Summer 2002 (10.2)
Page
23
Thor Heyerdahl
Reflections
on Life
by Thor Heyerdahl
Other
articles related to Thor Heyerdahl:
(1) Thor Heyerdahl in Azerbaijan: KON-TIKI
Man
by Betty Blair (AI 3:1, Spring 1995)
(2) The Azerbaijan Connection: Challenging
Euro-Centric Theories of Migration by Heyerdahl (AI 3:1, Spring 1995)
(3) Azerbaijan's
Primal Music Norwegians Find 'The Land We Come From' by Steinar Opheim (AI
5.4, Winter 1997)
(4) Thor
Heyerdahl in Baku
(AI 7:3, Autumn 1999)
(5) Scandinavian
Ancestry: Tracing Roots to Azerbaijan - Thor Heyerdahl (AI 8.2, Summer 2000)
(6) Quote:
Earlier Civilizations - More Advanced - Thor Heyerdahl (AI 8.3, Autumn 2000)
(7) The
Kish Church - Digging Up History - An Interview with J. Bjornar Storfjel
(AI 8.4, Winter 2000)
(8) Adventurer's
Death Touches Russia's Soul - Constantine Pleshakov (AI 10.2,
Summer 2002)
(9) First Encounters in
the Soviet Union - Thor Heyerdahl (AI 10.2, Summer 2002)
(10) Thor Heyerdahl's
Final Projects - Bjornar Storfjell (AI 10.2, Summer 2002)
(11) Voices of the Ancients:
Rare Caucasus Albanian Text - Dr. Zaza Alexidze (AI 10.2,
Summer 2002)
(12) Heyerdahl
Burns "Tigris" Reed Ship to Protest War - Letter
to UN - Bjornar Storfjell, Blair (AI 11.1Winter 2003)
Above: "Ra 2", the reed ship Thor
Heyerdahl used for his expedition across the Atlantic, from the
coast of Africa southwest toward South America, 1969. Courtesy:
Thor Heyerdahl.
Civilization
We have always been taught that navigation is the result of civilization,
but modern archeology has demonstrated very clearly that this
is not so. People had already settled the islands in the Mediterranean
and around Great Britain long before the first pharaoh built
the pyramids in Egypt.
The art of the pre-pharonic people in Egypt and the pre-Sumerian
peoples in Mesopotamia show ocean-going vessels.Civilization
grew in the beginning from the minute that we had communication
- particularly communication by sea that enabled people to get
inspiration and ideas from each other and to exchange basic raw
materials.
Today we have to fight the political walls and divisions that
separate us. We must communicate across all political, religious
and racial barriers.
On the occasion of his 80th birthday, October 6, 1994.
Saving the Earth
If there were something I could wish for in the future, it would
be that there would be an end to all the conflicts between the
different religions, and that everyone who believes in a creative
force behind nature would use intelligence, conscience, intuition,
the Holy Spirit and everything else that is in our collective
power to get advice and help to preserve nature before we completely
disturb the great Day of Rest.
"In The Footsteps of Adam by Thor Heyerdahl," London:
Little Brown, 2000, page 298.
Future
We are all on explorations into the unknown and it is by looking
backward in the wake of our trail that we can see the course
we are taking.
"In The Footsteps of Adam by Thor Heyerdahl," London:
Little Brown, 2000, page 292.
Where is God?
I feel that God is behind every flower and every tree in the
woods. He is behind every mountain rock and every foam-crested
wave in the sea. God is omnipresent. I am willing to reach my
hands in the air and admit that I have a limited number of senses
and that they are insufficient for me to grasp the whole truth.
If all people were blind, we wouldn't have known what color is...
Therefore, I refrain from having a fixed picture of God and what
He might be. It can be a magnetic field. It can be a law. It
can be anything. But if we are going to believe in the Bible
as a basis for our religion, then we at least have to give up
thinking of Him as an old man with a beard and slippers.
It says in the Bible, in plain words, that God made a self-portrait.
He created man in His own image - man and woman - for God is
Love.Why should we start thinking of a god up in the clouds with
wings, if He dwells within us in the spirit of Love?!
