5b) One must look towards Africa to understand Ancient Egypt. So, to understand the Ancient Egyptian outlook on “kem” (“kame” in Coptic) and why it was associated with “Asar Nesu Ankh” (“Osiris KING OF LIFE”), Amoun-Min, Ma’at, Queen “Ahmose-Neretari”, etc… one must look at the ancient texts, and one could look to the Nuba Hills in the Sudan where the “Kau Nuba” reside for just one example…
5bbb) …Another example is my personal experience living with and among West-Africans who carried some special water that they “washed” themselves with right before morning prayers. I don’t remember what they called it in their language and neither do I remember if I asked. But in English one brother told me it was “ink” and it was for protection. He was Soninke and Moslem, so I assume it was Quranic verses washed into water -- I don’t know…
5bbbb) …But the constant is the idea of “blackness” being associated with protection (like melanin) and superiority. Even a word for “shield” in Ancient Egypt is transliterated something like “akam” and uses the same “km” “biliteral” glyph in the words for “Kemet” (“Egypt”) and “kame” (“black”). See page 94a of Budge’s “An Egyptian Hieroglyphic Dictionary Vol. 1”…
5bbbbb) …On plate 18 of the “Papyrus of Ani”, “Chapter 15”, lines 2-3, is a “Hymn to the SUN-God” that states “One worships Your beauties/goodness with both my eyes and blessings manifest upon the skin”, and we all know what that “blessing” is -- at least physically. That blessing is melanin synthesis on the skin, a darkening of the skin as one worships the Sun-God.
5bbbbbb) …On plate 20 of the “Papyrus of Ani”, also “Chapter 15”, lines 12-14 is another “Hymn to the SUN-God” that states “I’ve come before You. I’m together with You concerning seeing Your Sun-Disc [“Aten”] every day -- unrestrained and unrepulsed. My members are renewed by the examination of Your beauties/goodness like all of Your favored ones. Because I’m one of those esteemed of You upon the Earth…”
5bbbbbbb) …On plate 26 of the “Papyrus of Ani”, “Chapter 78” called “The Chapter of Manifesting as a Divine Hawk“, lines 1-2 is a passage that states “I’m a beneficial spirit within the Divine Sunlight, created and manifesting as/in the Divine Flesh…”.
5c) …Thus, posts 5b through 5bbbbbbb show that the Ancient Egyptians at least started off as a black African people who valued the practicality of melanin in a tropical/sub-tropical environment with intense sunlight. The Sun gave life and melanin which was considered beneficial as well. This is the religion of a sun-worshipping black man with black values. The Ancient Egyptians were blacks and clearly proud of it…
5d) …So what. That was 1000s of years ago. It’s good to learn from and is full of good examples of what and what not to do. But, what are we going to do today? We have the potential. But, do we have the will, the values, the confidence, etc… to be as self-determined, truly free and productive as Kemet, Napata and Meroe? It’s 1000s of yrs later and we should’ve surpassed our Ancestors by now. We’re still talking about the “Super Bowl” of 1988b.c.e. -- it's 2012a.c.e.! Kum on nah!
5a) If blacks are “inferior mud-hut monkeys”, then why do some white people spend so much time communicating with us and posting vids about us? They look at their communications with us as either challenging or for the purpose of “gathering intelligence“. They don’t argue against the worst most self-destructive of our culture on thug videos, they only argue against Afro-centrist they feel threatened by. You know Afro-centricity is good when they don’t want you to have it…
The Egyptian artist had at his disposal six colors, including black (kem) and white. One of the few real-life people to be deified, Queen Ahmose-Nefertari was the patroness of the necropolis. She was usually portrayed with black skin, although she was not Black. Anubis, the god of embalming was shown as a black jackal or dog, even though real jackals and dogs are typically brown.was a symbol of death and of the night. Osiris, the king of the afterlife was called "the black one."You got it wrong
There are two variants of the black race: (a) straight-haired, represented in Asia by the Dravidians and in Africa by the Nubians and the Tubbou or Tedda, all three with jet-black skins; (b) the kinky-haired blacks of the Equatorial regions. Both types entered into the composition of the Egyptian population
go to -meira kwesi inside the cairo museum and see the nappy head wigs the khemites prefered to wear, for some reason straight hair or not they rocked nappy hair, the white demon race is a fraud !
