(Only
those who know their past, have a future.)
-
Wilhelm von Humboldt
Mr Tuniak
and I were meeting at the parking space behind the office building
today. As he had promised last week, he was going to show me today,
what he had shown Cailinn a long time ago.
“Do
you know what a beyul
is?”, Mr Tuniak asked, when we were in the car.
“That's
what they are calling swamps in the south of the United States, isn't
it?”, I asked.
“No,
you are thinking of bayous”, Mr Tuniak corrected me. “Beyul
comes from Buddhistic believes. It is the name for hidden valleys,
where wise men could find refuge and where all of their knowledge was
stored. You can think of it as a version of Noah's ark. While outside
the valley the world could go to hell, inside everything survives and
can therefore lead to a new beginning, a new world.”
“And
we are going to such a valley?”, I asked.
“Not
quite. But I wanted to tell you this, so that you know why we called
the place that.”
He
continued his description of a beyul
as a prospering and green valley, full of life and plants and...
...and
pretty much the exact opposite of the place where we landed.
When the
time machine had come to a stop, I was expecting to find myself
surrounded by mountains, maybe even seeing the Himalayas. But instead
dry and hot air was blowing in through the open door. We exited the
time machine and I saw that we had landed in the desert.
“When
you were talking about this valley, I was expecting something quite
different”, I said.
“Well,
there has been quite a jungle here in the past”, Mr Tuniak said.
“But there are several reasons, why we decided to built the beyul
here.”
“Because
of the cheap energy?”
The time
machine had landed close to a huge warehouse, huge like a aeroplane
hangar. All around us were rows upon rows of of solar panels, which
were connected through cables with this hangar.
“Yes,
that is one of the reasons”, Mr Tuniak said. “We are producing
enough energy here to supply a big city. The second reason is that
this land here didn't cost us anything.”
“It
was free?”, I wondered. “Did a state give it to you?”
“No,
we are outside any state. We are between Egypt and Sudan. Egypt is
north of here, that way, Sudan south.”
“How
can we be between these two countries?”, I asked. “If I'm
remembering correctly, they share a border.”
“Don't
ask me”, Mr Tuniak said. “For some reason neither of these two
states wants to own this land... this piece of desert. That's why
Gemini started building the beyul
here and since we started no one has come and complained.”
We were
walking towards the warehouse. Its walls were painted with images of
a green valley. Someone obviously had a sense of humour.
“One
other thing I should mention”, Mr Tuniak continued before we
entered. “From your point of view, we have travelled several years
into the future. In your time this whole complex is still under
construction and far from being finished... in a way it still isn't.
And don't be surprised, if we don't meet any people inside. Today is
a holiday.”
The
warehouse, despite its size, was only the tip of the proverbial
iceberg. The real complex was underground. The warehouse was just
like a hat that protected the head from the storm and the weather. It
was a reception area from which countless stairs, ramps and lifts led
downwards. We took one of the lifts. At the back of it a touchscreen
was showing the plans for the whole beyul
and I tried to get a general impression of it. But it was too big to
really grasp in that short amount of time. When we got out of the
lift, the only thing I knew for sure was that we were somewhere deep
underground.
“Once
the construction is completely and definitely finished, the lifts
will be turned off and their shafts will be blocked and sealed”, Mr
Tuniak said. “The only way to get down will be the ramps then.”
“Why?”
“So
that we can... control who gets down and how far”, Mr Tuniak
explained. “You will understand it, when I show it to you.”
Getting out
of the lift, I had the feeling of entering a workshop of the ancient
world. It was like a gigantic museum, although the exhibits were not
protected by glass. You could touch and use everything. Next to every
single one the those primitive machines – and even next to some
tools – were paintings explaining their use in simple terms. There
was also a protected area, where scrolls (not made out of paper or
papyrus, but some kind of new material, that hasn't been invented
yet) were stored.
“You
have probably read The Odyssey,
haven't you?”, Mr Tuniak asked, as we were standing in front of all
these scrolls.
“Yes,
and also an account of the siege of Troy”, I answered. “And I
think we read one or two other ancient plays as well at school.”
“But
only a very small percentage of all the works written back then
survived until your time”, Mr Tuniak said. “Here, we have really
collected everything. I brought students into the past to watch these
plays and write them down afterwards. Over there you can see some
paintings we made of those old productions.”
