
Language is mankind’s distinguishing characteristic. After all, the brains with which people are born with have that mysterious ability to learn languages. But not all the human languages are the same. There are some more expressive than others. Such is the case with the Aymara.
According to the prominent Italian semanticist Umberto Eco, in his book titled, “In Search of the Perfect Language”, the Aymara is an extraordinary and near-perfect language. Used by the inhabitants of the Punas in the mountain range of the Andes, the Aymara is a language inherited from the gods.
The writer Antonio Díaz Villamil once wrote that the Aymara was the “adanic language”, implying that it is humanity’s ‘native language’, from which all others have derived.
There is something about this, which is real and surprisingly current: Echo suggests that the Aymara is such a perfect language that it seems to be a programming language.
A small language engineering research group (IGRAL) led by noted mathematician, Iván Guzmán de Rojas, devised a calculation program called Atamiri, which allows its users to translate and to understand all the other languages through the Aymara! But there is more: The language, inherited from the gods, is a central element of the myths and Andean rituals. The myth is the sacred word and the ritual, the action that channels it. The significance is that the Aymara language doesn\'t only express, but rather conveys a vision of the world and a way of living. It has the capacity to influence us positively or negatively. It can cure or make you sick. It can make us die, or live.
Think about this: if a programming language allows that a machine does what one wants, is it not possible that it could modify the human brain? It is not an unfounded idea. If Aromatherapy is used to enhance psychological and physical well-being through the use of natural oils and music therapy is founded on music as a mean to promote healing, is it not possible that a similar phenomenon related to a language exist? Here is then the "mother of all the words":
ARUSKIPT’ASIPXAÑANAKASAKIPUNIRAKISPAWA
A noted Bolivian novelist translates into an expression that means: "we are forced to communicate". It is Aymara. It cures. It has to be able to. It is presumed to be the longest word that any language has created and we believe it synthesizes the spirit of the human species, today more than ever, in these times of a striking awakening of humanity\'s spirituality, of an awakening of the ajayu(another magical and powerful word in Aymara, suggestive like few).
To conclude we will say: among the nations, among the cultures and among people: "we are forced to communicate.”