of
relics. It will take many years of discoveries before the cave is
understood.
This is true for many of the country's ancient
sites. Environmental conditions and lack of funding slow exploration.
While this frustrates those trying to expose the region's history, for
visitors it means there is always something new to discover in Belize.
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