Wawel Chakra

Renaissance courtyard of Wawel Castle. The Chakra - near left corner.

The Wawel Chakra (Polish: czakram wawelski) - a place on Wawel hill in Kraków in Poland which is believed to emanate powerful spiritual energy. It is believed to be one of the world's main centers of spiritual energy[1] [2] .[3] The Wawel Chakra is said to be one of a few strongest places of power on the Earth, which - like a chakra in the human body functions in (esoteric) energetic system of Earth.[2]

The very center of Wawel Chakra is situated under St. Gereon's chapel which was built in 11th century and is located between Royal Castle and Wawel’s Cathedral - in the north-west corner of Wawel's courtyard.[4]

No evidence of any physical phenomenon are known. So, probably, the nature of the Wawel Chakra ("Wawel Stone") is purely spiritual, paranormal, and transcendental.[5] Or - it is a pure legend.

The Wawel Chakra, or Wawel Stone, or Wawel Lotus or Wawel Power Place is treated as:

The Wawel Chakra as an urban legend

One of Wawel’s most well-known, but officially unendorsed legends is that of the fabled chakra stone.[6] Chakra stone is believed to be a holy stone, one of seven mysterious energy sources placed in different locations around the world - the seven main energy centres of Earth.[4]

Chakra stone guards Wawel’s hill, and thus - the whole city.[4]

There is an assumption that the Earth has seven special places quite like ‘force centers’ of the human body called chakras in the tantric and yogic teachings of Hinduism. Krakow, and specifically the Wawel Hill, is supposed to be one of those holy areas. Also Rome, Jerusalem, and Delhi are usually awarded the same status. No consensus as regards the remaining three places on the list.[5] Internet is full of about 40 locations claiming to be one of the seven chakras of the Earth.[7]

The origins of the tale have been traced to a newspaper story published in the mid-1930s. It reported that two mysterious gentlemen from India visited the Wawel Castle and were overly interested in an empty corner of the courtyard, which prompted guesswork. The story resurfaced in the 1980s.[5] Soon the Wawel Chakra has become famous in Krakow and Poland, its legend fanned by New Age enthusiasts. In the 21st century it began to wane.[5] Recently such authorities as the Wawel museum management and the church has engaged in battling the chakram fallacy which may breathe new life into it.[5]

The Wawel Chakra as Theosophical occult center

According to European theosophical tradition, there are seven chakras of Earth, the other six are located in New Dehli, Mekka, Delphi, Rome, Velehrad.[2] In Hindu tradition there are also chakras in Benares, Hardwar, Rishikesh, Allahabad.[2]

According to a legend, Greek philosopher, mystic and explorer, Appollonius of Tyana, during one of his long-term voyages discovered a hill, now called Wawel, with great positive radiation. He left there one of his talismans, to reveal full potential of chakra radiation.[2][4]

Probably it was Wanda Dynowska, polish theosophist and translator, who bond Wawel with an old Hindu legend. The legend tells, that God Shiva threw seven stones on seven Earth's directions, to make gift to the people - seven places of powerful God's energy.[2][4]

Annie Besant, Charles Leadbeater visited Wawel, and stated, they felt powerful spiritual energy. George Arundale wrote in 1932 about powerful magnetic aura of Wawel.[2]

Polish theosophist, Kazimierz Chodkiewicz[8] wrote a book The Cracow Occult Centre.[9]

New Agers and the Wawel Chakra

Although St. Gereon’s chapel isn’t opened to public, still single people engrossed in meditation can be found - all year around, standing or sitting near the north-west corner of Wawel's courtyard. Believers may also touch the wall by their heads, backs, hands or heels – the wall which screens St. Gereon’s chapel from eyes of the public.[4]

It became customary for cultists and followers of the chakra to come here and lean against the wall for a few minutes in order to recharge their spiritual batteries.[1]

Researches and speculations of geomants and dowsers

According to geomants, dowsers and psychics, there is no doubt about the powerful positive radiation of the place called Czakram Wawelski.

But there is no consensus on the stone.

