Showing posts with label Hunzaland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hunzaland. Show all posts

Thursday, December 11, 2025

Aryan non-Muslims of Pakistan: Kalash


The last pagans (non-Muslims) of Pakistan πŸ‡΅πŸ‡°

Matt Shoe visits Indo-Aryan Afghanistan
(Matt Shoe) In this video, I set out on a ride from Islamabad to the Kalash Valley to find the last remaining (Indo-AryanKalash people — one of the most original and ancient cultures in the region.
Indo-Aryan peoples in Pakistan? (wiki)
I rented a motorcycle from PakistanBikers and started the long ride through rainstorms, mountain roads, and small villages. Along the way, I met friendly locals, saw incredible landscapes, and got a real taste of life in northern Pakistan.

After hours of riding, I finally reached the Kalash Valleys — Birir, Rumbur, and Bumburet. I spent the night in Birir, learning about their history, traditions, and the stories passed down for generations.

The next day, I visited Rumbur, where I witnessed something truly rare — an ancient funeral ceremony that few outsiders ever get to see. This was one of the most meaningful trips I’ve ever done — a glimpse into a culture fighting to keep its identity alive in the modern world.

My eBooks: Guides: mattshoe.travel/guides. Follow on socials: Instagram (themattshoe), Facebook (mattshoeyoutube), TikTok (mattshoetravel). Business enquires: contact@mattshoe.travel
  •  Matt Shoe, Oct. 11, 2025; Amber Larson, Pat Macpherson, Dhr. Seven (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly

Friday, September 6, 2024

The beauty of Kalash and Rajasthan (doc)


Discover the Kalash people | Beautiful women and shocking traditions of this isolated tribe
(WeGeo) June 22, 2024: πŸ‘€ Watch playlist with all videos about various countries: • Countries Images provided by ‪@rustamsheraz‬

Rajasthan, the Lost Land of the Maharajas
(Best Documentary) Feb. 8, 2024: RAJASTHAN This land rich in history embodies all the magic of India. Located in the northwest of India, it is the ancestral land of the maharajas "great kings" and Rajputs (rajaputras) or "sons of kings." Let's meet inhabitants and travelers of this isolated state between plains and mountains in the most inhabited desert in the world. Director: Laurent Cadoret. Original title: "Somewhere on Earth: Rajasthan"

Tuesday, July 30, 2024

Longevity of the Buddhist-Bon Hunza people


HUNZA RIVER VALLEY, Pakistan - The mystery of the longevity of the formerly Buddhist and Bon Hunza (prior to Islamic invasion and forced conversion, leaving them as Shia Muslims). The Hunza are the people who do not age and live to be 120-140 years old.

(Unraveling the Scriptures) ✪ Members first on July 4, 2024. Ever imagine living to be 120 years old or reaching 140 while looking like a teenager? Or reaching 80 years old while looking 40 and remaining healthy? This video talks about the mystery of the Hunza people in Indo-Pakistan (formerly India before the Partition of 1947).

Tibet was a massive empire, with Lhasa as its capital, and Gilgit (Hunza) circle at left.
  • "Bon" refers to the indigenous shamanic traditions of these mountains, as practiced throughout the Tibetan Empire prior to Buddhism, at which time it melded with the esoteric teachings of Vajrayana Buddhism throughout the Himalayas.
  • American longevity expert Dr. Joel Wallach (criticialhealthnews.com) insists the biblical phrase "land of milk and honey" does not refer to dairy and bee products but rather the frothy mineral rich waters coming down from glacial mountain streams and fruit nectar from trees growing on rugged terrain.
What are the secrets, to live in peace and not kill?
The Buddhist mountain people of Hunza take cold plunges, breathe fresh air, exercise daily, play sports until 100, eat mineral-rich food from the hills and valley, eat fresh low caloric foods, and live happily in close community. This is the Hunza River below the Himalayas and Karakoram ranges (close to the tallest mountain in the world, which is likely K2 rather than Everest), where beauty is the norm, much like the Buddha (Prince Siddhartha Gautama of neighboring Bamiyan, Afghanistan, called Kapilavastu in Gandhara in ancient times).
Hunza's Buddhist past
Buddhism and, to a lesser extent BΓΆn, was the primary religion in the area. The region holds several surviving Buddhist archeological sites, such as the Sacred Rock of Hunza.

Hunza Valley was central to the network of trading routes connecting Buddhist Central Asia to the subcontinent (India).

Ancient Buddhist rock carvings in Pakistan vandalized (Buddhistdoor Global)
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Ancient rock carvings look better. Hail Allah!
It also provided protection to Buddhist missionaries and wandering ascetic monks visiting the subcontinent, and the region played a significant role in the transmission of Buddhism throughout Asia [3] (along the Silk Road from the birthplace of the Buddha in Afghanistan and the birth of Buddhism in Bihar, proto-India).

