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The Hidden Messages in Water
Wednesday, April 28, 7:00 p.m.
Cline Library Auditorium
 

Black Mesa Trust is dedicated to saving the N-aquifer for future generations of Hopi and Navajo children and for the good of all people. While continuing its work on the important task of ending Peabody Coal’s pumping of the N-aquifer and the coal company’s illegal impoundment of over 5,000 acre-feet of surface water at the mine sites, the Trust is now expanding its mission into the global arena.

In January 2004, during the month of Paamuya (water moon), Black Mesa Trust launched the Decade of the Water to foster understanding and respect for water and our relationship to this sacred resource, the source of all life.

The Decade of Water will be a time for remembering, learning, preserving, and developing a conscious commitment to creating a harmonious global environment in which all living things can thrive.

Executive Director Vernon Masayesva explains, “I remember a tuning fork demonstration in my high school class. The teacher hit a U-shaped object, a tuning fork, and within moments a second fork picked up the ringing sound and began to vibrate at the same frequency. This was a lesson about resonance.

“Many years later, sitting in a kiva, I was reminded of the tuning fork demonstration. The men had gathered to smoke and meditate. They sang a song, ‘Bring Your Hearts Together.’ The song goes, ‘When our hearts become one, the rain clouds from all directions will visit us.’

“In other words, if humankind unites in thought and prayer, nature in turn will pick up the prayers and resonate with them. Trying to achieve this state of resonance or harmony was once the core of Hopi life. It was central to our religious practices.

“Today, instead of resonance we are living in a state of dissonance. Hopis call this “koyaanisqatsi,” or life out of harmony and balance.

“No wonder the rain chiefs are staying home. Signs are everywhere. We have experienced several years of drought. Springs are dying. Bark beetles are devastating the forests. Various species of birds no longer stay with us. The voice of nature is crying out, but no one seems to be listening.

“Recently we received pictures of water samples taken from Hotevilla Spring and the Navajo Aquifer. The samples were sent to Japan, frozen into crystals, and photographed by Dr. Masaru Emoto.

“The N-aquifer water crystallized beautifully. Sadly, however, the water from Hotevilla did not seem to have a face. The question is, ‘Why? What message is that water trying to give us?’

“Dr. Emoto is coming from Japan to Northern Arizona University on April 28 as a guest of Black Mesa Trust. He will talk about the research he has been doing for the past 15 years on interactions between humans and water. Perhaps he can help us understand why Hotevilla water has lost its face, and, more importantly, what we need to do to heal it.”

Dr. Masuro Emoto, a Doctor of Alternative Medicine, is the Director of the Hado Institute in Tokyo. According to Dr. Emoto, “Hado is the intrinsic vibrational pattern at the atomic level in all matter. The smallest unit of energy. Its basis is the energy of human consciousness.” As a result of his extensive research into the nature of water around the planet, Dr. Emoto has realized that it is in the frozen crystal form that water shows us its true nature, and he has proved that thoughts and feelings affect physical reality. By producing different Hado through written and spoken words, as well as music and literally presenting it to the same water samples, the water appears to "change its expression.”

Based on this research, he has authored the two-volume work, “Messages from Water.”

He will speak at the Cline Auditorium at Northern Arizona University in Flagstaff on April 28th from 7 to 9:30 p.m., including a question and answer period.

For more information about Black Mesa Trust’s work, please call the Hopi office at (928) 734-9255 or the Flagstaff office at (928) 213-9009, or visit www.blackmesatrust.org. For more information about Dr. Emoto’s work, visit www.hado.net.

This event is co-sponsored by the Center for Sustainable Environments.
 

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Last updated January 16, 2007