In his book “Gods from Outer Space,” Erich von Däniken recounted portions of the Bep Kororoti story. This is very important in the ritual dances of the Kayapó Indians of Brazil.
The Kayapó tribe celebrates the advent of the mysterious Bep Kororoti, the Anunnaki who used to live in the Amazon, clothed in a wicker suit similar to that of a modern astronaut.
According to tribal leaders, this strange man from the Pukato-Ti mountain range first generated fear, but he quickly adopted the role of a Messiah among the locals.
“Bit by little, the residents of the hamlet were drawn to the foreigner because of his beauty, the shining whiteness of his skin, and his kindness to everyone,” the story goes. He was smarter than the others, and he quickly began to teach numerous previously unknown concepts to humanity.”
The Life of Bep Kororoti
According to Amazonian folklore, Bep Kororoti went insane one day. He shouted and refused to let the locals to approach his body. The people chased him all the way to the mountain’s foot, where he fled into the sky in the middle of a gigantic explosion that rocked everything in its path.
According to the story, “Bep-Kororoti disappeared into thin air amid blazing clouds, smoke, and thunder.” “The explosion had caused the dirt to shake so violently that they leaped up to the roots of the plants, and the forest had disappeared, and the tribe had began to feel hungry.” When ethnologist Joao Americo Peret interviewed the elders of the aboriginal community in 1952, he discovered that Bep-Kororoti had a lengthy history.
The cargo cult that arose around a real thing has current scholars asking what kind of individual would approach the Mato Grosso wilderness in such a remote time, dressed as an astronaut and armed with a “magic” rod capable of striking down an animal merely by touching it.
Bep-Kororoti is not the stereotypical American humanitarian soldier revered by Vanuatu’s Tanna. Surprisingly, when the Kayapos’ story first broadcast, the design of the astronaut suits did not even exist in the ways of the world’s space agencies.
Even the depiction of the cosmonaut’s second departure, in which the visitor vanished between clouds of smoke, lightning, and thunder, is reminiscent of a modern spaceship’s takeoff.
“The universe’s man sat down on that particular tree once more and ordered the branches to bow until they reached the earth.” The tree then disappeared into thin air after another explosion.”