Before conquest by Islam, the majority of the region practiced Buddhism. Since then, most of the population was converted to Islam.

The region has many works of graffiti in the ancient Brahmi script written on rocks (petroglyphs), produced by Buddhist monastics as a form of worship and culture [4].

With most locals being converted to Islam, those inscriptions had been mainly left ignored, destroyed, or forgotten, but they are now being restored [5].

  • Unraveling the Scriptures, July 5, 2024; Pat Macpherson, Dhr. Seven (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly

Monday, March 4, 2024

Oldest person in world from SF turns 117

Pat Macpherson, CC Liu, Dhr. Seven, Wisdom Quarterly COMMENTARY; Guinness
World’s oldest person, Maria Branyas Morera, celebrates 117th birthday
A grandmother wishes for her granddaughter long life and happiness of Nowruz (spring)
R to L: Chiyo, Toshiko (her daughter), Shoji (husband), Kiku (mother), Junichi (son) (Guiness)
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Hunzan women in traditional garb, Hunza Valley
March forth (actually March the fourth) always reminds us of G. Marie G's birthday, so to think it is the oldest Maria's birthday is a nice coincidence. Blond Italian Protestants from California like GMG are rare, but she's gone to Florida now, which has many more conservatives among which to fit in. The Valley is no place to be waving flags and supporting El Supremo.
  • Who's the most famous person born today? Maria:
Most popular drinks in the world: water and tea
Catholics must live longer, if only because there are more of them than any other religieux, not that anyone trusts Holy Roman Imperial Vatican rule anymore, but on official records and census lists.

The last oldest person in the world was a French nun, with all that clean monastic living, then she died leaving a Spanish woman from San Francisco, now returned to Spain, as the oldest.

It always used to be Japanese Buddhists (like the famous Okinawans) with their island diets and respect for elders. Is the Jewish God showing favoritism? Doesn't sound like him. No, wait, it sounds exactly like him.

Of course, to live longer than anyone else, if that's important, move to a Blue Zone. We have one near Los Angeles in La Mirada.

A better bet would be to travel to Hunza Land in the Himalayas (ancient Buddhist Pakistan in Gandhara, where the Buddha was from, i.e., Bamiyan, now in Afghanistan, according to maverick Indian historian Dr. Ranajit Pal), of course, but would they accept short-lived outsiders? That's the question. If it were that easy, everyone would move there.


The secret is the diet (full of micronutrients, the 72 trace minerals in the water), slow-deep breaths of mountain air, and constant moving around in persistent (not strenuous) exercise of walking up and down.

Siddhartha, 35, as wretched extreme ascetic, blaming
his spiritual bondage on the body and doing penance
Mothering little Prince Siddhartha
  • The Buddha lived to the age of 80 but could have kept going to 120 (a kappa or "age," "lifespan"), like his cousin (possibly his older son with the attendant dancing girl Mriga in some Buddhist traditions though not Theravada) Ananda, had he been asked to continue on after his mission to establish the Dharma and fourfold Sangha (spiritual community) was established in the world again after kappas of absence. The key is in the definition of kappa (Sanskrit kalpa, an "aeon" or "age"), which has many meanings, including ordinary lifespan at a given time. That span reduces from a Satya Yuga to the present Kali Yuga, from a golden age of Truth, dwindling down to a dark age of Decadence. When the wandering ascetic Siddhartha adopted the wrong view that the body is to blame, he punished it with extreme austerities, called tapas in yoga, and it got worse. When he found the problem in the mind, he nourished the body and became youthful, vigorous, bright, and beautiful again. Body and mind are interdependent. The body can be a vehicle to enlightenment (awakening) in this very life if we care for it without ruining it by hedonistic indulgences. The Middle Way knows moderation in all things, except mindfulness. The more mindfulness the better.
Hunza Valley water is very clean and mineral rich
For the rest of us, there's still hope if we find "the land of milk and honey," which researcher Dr. Joel Wallach insists is dairy-free. What was called "milk" was really frothy crushed minerals brought down by melting glaciers that grinds up earth in mountain streams. The honey may have been flower nectar with its chromium and other micronutrients intact. These can be found in supplements from criticalhealthnews.com.
  • Ultra-processed foods like breakfast cereals and white bread are the cause of American disease, obesity, Type 2 diabetes, greying, and lack of energy; avoid these toxins
What the Buddha drank as a boy in Bamiyan
Did anyone ever ask the Buddha, "What is the cause of longevity?"? They sure did. His answer was clear: karma ("deeds"). Which deeds might those be? Not having killed but preserving and protecting life in the past, when these actions ripen, they endow one with long life. Everyone always asks superannuated quadragenarians, "What's your secret?"

