Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Solar eclipse won’t speak Games

A total eclipse of the sun a week before the Beijing Olympics will spook the superstitious but Chinese authorities have no reason to fear for the games, astrologers and feng shui experts say.

The phenomenon was once seen by China’s emperors as a portent of disaster, and astrologers predict some turbulence this time too, probably on the stock market and may be even on the streets.

However, any trouble will not be powerful enough, they say, to disrupt the world’s largest international sporting event or unduly worry China’s rulers.

Ms Mak Ling-ling, one of the most renowned feng shui and astrology experts in Hong Kong and author of many books, said the eclipse might bring small-scale political turbulence and problems to the transport and communication networks in Beijing during the Games.

“Protests and chaos on the street are very likely but they but they will not do any permanent harm to the Chinese authorities,” she told.

China may play down any association between the eclipse and the Olympics to avoid being mocked for being superstitious- but Ms Mak said it had a longtime practice of consulting feng shui experts when selecting athletes.

“The national teams give me the date and time of birth of the athletes and ask me to calculate and identify the ones with a strong will and a real chance of winning international games,” she said.

“No Olympics teams have consulted me about the eclipse but I believe if the authorities are really worried about it, they would seek help and do something discreetly without letting outsiders know.”

A total solar eclipse is caused when the moon blots out the sun by passing directly between it and the earth, and has traditionally been associated with misfortune.

The latest eclipse is set to traverse half the earth over the course of two hours in August 1. The path of the moon’s umbral shadow, some 10,200 kilometres (6,375 miles) long, will begin in Canada and extend across northern Greenland, the Arctic, central Russia and Mongolia, before ending in northern China. But it will not cross Beijing.

It will make its final stop at sunset in Xi’an, capital of China’s Shaanxi province and site of the famed terracotta army.

“In ancient times, Chinese people believed that a celestial dragonA or dog was devouring the sun during an eclipse,” said peter So, another top feng shui master in Hong Kong. “The belief gave rise to their practice of banging drums and pots to frighten away the animal,” she added.

www.rajagiriworld.com

[IMG]http://www.rajagiriworld.com/happy.gif[/IMG]

No comments:

Post a Comment

18 siddhas

18 siddhas
gorakkar
For natural, restorative home therapy visit Core healthcare products.