LLANDUDNO ROCKS

All over South Africa we come across ruins of ancient fortresses and temples.

Llandudno

These rocks must have been sun temples in ancient times.

Llandudno

The most powerful healing temples in South Africa, were those erected along our country’s coast, because again the sea is believed to generate a powerful spirit as it crashes against the shore.

Llandudno rocks

Llandudno

LlandudnoLlandudno

All along the Cape coast there are rocks, rocks which show evidence that they were put in place by intelligent human beings. Human beings however who did not want to disrupt the magic of nature in any way.

Along the Cape coast there are stone temples, there are big round rocks, hollow underneath and some of these are large enough for ten human beings to sit inside them in comfort. At sunrise and sunset the rays of the sun stab through special notches made in these rocks.

Llandudno

The waves, as they move backwards and forwards, make love to the earth and arouse her deepest powers, which can be used for the benefit of mankind. Stone and water create a very great healing force.

Llandudno rocks

There is another rock, a small one, which is round on the outside but hollow underneath, with an aperture through which a small human being can crawl.

Llandudno

This rock must have been used as a beacon in ancient times because it is very close to the sea shore and if were to you light a smoky fire inside this rock, it would send a column of smoke high into the air, smoke which would be visible to any passing ship.

In the huge unrecorded folklore of my country, we hear of people known as Bafumi, the rich ones. These were black people who traded with ships which passed along the east coast of South Africa. In fact these people existed until within historical times and their presence was noted by the Portuguese who called them Los Fumos, people of smoke, because they used to light plumes of smoke to attract ships to trade with them. Let me tell you that these Los Fumos were in part my people the Zulus and they were also in part the Swahili people, who were amazing sailors; people who possessed ships with which they traded along the East coast of Africa, from the Horn of Africa, right down to the Cape.

Little Lions HeadLittle Lions Head

There is a mountain in Cape Town called Little Lions Head and at the base of this mountain are, what are called Llandudno rocks.

Llandudno rocksLlandudno rocks

Llandudno

Llandudno rocks

Llandudno rocksLlandudno caveLlandudno rocksLlandudno rocksLlandudno caveLlandudno caveLlandudno rocksLlandudno rocks

Llandudno cave

Llandudno rocks

Llandudno rocks

Llandudno rocksLlandudno rocks

And right on the ocean where the waves kiss the beach, amongst a clump of rocks there is a stone which is clearly engraved with a cross, a cross that points to the four cardinal points of the earth.

Llandudno cross

What does this tell us, this lonely stone upon the seashore?

It tells us the Portuguese were not the first to circumnavigate the Cape. There were others in much more remote times.

No-one can deny and no-one should deny, that there were once people sailing round the coast of the southern tip of Africa, tens of thousands of years ago.

Llandudno

As proof of this I can tell you that on one of the coasts of the Cape, an ancient boat was found. The remains of a very ancient boat a boat of the type made in Europe during the Bronze Age. Such a boat was found in the Cape deep under the sands of where the sea used to beat.

According to African folklore, there was once a land beyond Table Mountain. There was once land extending far into the sea to the south of Table Mountain. In other words the Cape of Good Hope was much bigger in ancient times than it is today.

One thing that enrages me is that the establishment scientists in South Africa refuse to acknowledge the fact that there were once sea-voyaging people who travelled throughout the world and who even established settlements in South Africa in various places.

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