And they always say the same thing: nonsense. They don't know. All they can think to mention are counterintuitive things like smoking and drinking, which we all know shorten life and make it more wretched. But that's why they brag about it, communicating that in spite of doing these things, they have lived this long. We are left to surmise that enjoying life and having a good attitude towards things is more important than the details.

Hunza Valley in the spring looks just like neighboring Bamiyan, the Buddha's hometown
.
Karma is the cause. Store up merit.
Having stored up the sort of karma that results in longevity is an even better thing to have because then, without wishing it, one will enjoy health and long life in many future lives. That is because even one act, one deed, has many many results. It comes to fruit exponentially, not unlike a single fruit seed leading to many fruit and many more seeds.
Today (March 4th) is the 117th birthday of the world’s oldest living person, Maria Branyas Morera, born in 1907 in San Francisco, California, USA, who returned to Spain with her family when she was 8 to settle in Catalonia. She's lived in the region ever since and has resided in the same nursing home for the past 23 years. She became the oldest person on Earth in January 2023, following the death of 118-year-old Lucile Randon (France). More

Wednesday, November 15, 2023

How to get cleaner wetter water in drops

Dr. Patrick Flanagan, M.D. (amazon.com); Eds., Wisdom Quarterly
Hunza Valley, Hunza Land, Indo-Pakistan, Himalayas (Hindu Kush) idyllic land of longevity.
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American invention by Dr. Flanagan
American Irish genius Dr. Patrick Flanagan, MD, Ph.D., was a kind of Nikola Tesla. In junior high school he invented a device that could detect missile launches (and possibly nuclear detonations) anywhere in the world. It was just a school project built with ordinary Radio Shack parts, totaling about US$5. Had he spent $20, it could have really been something. The powers that be (in the form of the FBI) showed up at his school to confiscate the device and steal the technology behind it. They seemed to have asked him if he had any other inventions or ideas. He did. One of them was a clear liquid made of H20, silica, and minerals to purify water. He called it Crystal Energy (Hunza water with Phi Sciences "Flanagan microclusters" for catalytic "wetter water." He talked about it to Lisa Garr on Pacifica Free Speech Radio KPFK's The Aware Show years ago. What else did he invent?

Tuesday, October 1, 2019

Travel: Lost Horizon to Shangri-La (video)



Pakistan: The Road to Shangri-La
Lost Horizon the book, 1933
This is a utopian mystery documentary about a lost horizon. Legend tells of a utopian Buddhist kingdom hidden among the towering mountains of inner Asia [Central Asia] -- a paradise on Earth yet a place apart, a place of spiritual contentment and long life, a place that’s become known in the West as "Shangri-La."

For centuries, romantics, adventurers, and the devout risked their lives searching for this mythical heaven on Earth [rarely suspecting that it was underneath their feet in our Hollow Earth and its many levels spoken of in the Vedas since before that advent of the historical Buddha].

Lost Horizon the movie, 1937
Many perished in the quest. Those who returned told of a journey through hostile lands, of crossing treacherous mountain passes and desert gorges, in their search for a valley where people live for hundreds of years.

To this day its whereabouts remains a mystery. Host David Adams goes in search of "Shangri-La" -- as described in the famous Western novel Lost Horizon -- in the icy valleys of the Himalayan and Karakoram Mountains in Far North Pakistan, which was part of India until Partition in 1947.
  • Content licensed from David Adams Films. Any queries, please contact: realstories@littledotstudios.com

Sunday, August 18, 2013

Longevity how-to: Oldest man in world is 123

Dhr. Amber Larson and Dhr. Seven, Wisdom Quarterly; Carlos Valdez, Associated Press
Longevity or "life expectancy" (average lifespan) in demography
Aymara herder Carmelo Flores Laura may not be the oldest but he has documentation (AP)
 
The Buddha's reflection (Anekphoto/flickr)
There are beings on Earth who are far older. But with no legitimate birth or baptismal certificate, they are not likely to make themselves known for quite some time.
 
As alien and trans-dimensional "visitors" check in on their project(s) and continue to genetically manipulate and breed with the ape-like forms already developing here, namely we ordinary earthlings -- age is bound to increase. Bear in mind that there are many worlds that constitute the "human plane" (manussa loka) beside our own small population on this pale blue dot orbiting in space, which is distinguished primarily by the fortunate arising of a teacher of humans and devas. He is, of course, the supremely enlightened Buddha. There have been other sages, but this one is different and extraordinarily rare. Yes, earthling lifespans will again increase dramatically.
Silence is the divine "language"
The mythological figure for how long a person can live unassisted under ordinary conditions is 80,000 years. But we will be lucky to 900 in the remainder of this aeon (kalpa), which should make our Jewish/Christian friends happy. In fact, as things descend, average lifespan will one day reach 10. But so much for mythology and cosmology, who is this 123 year old human? 

