Course XXIX - Teaching 8: Sixth and Seventh Lemurian Sub-races
The sixth Lemurian sub-race, called Mo-Za-Moo, started with the fight of men against monsters. The latter prevailed on the west side of the Continent, and creeping, flying or swimming periodically invaded the central Continent and destroyed thousands of Lemurians.
The nervous system of the Lemurians grew stronger thanks to their fear to be invaded by those monsters, they acquired a normal blood circulation, and the Botal’s hole remained closed forever –human nature was unable to standardize it since the Hyperborean Race.
Their eyes started glimpsing lights and figures, which contributed to the union of the Lemurians in their common defense. But they alone would be unable to defeat those monsters, and high spiritual entities incarnated among the Lemurians to guide and lead them to the victory.
The defense and attack against those monsters was as follows:
Males formed up on a wide front; followed by a row of females, another row of males, another of females, and so on. Men had heavy canes as weapons, and women carried their children and food in bags of vegetal fiber.
Guided by Divine Instructors they got going. Their heavy and ordered march produced a vibration that scared and misguided those monsters and opened in their vanguard immense crevices on the earth, where the half-blind monsters sunk.
Year after year, the Lemurians marched this way until a final victory over these monsters; of the latter just the most degenerate or bestial remained.
On the western end, an immense island appeared; surrounded by a great abyss, and called Sacred Land or Moo-Za-Moo, was inhabited by the most chosen Lemurian type. This would be the beginning of the most advanced sub-race, the Moo-Za-Moo.
The seventh sub-race, Moo-Za-Moo, witnessed how the Lemurian men, already owners of their instinctive mind, with a quite balanced nervous system and perfect blood circulation, made considerable advances in their new experimental lives.
In those last times, seismic movements had displaced and centered the Lemurian life in the west, even though there were other quite important islands where the Lemurians migrated in order to establish progressive colonies.
The oceanic water, divided into three large oceans, even though effervescent and continuously boiling, was of the same chemical compound as today.
On these islands, and especially on the Sacred Island –Moo-Za-Moo–, great granite temples were erected, –some sort of enormous vaults supported by monoliths.
In the beginning, these monoliths were clocks before being transformed into gods, as during the fourth Atlantean sub-race; the Lemurian put an immense faceted stone, balanced upon the point of the monolith, which with oscillations and movements marked different hours, atmospheric movements and volcanic eruptions; the latter was extremely dangerous to the Lemurian cities.
Lemurian women stayed in those great locations (granite vaults), in charge of children of the colony and preparing food.
Lemurians were strictly vegetarians; from the fruit of certain trees obtained some sort of nutritious flour that they stirred in mortars to prepare big cakes cooked by the sunrays filtered through the clouds.
They expected the sunrise and then they cooked they food, tidied up and intuitively communicated with the spiritual world from where they came. This time could be called hour of material food and spiritual food.
Streets and roofs of the great vaults were covered with an especial mud, –mud from swamps of the land of Moo, which contained so many chemical elements; mixed with water and exposed to the sun, this mud grew harder and became yellowish, tinsel-colored. Streets, sidewalks and roofs of the Lemurian cities were made with this material.
At the center of the island they had an immense granite wheel that, as a wind-mill, was rhythmically in motion; this wheel alone, smeared with a radioactive substance, illuminated the island.
Lemurian men hunted their powerful cane as a weapon and their winged dinosaur at their side. They traveled through great distances, and guided by their secret sense of orientation, killed wild and harmful beasts and tamed dinosaurs. But they did not eat meat, and used the hide of those animals, properly inflated, to adorn their cities.
Among them there were sculptors –considered privileged, priestly beings. These are the authors of monoliths and statues; one of the latter remains on the Easter Island as a relic.
In the beginning of the Race, the Lemurians created their physical abodes through their self-consciousness and operated on the phenomenal will; but in the end, they begot in a normal way, through male will, operating on the female consciousness.
But, day by day, generation after generation, volcanoes howled and vomited lava –slow lava continuous and implacable that gradually was devastating and destroying the whole Lemurian Continent. Finally, the merciful waters covered it and smothered the fire.