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Home is Where the Rajawala' Are
Living in Time and Space the Highland Maya Way
Home is Where the Rajawala' Are
Living in Time and Space the Highland Maya Way
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Description
The Mayan peoples of highland Guatemala live within an animate world, where the physical environment, ancestors, and surrounding people, plants, and animals are infused with spirit and presence.
At the heart of this daily engagement are the ajq'ija', Mayan spiritual guides who serve as mediators between human communities and the rajawala'-the vital, living energies of the world. This book offers insight into the foundational knowledge ajq'ija' use to communicate with the rajawala', revealing how the sacred becomes visible through time and space, shaping and protecting the landscapes where Maya communities live. Each community is surrounded by its own constellation of guardian energies and sacred altars. The authors also confront the modern threats facing these sacred spaces: restricted access by private landowners, the loss of traditional roles, vandalism, religious opposition, environmental degradation, and violence against spiritual practitioners. Structured like a ritual itself, the book embodies the ongoing creation of sacred space and the deep dialogue with spiritual forces that sustain it. Through this work, the authors aim to share Mayan perspectives and practices for living within a sacred, interconnected world.
Product details
| Published | 14 May 2026 |
|---|---|
| Format | Ebook (PDF) |
| Edition | 1st |
| Extent | 172 |
| ISBN | 9798216256250 |
| Imprint | Bloomsbury Academic |
| Illustrations | 10 tables |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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"Much has been written about Mayas' spiritual practices, but nothing measures up to Maxwell and García Ixmata's splendid, Home is Where the Rajawala' Are. This ethnographically and linguistically rich book is both a primer on how Mayas communicate with their ancestral, spiritual, and cosmological world and a detailed description of the sacred geography in which their practices take place. Moreover, throughout their book, they include historical and political context and deeply personal anecdotes from decades of experience."
Walter E. Little, professor of Anthropology, University at Albany, SUNY

