4a) I was doing some house work and I ran across a old small book on one of my bookshelves. It’s a more serious document than the Moustafa Gadalla book I referred to you that will help you through the Gadalla document: Charles G. Seligman’s “Egypt and Negro Africa: A Study in Divine Kingship”, Routledge, London, 1934. Also “A History of the Beja Tribes of the Sudan” by A. Paul, M. A., Cambridge University, 1954.
4b) I included the Paul book because the appendix in the Seligman book reminded me of one in the Paul document discussing the “Fellata/Tekruri” (“Fulani/Tucolor”) and “Melle” (“Mandingos”) who live among the Beja around Port Sudan…
4b1) …A. Paul pointed out on page 147 of his document regarding these Fulani and Mandingos living among the Hadendowa Beja that “…the younger generation with its mop of hair and scratching pins…baggy trousers…are, at first sight, indistinguishable from the Hadendowa among whom they live…”
4bb) …and if the Fulani/Mandingos are “at first sight indistinguishable from the Hadendowa among whom they live” -- and the Hadendowa Beja are a phenotypic, linguistic and DNA remnant of the Ancient Egyptians -- then the Fulani/Mandingos are also phenotypic approximates to the Egyptians from which they themselves say they descend according to the Fulani Sultan Mohamed Bello of Sokoto, Nigeria. And many African-Americans are of part Fulani/Mandingo descent…
4bbbc) …And this “Fulani/Mandingo/Beja/Ancient Egyptian connection” reminds me of a personal experience I had several yrs ago with a Fulani chick and her small Egyptian-born daughter as I was visiting an Azande guy and his Dinka wife (both from Sudan) who was babysitting for the Fulani chick who had lived in Egypt for so long that she forgot how to speak Fulani.
4c) …As I was sitting and talking with the Azande brother, I saw a little dark-brown-skinned girl with 2 small vertical cuts directly behind both of her eyes near her temples. I knew those marks from a Senegalese Tukulor/Fulani chick who’s married to the brother of one of my brothers’ Senegalese Mandingo wife, and I also knew those marks from 2 Fulani kats I know from Mauritania…
4cc) …I asked the little girl (who could speak better English than her mother) where she’s from and she said “Egypt”. I asked her what tribe she was from and she said she was told, but can’t remember and that her mommy would be there soon and she could tell me. So, I said to them that I knew those marks from West-Africans called Fulani and Tukulor…
4ccc) …Her very light, almost gold-skinned, mommy came in with the same marks. She only knew Arabic and couldn’t speak English beyond a few cordialities. So, the Sudanese Azande brother asked her my question for me in Arabic -- “What’s your ethnicity”, and she said “Fulani”. He was entirely shocked and said to me in excitement something along the lines that “You know Africa better than me and I’m African [born]!!!”.
