Little is known about the subject of the Inti Raymi, however,
some information gathered by chroniclers Cieza de Leon,
Cristobal de Molina (the Cusqueño) Jose de Acosta, Murua,
Guamam Poma de Ayala, Betanzos and Garcilaso de la Vega are
very important. Because they shed some light in the matter.
The information we have used to recreate the festival that
honors the Sun called Apu Punchao Inca, also known as Sun of
the Incas comes from the memories of the actual peasants who
still practice some of the ceremonies during the year to
honor their tutelar gods inherited from the Incas. This
information has also been gathered from the archeological
findings.
Nowadays, this ceremony is represented on the stage of
Saqsaywaman fortress with a written script. Lately, new
scenes have been added, such as those held in the courtyard
of Koricancha Temple and the Main Square of Cusco, called
the Haukaypata, from which, the royal followers go to the
slope of the fortress every June the 24th. Each year special
stands are built for the visitors that can reach about 100
000 on that day. Local people sit around the complex to
watch the ceremony.
For the author, it's a special privilege to narrate a
ceremony he has witnessed. Now follows a summary of the
events on stage.

FESTIVAL OF THE SUN
From the main architectural sites built by the incas, we can
see that the sun was the main deity. Buildings like the
Koricancha made of polished stones where we can admire the
surrounding wall and the interior rooms with delicate
polished stones of the finest quality.
This temple, was richly decorated with precious metals and
delicate weavings honoring the sun god, and making it the
main target for the pilfering carried out by the Spaniards.
It is also mentioned that walls had golden plates that were
stolen by spaniards, who eager for gold and silver entered
the sacred sites and tore down all ornaments and offerings
like those inside the Koricancha. The offerings buried in
the ground were the only things spaniards couldn't take.
For the festival of the Sun, people made prior arrangements
for the ceremony and when the Inca and his followers entered
the temple, all the people toasted him with chicha or a
drink specially prepared for this ocassion. The chicha was
served in two container es called Keros. In one glass,
people toasted the land and the gods, and with the other
container, people toasted the visitors. This custom is
maintained to this day among peasants. The representation of
the Sun consisted of a sculpture of gold that was kept in a
special place in the temple, and probably was away before
the spaniards got into the Koricancha, and saved in a site
farther away. The idol represented the Sun and was dressed
with the most elegant weavings of the Empire. This is
confirmed with the findings in a peak in Chile and other
summits where mummies have been found with finely woven
clothes.

This idol of the Sun was presented in all main important
ceremonies.
It's necessary to remember the unknown elders of Cusco who
organized the first presentation on a stage in 1928. This
outdoor presentation was called the Defense and Taking of
the Fortress of Saqsaywaman, performed by a group of
teachers who put on stage the conquest of the site by the
invaders. The main characters were, the Inca Cahuide (a
mytical character). More than 100 indians participated
acting out the defense and the custody of the Virgins of the
Sun, kept in some place around the fortress. The indians
lost the battle and Cahuide jumped from the top of the wall.
For the representation, the Inca and his followers wore
special customes made by a talented artist of the group. The
entire program presented on 1928 was featured on the
magazine "Mundial". President Leguia (the president at that
time) was unable to attend the presentation, and instead
sent his two daughters. The program included dances
performed by the Sikllas; country folk dancers from
Urubamba; the Canchis from Sicuani; and the Dance Mestiza
Coya from Paucartambo. The whole show was a hit much
appreciated by the whole audience.

Dr. Humberto Vidal Unda, probably saw the presentation when
he was 22 years old and later he presented a project to the
American Institute of Art for a future presentation of the
same program in the same area of the complex.
The Sun was considered by the Incas a divinity of the
highest rank, to whom temples were built in his honor in the
most important places of the Empire. Not only presentations
were made in honor of the Sun, but also in honor of God
Kuntor (Condor), and Qoa, Choquechinchay or Titi (Feline
God).
To honor the Sun God, animals were sacrificed. Nowdays
during the ceremony of the Intiraymi there is a simulation
of a sacrifice of a llama. In a drawing made by the
chronicler Guaman Poma de Ayala, we can see how the priests
take the guts of the animal through an opening located to
one side of the animal where the priest put his hand and
pulls out the heart still beating, then the lungs are
inflated by the priests and through the blood stains, they
could forecast the future for the Inca and the Empire.
Similar ceremonies are still held by the peasants, but in
the original ceremony of the Inti Raymi dozens of llamas
were killed.
Other part of the celebration featured the start of the new
fire. Obeying the order of the Inca, no fire was allowed
that day in the city. The new fire was obtained through a
hollow mirror and brilliant surface that focused the rays of
the sun, and projected them to the fur of an animal, and
when the fur caught fire it was then used to start the rest
of the kindling distributed in different platforms in the
main square.
90 soldiers of the National Army played the part of the
Inca's soldiers, who represent to the Inca's soldiers.
Actors wear clothes similar to those drawn in chronicles of
Guaman Poma de Ayala, with a shield in one hand and carrying
on the other a stick with a star made of wood. The soldiers
also wear rubber sandals and a helmet similar to a cap.
In the ceremony there are also 25 couples of women who
represent the acllas, but not in the original ceremony. To
make the scenes more spectacular, both, the Inca and his
wife (Coya) arrived by litter.
There was a compulsory participation of priests in the
ceremony, all of them with names according to their
characters. The Wirapiricuq, the one that took the guts, the
one called Kallpa rikuq, shepherd of the llamas for the
sacrifice, the Turpuntay, or priest in charge of the cutting
with the sacred knife called Tumi, and the willaq Uma in
charge of the forecast or prediction observing the viscera
of the llama, and the one who told the Inca the good or bad
news.

Before the Inca entered the plaza or the slopes of the
fortress, a group of ajllas or selected princesses led the
procession along with the pichaq, or men in charge of
sweeping the floor to drive away the bad spirits. The Inca
is shown in all the documents accompanied by a hump backed
dwarf called Kumillo who carried the achiwa, an instrument
similar to an umbrella made of colorful feathers.
The festival lasted several days. Some days the Inca and his
priests and the nobility waited for dawn in the Koricancha
Temple and the other days in the Usno or Altar of the Main
Square.
Before the Inca climbed to the Usno, he had to walk along a
garden of flowers and weavings of delicate clothes placed
specially for the emperor to walk over.
In these ceremonies the Inca was carried on a litter with a
linen veil, and he held a staff symbol of power taken by the
Umillos before the Inca climbed to the Usno. Later the
priest and the participants sing songs to salute the Inca
and the Sun, accompanied by the musicians.
Referring to the Unku, or the undershirt worn by the Inca,
we have samples of these displayed at the museums, where
they are shown as pectorals made with fine feathers of
different colors. Together with a fine lace tied to the
mascaypacha, used on the forehead.
During the ceremony the Inca is toasted with chicha (a
fermented drink) poured into gold containers, one for the
Inca, one for the Sun, and the third one for the mother
land, mentioning also the Apus or gods of the earth. As a
fitting finale, the Inca gives a speech in the native
language quechua.
Luis Barreda Murillo |