http://www.theage.com.au/world/strangebuttrue/russia-acts-as-countdown-to-doomsday-prophecy-sparks-unrest-20121203-2ar1e.html

Russia acts as countdown to doomsday prophecy sparks unrest
  Date  December 4, 2012 

 
The end is near ... bouts of psychosis in Russia are being attributed to the 
Mayan's New Age prophecy. El Castillo situated in Chichen Itza is believed to 
be an ideal representation of the Mayan calendar. 

MOSCOW: There are reports of unusual behaviour from across Russia's nine time 
zones.

Inmates in a women's prison near the Chinese border are said to have 
experienced a ''collective mass psychosis'' so intense that their wardens 
summoned a priest to calm them. In a factory town east of Moscow, panicked 
citizens stripped shelves of matches, kerosene, sugar and candles. A huge 
Mayan-style archway is being built - out of ice - on Karl Marx Street in 
Chelyabinsk in the south.

For those not schooled in New Age prophecy, there are rumours the world will 
end on December 21, 2012, when a 5125-year cycle known as the Long Count in the 
Mayan calendar supposedly comes to a close. Russia, a nation with a penchant 
for mystical thinking, has taken notice.

Last week, Russia's government decided to put an end to the doomsday talk. Its 
minister of emergency situations said on Friday that he had access to ''methods 
of monitoring what is occurring on the planet Earth,'' and that he could say 
with confidence that the world was not going to end in December. He 
acknowledged, however, that Russians were still vulnerable to ''blizzards, ice 
storms, tornadoes, floods, trouble with transportation and food supply, 
breakdowns in heat, electricity and water supply.''

''You cannot endlessly speak about the end of the world, and I say this as a 
doctor,'' said Leonid Ogul, a member of Parliament's environment committee. 
''Everyone has a different nervous system, and this kind of information affects 
them differently. Information acts subconsciously. Some people are provoked to 
laughter, some to heart attacks, and some - to some negative actions.''

Russia is not the only country to face this problem. In France, the authorities 
plan to bar access to Bugarach mountain in the south to keep out a flood of 
visitors who believe it is a sacred place that will protect a lucky few from 
the end of the world. The patriarch of Ukraine's Orthodox Church recently 
issued a statement assuring the faithful that ''doomsday is sure to come,'' but 
that it will be provoked by the moral decline of mankind.''

In Yucatan state in Mexico, which has a large Mayan population, most place 
little stock in end-of-days talk. Officials are planning a Mayan cultural 
festival on December 21 and, to show that all will be well after that, a 
follow-up in 2013.

Last week, lawmakers took up the matter, addressing a letter to Russia's main 
television stations asking them to stop airing material about the prophecy.

Russians are approaching the deadline with their characteristic mordant humour. 
An entrepreneur in the city of Tomsk has sold several thousand emergency kits, 
a $29 package including sprats, vodka, matches, candles, a string and a piece 
of soap.

The motto on the package is a classic refrain of the Russian optimist: ''It 
can't be worse.''

AP 


Read more: 
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