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Introduction
Consisting of seven sections, this module focuses
on the captivating Quechua culture rooted in the remotest
regions of the Peruvian Andes. The discussion of the evolutionary
theories about the origin and development of Quechua culture has
been supplemented with myths and legends from the oral tradition
which have been enhanced with photographs, music, personal
accounts
and other media. The module also includes a selected bibliography
which should prove quite useful to those who wish to further explore
the subject.
Andean
Quechua Culture

The legend of the Ñawpa Machus or ancient
kinfolk
At the dawn of creation, before
the powerful Inca, there lived on the Earth a lineage of little
men called ñawpa machus. Back then, the little men lived in darkness,
since their only source of light was the tenuous moonlight.

Moche iconic art (Northern
Peru)
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Upon the arrival of the Inca or Children of the
sun, the ñawpa machus, who could not stand the brightness nor the
heat of the sun, fled with their animals and their costly belongings
and settled in the jungle, where the rays of the sun could not reach
them. Nevertheless, as they made their escape, many of them where
caught by the sunlight, which reduced them to ashes on the spot.

It is said that their scattered ashes turned
into boulders and hills, where their malevolent souls dwell. Of
course, not all the little men were annihilated; there were some
that succeeded in hiding before the sunlight reached them by burrowing
into the ground, holing themselves up inside hills or diving into
the bottom of lakes-from whence they will return to rule the Earth
once the Inca era comes to an end.
Compiled by Odi Gonzales

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