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Kindred Spirits
Travel+Leisure US
|February 2025
A national park in Belize has deep roots in Mayan healing traditions.
SMOKE CURLED around my body as Maria Garcia, a Yucatec Maya healer, walked around me in circles, swinging a pail of incense. I closed my eyes and inhaled the spicy fragrance—copal resin mixed with cinnamon and rosemary—while Garcia brushed my limbs with a bundle of piper amalago leaves. The plant, part of the family that includes common black pepper, is sacred to the Maya for its healing properties. “We use it like a brush to remove all of the negativity,” Garcia said. “You give all that’s not good to the plant and the plant gives you its energy.”
I was standing in Garcia’s jungle-like garden in San Antonio, a small Mayan village in the western district of Cayo, in Belize. Bordering Guatemala, Cayo was in ancient times a center of Mayan civilization. Now it’s home to Noj Ka’ax H’Men Elijio Panti National Park (EPNP), one of four parks in the country comanaged by the Mayan community.
Established in 2001 thanks to the efforts of the Itzamna Society, a group formed by Indigenous Maya to protect their ancestral lands, the park is a cultural sanctuary for members of the community living in and around San Antonio. Its name, which means “canopied rainforest of healers,” also honors Garcia’s late uncle, Elijio Panti, who was a distinguished spiritual leader and healer.Diese Geschichte stammt aus der February 2025-Ausgabe von Travel+Leisure US.
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