4ccccd) …this Fulani chick always says “My brother!!!” when she sees me. During that visit, the ethnic name “Hadendowa” just happened to be mentioned and my Azande bro’s Dinka wife quickly looked up at me as if a “light bulb had lit in her head” and pointed at me saying something along the lines of “that’s what you are, you‘re Hadendowa” as if she had been trying to figure it out…
4d) …So, although I’m proud of the Congo side of my multi-ethnic predominantly African African-American heritage (biologically and/or culturally), my phenotype approximates between Fulani and Mandingo, and their phenotype is sometimes “indistinguishable from the Hadendowa Beja among whom they live”, and the Beja are a phenotypic and DNA remnant of the Ancient Egyptians as well as DNA relatives of the West-African Tuareg…
4dd) …which means that the descendants of the Mandingo, Fulani and Tuareg, etc… -- who were trafficked to the U.S. as slaves, POWs and abducted royals and nobles, and who are now called “African-Americans, Negroes, Negroids” and “Nigger thugs” today -- are also phenotypic approximates to the Ancient Egyptians as well as DNA relatives of the Tuareg who are the DNA relatives of the Beja who are the DNA relatives of Ancient Egyptians…
4ddd) …Thus, when African-Americans claim to be “descendants of kings and queens” and that “the Ancient Egyptians were blacks” and that we are related to them in part, that’s true and is well documented enough so that the data can be objectively assessed. When African-Americas say that the Ancient Egyptians were blacks, it’s because our phenotypes approximate theirs and we are called “blacks, niggers, etc…”…
4dddd) …This is true even for the Ancient Egyptians who had straighter hair because straight-haired Malagasy people where also trafficked to the U.S. as slaves according to slave ship records and other documentation from the time which shows that those individual Ancient Egyptians with similar hair texture and phenotypes as the Malagasy of the island of Madagascar were likewise considered “Negroes” in America like Adam Clayton Powell Jr…
4ddddde) …Thus, African-Americans are of the opinion that the Ancient Egyptians were “Negroes” like themselves -- or like our Adam Clayton Powell Jr. looking relatives who were “Negroes” with the rest of us. I have an appointment, so, I’ll talk to yall latter.
King Tut a long head enlarged incisors,pronounced alveolar prognathism resulting in an overbite and a concomitant receding chin,thick lips.This is certainly not a typical European genetic phenotype, plus his grandmother Queen Tiye and Pharaoh Akenaten look black african.
I am Yoruba, born and raised in America though. For the longest time I've felt that Yoruba people are partly of Egyptian descent. There also seems to be a strong Hebrew influence.
I don’t know much conversational Yoruba as I would like, just a few cordialities and enough to get through “itubo” offerings. My godparent does all my “ebo” sacrifices for me in ede-Yoruba (with an American accent though so I’m told).
1b) Remember though that the Hebrews were not an ancient or numerous people, were students of the Ancient Egyptians for 100s of years and much of their culture (circumcision, sacrificial rites, moral codes…) were learned from Kemet. They wrote a very good book that I have next to my bed with several other spiritual books ranging from Orisha, Voodoo, Kemet, Islam, Ethiopian Orthodoxy, etc… and people admire them because of their popularity…
1bb) …my nephew’s mother’s Jewish and they are very accomplished people in the world which makes people want to be associated with them. But, it’s the true Spirit of God in us that we seek, not the blood of His creation as God is far to big to be worried about such things as bloodlines and such. As an Yoruba Ifa odu (“chapter”) says “it’s good character that we are looking for”. God bless you and o daabo.
At 4:21 those are Nubian slaves to the Egyptians. The Egyptians were a mixed race of Asiatic heritage. Your ancestors came from thousands of miles away, in the voodoo infested jungles of the Congo.
1a) The texts in front of mural image of the people at 4:21 from the Tomb of Huy says in Ancient Egyptian transliteration “Msw Wr Nw-Smtw Nbtw” (or with restored vocalization “Mesu Ouer Nu-Semyatu Nibtu”) “The Great Children of All Countries”. They aint slaves, but are nobles, royals and princes. Unfortunately not far behind them are some other brothers bound as if to be sold. So, these “Great Children” are apparently slave dealers whatever its nature.
1b) Yep, and my YT name is Kongo/Mbundu for the “Jumbo” part where it originally meant “elephant“,
Fulani for the “mojo” part where it originally meant “magic“,
and Wolof for the “kat” part that means “someone who does something“.
The Fulani part “mojo” implies that I am an initiate into Orisha-Voodoo where the Gods and Goddesses of Ancient Egypt are still worshipped in an unbroken line.
1c) But, I’ve wondered if those big tall dark black shadow people that whites constantly report on Coast to Coast radio shows is really either some kind of white guilt or a lynching victim returned from the grave to haunt their descendants?
