What if everything you thought you knew about the ancient Inka was wrong? History tells us they were master builders, but what if their most impressive structures were never meant for the dead at all? New evidence from the mysterious chullpa towers of Sillustani and Cutimbo reveals something far more extraordinary: these megalithic chambers were not tombs, but carefully engineered portals for a secret ritual of "living resurrection."
This ancient practice, known to initiates from Egypt to China, from the Essenes beneath Mount Sion to the philosophers of Greece, allowed a living candidate to journey voluntarily to the Otherworld and return, risen, with first-hand knowledge of the cosmos. The same ritual echoes through the empty sarcophagi of Egypt, the suppressed Gospels of early Christianity, and the secret rites of the Knights Templar. And now, encoded in stone on the high Andean plateau, the chullpas of Peru whisper the same forbidden truth.
Forget what the history books taught you. The real story is stranger, older, and infinitely more profound.
Rather than being burial chambers, the chullpas of Sillustani and Cutimbo were used for a secret, near-death simulation in which candidates returned 'risen'.
Conventional history claims the Inka appeared suddenly during the 15th century, and within ninety years their ability to fashion stone advanced at meteoric pace, from mere river rock with mortar to megalithic tongue-and-groove monuments featuring masonry so tightly arranged that an alpaca hair cannot not be inserted between the blocks.

