Amor fati
Superstar
Cacs still believe.....these guys are wilfully ignorant, cacs are kings of Iconiclism and went to town with their myths during the renaissance period rewhiting history
They weren't black but they weren't white either
Yep.Correct. Hell, a significant number of the Kemites who had to get the fukk outta dodge after Kemet was going through foreign invasions and being subjected to foreign rule retreated either into Nubia, deeper into East Africa, and a good number of them retreated out into Central and West Africa as well. Some say the descendants of these refugees were among the first wave of Africans to be captured by the European slave traders.
It’s a couple of books on this topic:
https://s3.amazonaws.com/arena-attachments/255239/d23e7753d6e0e46a503728459fc28f8f.pdf
It’s another one too but it’s name is escaping me right now
Edit: That other book is Exiled Egyptians: The Heart of Africa
I'm looking for Yoro Diao work on the internet. He compiled towards the middle of the XIXth century extensive info on Wolof/Jolof kingdoms, their inception, how they worked, what they believed in... But also oral history (which was still prevalent at the time) about the Egyptian origin of the Wolof people amongst other ethnic groups found in West Africa. Dude toured the region and recollected infos from the griots and the elders at a time where oral transmission was prevalent. Too bad he had to work for the enemy.
From Wikipedia:
Senegalese historian, Boubacar Lam, a disciple of Cheikh Anta Diop, also encountered the compiled and collected work of Yoro Dyao, such as his works on migrations from the Nile Valley to West Africa.[4] Yoro Dyao indicated that there was a widespread oral tradition among the peoples of Senegal and Senegambia: "The general opinion in all of Senegambia being that our country owes its peopling to migrations out of Egypt, from which descend all of its population."[3] In Chronicles of Senegalese Foùta, Dyao gave account of six population migrations from Egypt to Senegambia:[3][13][14]
- In the first migration, composed of the Dya'go, Dyao highlighted that they migrated out of Egypt armed with metal (hogo) assegais, sabers, daggers, and knives, bringing along with them armor, as well as their industrious wisdom of metallurgy; they inaugurated the sorghum culture to prevent flooding from the Senegal River; the migration took place under the king of Egypt, identified as "Pate Lamine"; the words, whether used separately or together, are used among the Mandinka, the Peuls, the Khassonké, the Sarakhollé, and to some extent, among the Wolof.[3][13][14]
- In the second migration, composed of the Manna (named after their chief leader), which was caused by the vexations of the king of Egypt, Sossé Touré, Dyao notes that they were much more numerous than the Dya'go; they sojourned through the desert, settled near the Senegal River, and peopled Fouta; as they seized political power from the Galos, their leaders bore the title of Fari (Emperor), which is used among the Wolof and Peul. The Bambara, Malinké, Soninké, and Khassonké are also said to have come along with this migration.[3][13][14]
- In the third migration, composed of the Tondyon people, Dyao made note of their migration being more important than the Dya'go and Manna migrations, as they had seized the titles and rights to rule from the Fari and bestowed it upon their leaders, the Farang; Farang was a title used for their rulers, as well as the king of Egypt, who caused them to expatriate due to the continuous menial tasks they were being commanded to perform; as part of an extended Farang Empire, some of the migrants settled near the Senegal River, in the Sokhotoro, Kindila, Gangari, and Tambo-Dougoura, and became known as Soninké. The Bambara, Malinké, and Khassonké are also said to have come along with this migration.[3][13][14]
- In the fourth and fifth migrations, composed of Tourmiss and Koli-Tenguella, respectively, which was caused due to the excessive demands of the Farang of Egypt, it was noted by Dyao as being comparatively smaller than the Dya'go, Manna, and Tondyon migrations; while partly composed of Soninké, Bambara, Malinké, Khassonké, and other Manding, these migrations were largely composed of Fulani, to which the leader, Tourmiss, belonged, and ultimately, resulted in the spread of the Fulani throughout the six countries of Senegambia.[3][13][14]
- In the sixth migration, composed of the Turi-Siny, or Lam-Toro (also the title of its leader), Moussa departed with some of the group he would travel with, from Tripi Sing, near Mecca, and others from the group in Egypt; he arrived as a cavalry in Senegal, overthrew Ymido, defeated the Kalimou quarter, and proclaimed himself king, which led to subsequent migrations and state formations in the region.