Clean environs of the Hunza Valley, Indo-Pakistan
Not since Ven. Ananda and other close associates of the historical Buddha walked the Earth have people been living to 120. So what is the "secret" to longevity? Is it praying and petitioning God/gods? Blueberry blast shakes? Steamed kale with sauteed garlic and sesame oil? Doing what you want when the he*k you want? Supplementing with Alchemical "philosopher's stone" (Ambrosia) or "distilled dew" made of evaporated rainwater that has never been allowed to touch the ground? Telomere-lengthening with Indian herbs (like clinically-proven, peer-reviewed Protandim)? Chewing Bolivian and Peruvian leaves from the Andes mountains? Mud walls and dirt floors? Live among Japanese Buddhists, who are documented by the World Health Organization (WHO) and the United Nations (UN) to enjoy "the longest overall life expectancy at birth of any country in the world: 83.5 years for persons born in the period 2010-2015"?[Ref 13][Ref 14] Live among the Hunza Muslims in their great Himalayan foothill valley? All these may help and certainly can increase the quality of life, but the Buddha taught something more directly and emphatically: karma. It is by one's course of conduct that one enjoys longevity here and hereafter, this world and worlds to come.
The great awakening from suffering
Samsara is a long, long round (of births and deaths sufferings innumerable); nirvana is release. But before that final liberation, the ripening of deeds lead to longevity. Abstaining from taking life, from harming, beating, cudgeling, harassing, poisoning, depriving others of sustenance (food, medicine, shelter, care), and so on ripens as long life in terrestrial and celestial worlds. There are, of course, planes which one would not appreciate longevity, worlds-of-woe one may fall into so long as one has not become a stream-enterer and thereby cut off that possibility.

The Good Life
The banks of Lake Tititcaca with snowy Andes
LAKE TITICACA (Frasquia), Bolivia (AP) - If Bolivia's public records are correct, Carmelo Flores Laura is the oldest living person ever documented.
 
[One can live longer, but the key here is holding the modern bureaucratic documentation to prove it. Look at the case of the Great Avatar Babaji, 500, living in the Himalayas, or human-hybrid Yetis, or "Snowmen," in the same area, or Humanzees in Russia and Siberia, the result of Dictator Stalin's crossbreeding experiments with our kissing cousins].
 
They say he turned 123 a month ago.

The native Aymara lives in a straw-roofed dirt-floor hut in an isolated hamlet near Lake Titicaca at 13,100 feet (4,000 meters), is illiterate, speaks no [colonial] Spanish [of the European conquerors or Conquistadors], and has no teeth.

He walks without a cane and doesn't wear glasses. And though he speaks Aymara with a firm voice, one must talk into his ear to be heard.

"I see a bit dimly. I had good vision before. But I saw you coming," he tells Associated Press journalists who visit after a local TV report touts him as the world's oldest person."
 
Hobbling down a dirt path, Flores greets them with a raised arm, smiles and sits down on a rock. His gums bulge with [chewed whole untreated] coca leaf, a mild stimulant that staves off hunger. Like most Bolivian highlands peasants, he has been chewing it all his life.

Guinness World Records says the oldest living person verified by original proof of birth is Misao Okawa, a 115-year-old Japanese woman. [Women excel, and men rarely make it beyond 116.] The oldest verified age was 122 years and 164 days: Jeanne Calment of France, who died in 1997. More

Update: Debunked?
(SCPR, Aug. 17, 2013) According to KPCC FM's Off-Ramp with John Rabe, the elder Laura is only 107 according to his Baptism certificate. This is the shocking claim of UCLA's Dr. Stephen Coles, director of the Gerontology Research Group, which investigates these kinds of claims for the Guinness Book of World Records. He says he was skeptical from the start, especially because there was no documentary proof dating to the year Laura was supposedly born. "I was immediately suspicious because no man to our knowledge has ever lived past the age of 116, because 90% of people we call super-centenarians are female." More

Friday, June 19, 2009

New Oldest Man in the World

Reuters Life!
American Gertrude Baines (be-low) is officially the oldest per-son in the world. But British Henry Allingham, born on June 6, 1896, has now been declared the world's oldest man, at 113, following the death of Japanese Buddhist Tomoji Tanabe.
Tanabe, who ate mostly vegetables and believed the key to his longevity was not drinking alcohol, died on Friday aged 113 and had held the record for the oldest living male since January, 2007.

Guinness said the official old-est living person is American Gertrude Baines, 115 (born 1894). Of course, older people live in rural Vietnam, Hima-layan Hunzaland, and elsewhere without satisfactory record-keeping for Guinness. More>>