I could have
spent days in those rooms, looking at everything I could and still
would not have seen everything. But we had to continue. There were
even more things to see.
Mr Tuniak
guided me to a hidden ramp that led further into the deep. As we were
walking on it, he pionted out the steel doors in the walls which
would someday block this way.
“Once
we are finished, there will be no short cut down from the top to the
bottom”, Mr Tuniak said. “You will have to pass through all
storeys and the connecting corridors, like this ramp here, will be
hidden and blocked. There will be riddles at each level and to pass
on to the next, you will have to solve these riddles first.”
“Like
in a computer game?”, I asked.
“If
you want to put it like that, but there is a reason for this”, Mr
Tuniak said. “Imagine that in the far future, mankind, for whatever
reason, will fall back into the Stone Age. All our knowledge will be
lost.”
“Is
that going to happen?”, I wanted to know.
“Not
as far as I know”, Mr Tuniak replied. “But the future is vast and
I don't know what will happen in a million years. So imagine these
new Stone Age humans discover our beyul
here. Suddenly they would have access to all these modern
technologies.”
“It
would be as if you were travelling into the past and giving the
people then modern technology”, I said. “You would influence the
course of history.”
“And
we would hand these discoverers a great deal of power”, Mr Tuniak
said. “We don't want to do that. That's why every level is...
guarded by a riddle. To solve these riddles, you will need a certain
technical knowledge. It means that you can only access an area, once
you have already discovered the hidden knowledge on your own. We
don't want to influence the future here, we just want to make sure
that the past is not forgotten.”
We passed
quickly through the next level – I guess that the technology on
display would fit at the beginning of the middle ages – and entered
another lift. When we got out again, we were sometime in the
nineteenth century. If we had walked all the way, it would have taken
us several hours and I didn't even want to imagine how many metres
(probably even kilometres) and tons of rock were above our heads.
“This
is one of my favourite treasures”, Mr Tuniak said. He led me to
several shelves were disc records were stored. Record players were
standing in front of it.
“What
kind of music are you collecting here?”, I wanted to know.
“Everything
and anything we can find”, Mr Tuniak said.
“And
why aren't you using CDs or store them on computer files?”
“Because
they work better for our purposes”, Mr Tuniak explained. “If you
store something on a computer file, you also have to provide a
computer. They wouldn't fit into the time frame here and they would
be just another thing that could get damaged. And speaking of digital
storage in general: There's always the risk that they won't be able
to read those files in the future.”
“I
see you have other disks over there”, I said. “Why are they
separate?”
“Because
they are not songs, but languages”, Mr Tuniak said. “We have got
dictionaries and sound samples over there.”
“And
why have these shelves the image of a parrot carved into them?”
“Oh,
that's an old story”, Mr Tuniak said. “When Alexander von Humbold
came to South America, he discovered a parrot who was speaking an
extinct language. Every human, who had spoken that languages, had
already died, but the parrot still remembered it.”
“Speaking
of languages... I see that all the inscriptions here are written in
English”, I said. “Will they be able to understand that in the
far future?”
“There
is an explanation and dictionary several levels above us”, Mr
Tuniak said. “But you are right that without those, people in the
future would have a very difficult time understanding anything we
have written here.”
Even further
down...
I can't
recount here everything Mr Tuniak showed me. When I came home
afterwards, I felt as if I had spent several days walking through
those corridors (and since the time machine returned us five minutes
after we had departed, theoretically it would have been possible).
We came to a
database, where the genetic codes of all animals and plants that ever
lived were stored. There was also a big safe, which was connected to
a cooling unit.
“What
have you stored in there?”, I asked. “Cells?”
“We
have thought about that and maybe we are still going to do it one
day, but that's not in there”, Mr Tuniak said. “In there is
primordial slime.” When he saw that I didn't get the significance
of what he had said, he added: “It's the stuff that life originated
in.”
“Do
you mean... Is it possible to create new life with it?”, I asked.
“Maybe”,
Mr Tuniak said. “It wasn't my idea and I am not convinced that it
would actually work but... yeah.”
In
some strange kind of way I felt reassured. No matter what would
happen on the surface of the planet, down here the possibility of new
life would exist. This beyul
was the world – and its history – in miniaturised form. This here
was the legacy of Mr Tuniak and his mothers: A memory of a world.
NEXT
WEEK
And
now I think I am quite ready to go on another journey.
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