Historian Aboubacry Moussa Lam also reviewed his work so his take on it could be interesting.
Link to the texts?You will be in a Land, a Strange Land
Your Body will be Egyptian (or African)
But your Mind will be that of another race
~ The Hermetic Texts
440+ years before the existence of the Bible and an additional 5,000 years before the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade. The Hermetic Texts originate from when Imhotep himself had a spiritual conversation with Hermès aka Tehuti/Djehuty/Thoth. That was just a short excerpt from the Texts, the rest of their conversation will blow your fukking mind away y’all. We basically predicted the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade several millennia before it even happened.
We were falling asleep, going dormant so to speak. Turning “savage”. We had to do what was necessary in order to prepare ourselves for what was to come and to later plan a way to bring our memories back of not just Our Time here in the Physical but also Our Time in the Primordial as soon as we gradually start to wake up and conduct the work that we all agreed to do in a previous lifetime.
If you keep looking at it from a physical aspect from the historian point of view, you probably wouldn’t understand the real reason why the Moors HAD to go up in Europe to get Cacs hip to our shyt and give them the concept of “moralism”. Just imagine how much worse our physical existence with these pale skinned beasts would’ve been if we didn’t give them that Bible and Koran (all them moral codes up in those Abrahamic texts gotta do with THEM NOT US) all while we lost our memory, you can’t even fathom them being more Devilish than they already are right now.
Hell, we already described on those temple walls in great detail how vile Cacs really are and where they come from.
I may be getting ahead of myself with the crowd here but IYKYK. This shyt is way deeper than Rap is all I’m gonna say. Take it or leave it the hell alone
NeggedJust like how yall have ancestry in Europe right? I dont see yall obsessing about that region's history or any other region's history in Africa. I wonder why
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Yer man...Egypt is just on an island next to Africa. They were right next door and surrounded by other African kingdoms that were black but yer...definitely not blackThey weren't black but they weren't white either
I love the goal post moving. You aint slick Breh . You know exactly what I meant. It might not have been named Nigeria or Ghana but the history of the peoplein West African countries still remains the same
You can't stop writing crazy stuff bruh?
First of all African Americans ancestors were not only from West Africa, but they were also from Central Africa and Southeast Africa. The second thing is that there were no countries when African American relatives were there. There were a bunch of kingdoms of various sizes and a whole lot of stateless people that lived on the edge of those kingdoms. The third point is that if African American were going to learn about the modern country of Ghana, then why wouldn't they also learn about the modern country of Burkina Faso, because if African Americans were from that region then they would most certainly have been northerners that captured by Dagomba traders and paid to the Ashanti as tribute who in turn sold them to Europeans. Just so that you know it; African Americans seem well aware of the history of their ancestors.
What do you think this stuff is :
Addressing everything but the unhealthy obsession over Egyptian history. Busy shytting on Europeans forgetting they are also your ancestors. Why not link to the European history as well, breh?
Again, cherry picking your responses and moonwalking over everything else I said in the past 3 postsThe Blues are Mali. You know about Mali right? That is a place in West Africa that you claim that African Americans no nothing about?
Again, cherry picking your responses and moonwalking over everything else I said in the past 3 posts
Go head Breh, you won. You got this
Aren't you one of those people who claim ADoS and according to ADoS members their history began in the US, not Africa. Claiming any African culture is considered cultural appropriationI guess for the same reason that Greece, Rome are big deals to White Americans. Greek and Romans were Mediterranean people yet Northern European White people claim that as their heritage.
Aren't you one of those people who claim ADoS and according to ADoS members their history began in the US, not Africa. Claiming any African culture is considered cultural appropriation
So you're saying there are tribes of non-black africans that have gone extinct in Africa?A lot of tribes that used to inhabit SE Africa.
They weren't black but they weren't white either