Maybe the stone is

According to Polish geomant and dowser Leszek Matela,[11] there is unusual radiation there, both cosmic and terrestrial, conducted by water veins ascending under the chapel.[12] The water veins flow deeply underground in the bedrock, lifting up beneath the chapel. Consequently, the annular radiation occurs. The radiation is beneficial to human beings, unlike the radiation of usual water veins.[13]

Additionally, these powerful radiations are intensified by global Hartmann Grid and diagonal Curry Grid. These both cosmic radiation networks distribute and intensify both earth and cosmic radiation, either negative (of water veins etc.) or positive of places of power.[14]

As many as seven ley lines cross at Wawel. They link Wawel to many other places of power, including Stonehenge, Jerusalem, Stara Zagora, Istanbul, Arkona, Rome, Vilnius.[15]

More researches, statements and speculations

There is no simple analogy between human chakras and the chakras of the earth. There are more than seven Earth chakras, and they are nodes of Earth's subtle radiation network and subtle energy transformers.[16] Perhaps – if the hypothesis of Goncharov, Makarov and Morozov[17] is true - Earth chakras are active nodes of Earth global crystal-like structure[18]

The Wawel Chakra is a left-handed one, which means that its main purpose is to absorb negative energy and cleanse energy aura this part of Earth.[4]

The power of Cracow Chakra's stone geomantic energy has been estimated by Polish geomant Leszek Matela and is 120.000 points on BSM scale (Bovis-Simenoton-Matela) – for comparison, radiation of healthy human body is ‘just’ 6500 points.[2][4]

The Cracow chakra reached its full power in 1935, on the day of the funeral of Marshall Jozef Pilsudski (known as man who led Poland to its independence in 1918). According to reports from the event, extraordinary things happened then – suddenly air temperature dropped by 7 Celsius degrees and about 14 o'clock the darkness overcame.[4]

Oldest stories tell about the dragon of Wawel Hill which lived in a cave under Wawel on the bank of the Vistula river. In eastern traditions, dragons were great guards of power places, especially those connected to the energy of Earth. So perhaps the legend about Dragon refers also to Wawel Chakra.[4]

The Wawel Chakra as an unwanted tourist attraction

The specific location of the positive energy is not open to the public in spite of the archeological excavation there having been completed.[2]

When the chakra area was roped off in 2001, the conservationists' desire to protect the wall from the public was explained as the main reason for this, although there is no doubt that the cathedral hierarchy's distaste for New Age tourism also played a part.[1]

Works cited

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Poland : the rough guide, London, Rough guides, 2002 limited free access
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 2.8 Leszek Matela Polska magiczna. Przewodnik po miejscach mocy" pp. 52-58 (in polish: Magickal Poland. A guide to power places)
  3. 3dTravelAdvisor
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 4.6 4.7 4.8 4.9 A few words about Chakra of Cracow
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 Krakow info Wawel chakram
  6. InYourPocket City Guides on The Wawel Chakra
  7. Alexa and Jason’s World Travels (blog)
  8. pl:Kazimierz Chodkiewicz
  9. K. Chodkiewicz The Cracow Occult Centre, London 1966 (reprinted)
  10. Rożek M. (1991), pp. 41–44
  11. pl:Leszek Matela, de:Leszek Matela
  12. Matela, L. (2006), p. 68
  13. Matela, L. (2006), pp. 48–49
  14. Matela, L. (2006), pp. 51–53
  15. Matela, L. (2006), p. 69
  16. Matela, L. (2006), p. 17
  17. A Russian Theory of the Energy Grids
  18. Święch Z. (2005), p.98
  19. pl:Leszek Matela, de:Leszek Matela (b. 1955) - polish geomant and dowser, researcher of paranormal phenomena, author of numerous books and translator
  20. pl:Zbigniew Święch (b. 1943) - Iconic Polish writer and journalist, film director and historian. Member of The Explorers Club
  21. pl:Michał Rożek (b. 1946 in Cracow) - Polish art historian, author of numerous publications, mainly on the art and history of Cracow
  22. pl:Kazimierz Chodkiewicz (b. 1892, d. 1980) - Polish philosopher, esoteric, theosoph; colonel of the Polish Army military police. Since 1940 a member of the Theosophical Society in Edinburgh
  23. Święch Z.(2005), p.75

External links