"Thor Heyerdahl, The Explorer," by Snorre Evensberget.
Oslo: J.M. Stenersens Forlag A.S., 1994, page 205.
Time does not exist
I have never been able to grasp the meaning of time. I don't
believe it exists. I've felt this again and again, when alone
and out in nature. On such occasions, time does not exist. Nor
does the future exist. For every minute, the future is becoming
the past. Therefore, there is no "now" either. It's
only a transitional form. I'm left with the feeling that God
in His wisdom, found it necessary to give man the belief in,
or the concept of, time. But time only exists in our mind, and
solely as a figment of our imagination. My age exists within
my awareness. That is simple enough. But if we begin thinking
about the world being over 100 million years old, then it's absolutely
by chance that you and I are sitting here alive today, while
all the others are dead or have never been born. I also believe
that when one dies, one may wake up to the reality that proves
that time does not exist.
"Thor Heyerdahl, The Explorer," by Snorre Evensberget.
Oslo: J.M. Stenersens Forlag A.S., 1994, page 205.
Greatest lessons
One learns more from listening than speaking.And both the wind
and the people who continue to live close to nature still have
much to tell us which we cannot hear within university walls.
"In The Footsteps of Adam by Thor Heyerdahl," London:
Little Brown, 2000, page 291.
Enemies vs. Allies
Circumstances cause us to act the way we do. We should always
bear this in mind before judging the actions of others. I realized
this from the start during World War II.
A personal example is the fact that I grew up in an environment
where we knew little or nothing about what was going on in Russia
[Soviet Union]. It was all a mystery and everyone who lived there
was diabolical. This was not uncommon for many people in the
interim between the wars. However on the day Hitler attacked
the Soviet Union, the newspapers changed their tuneCompared to
our common enemy, Nazism, the Russians were our great allies.
Therefore, I feel convinced that any political picture can be
changed to suit the needs of the powers that be.
"Thor Heyerdahl, The Explorer," by Snorre Evensberget.
Oslo: J.M. Stenersens Forlag A.S., 1994, page 205-206.
True happiness
Life has brought me together with many different people, not
only all types, but from every walk of life, and I have encountered
far more happiness, if "happiness" is the word I am
looking for, among those who had little of the material goods
than we tend to deem necessary to achieve happiness.
In my experience, it is rarer to find a really happy person in
a circle of millionaires than among vagabonds. I say this without
trying to romanticize the life of a vagabond. It is also rarer
to find happiness in a man surrounded by the miracles of technology
than among people living in the desert of the jungle and who
by the standards set by our society would be considered destitute
and out of touch.
"Thor Heyerdahl, The Explorer," by Snorre Evensberget.
Oslo: J.M. Stenersens Forlag A.S., 1994, page 203.
The word "enemy"
If there is anything I detest hearing or reading in a newspaper,
it is the word 'enemy'. I consider it bestial and primitive that
anyone today can use such an expression. This is done only as
autosuggestion, and to hood wink people. A civilized nation can
have no enemies, and one cannot draw a line across a map, a line
that doesn't even exist in nature and say that the ugly enemy
lives on the one side, and good friends live on the other.
"Thor Heyerdahl, The Explorer," by Snorre Evensberget.
Oslo: J.M. Stenersens Forlag A.S., 1994, page 206.
Origin of Hate
Those who have experienced the most, have suffered so much that
they have ceased to hate. Hate is more for those with a slightly
guilty conscience, and who by chewing on old hate in times of
peace wish to demonstrate how great they were during the war.
"Thor Heyerdahl, The Explorer," by Snorre Evensberget.
Oslo: J.M. Stenersens Forlag A.S., 1994, page 207.
True Heroism
I don't believe in war as a solution to any kind of conflict,
nor do I believe in heroism on the battlefield because I have
never seen any. I was in uniform for four years, and I know that
heroism doesn't occur from taking orders, but rather from people
who through their own willpower and strength are willing to sacrifice
their lives for an idea.
"Thor Heyerdahl, The Explorer," by Snorre Evensberget.
Oslo: J.M. Stenersens Forlag A.S., 1994, page 207.
____
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