@jumbomojokat The Jamaican people speak an almost unintelligible form of English, but that does not mean their ancestors came from England. It points to a time period during which they were dominated by the English. Similarly, the people of West Africa may have been dominated by the people of Egypt. They may have had trade relationships that included being sold as slaves. The hieroglyphics indicate this. It does not mean that West Africans are descended from Pharaohs.
2aa) My woman is Jamaican. Her accent is almost entirely gone, but her family speaks a very deep version of Patwa and I understand them. Some make it unintelligible to outsiders intentionally for fun. Another friend-girl I know who’s Bahamanian (where another group of Florida Gullah-Geechee Maroon Warriors escaped from “Angola” [a name for the Maroon community in Sarasota, Florida] and relocated in the Bahamas) speaks a dialect between Geechee and Patwa…
2aaa) …Patwa Jamaican Creole -- like Texas-Gullah/Afro-Seminole, Sea Island Gullah-Geechee, Kulluh/Kullud, Bahamanian, Louisiana Gumbo Creole (or “Nigger French”), etc… -- is an Afro-English Creole language that has dominant vocabulary from Twi/Akan, some Fulani, and Igbo, etc… See: Cassidy and Le Page “Dictionary of Jamaican English”. I’ve lived with my Jamaican woman since the 1990s and am quite familiar with that African-English dialect.
@jumbomojokat Evidence suggests that Ancient Egyptians of North Africa had a relationship with sub saharan peoples similar to the Arabs of North Africa thousands of years later. It is one of war and trade, including slavery, where the predominate North African culture is absorbed by the blacks. Even now you can hear the Islamic call to prayer throughout sub saharan Africa.
Interestingly enough, one them spoke to a man when asked in great fear "who are you?" and he replied "Old Scratch", which is a pre civil war name for Satan. Considering blacks see them too, I doubt they are some kind of retribution for slavery.
According to laws of karma and reincarnation, all of the white slave masters may take birth as the descendants of the slaves they once abused, to experience the result of heir own hatred and learn. You may an old slave master yourself.
@jumbomojokat Humbug. The cosmology and structured worship of Egyptian temples closely resembled their Sumerian and Babylonian contemporaries.The ghost worship of West Africa is far inferior to the lavish and technical worship of exalted deities such as Amun.
2a) The Ram-God Amoun is God of most indigenous African cultures. Even the “Dua Amoun-Re” (“Hymn to Amun-Ra”) says He’s a God of regions south of Egypt towards the African interior as His name is still the indigenous general name for “God” in a large percentage of African cultures…
2a1) …The Dogon “Ama” (“God”) is “Amoun” as is the Baule “Nyamien” (“God”). Nyamien is still represented as a sacred ram -- the Sacred Ram is common in indigenous African spirituality. Orisha/Voodoo worship is exactly scientifically technical and meticulous as it’s nature worship -- a worship of facts, herbs, essences, etc… I know this as an insider as it doesn’t seem to be lax at all. Above all, good character and gratitude is expected.
2a2) Again, at post 1d I already showed you that we still worship Re/Ra the “Sun-God” in the forms of “Lisa” in Voodoo/Vodun and “Orisha-nla” in Orisha/Santeria, and that “Lisa” is the word “Orisha” which is the words “Urshu” or “Wrshw” in Ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs. [NOTE: I accidentally posted my “2s” way out of order as I almost didn’t post them (because of your apology) and had to reedit them. Thus, my numbers are out of order here.]
@jumbomojokat Voodoo practitioners have an inclusive tendency that even adds inimical Catholic saints to their pantheon of Gods. That does not mean the Voodoo is the original unbroken line of Catholicism. Egyptian Gods may also be projected on to powerful voodoo spirits.
You will have to provide an authoritative reference to prove this claim, if you do I would consider it intriguing evidence. I am willing to listen.
2a) [I first posted in the wrong place] This is an elementary source, I’ll give you Ancient Egyptian texts later: Moustafa Gadalla in his book “EXILED EGYPTIANS: THE HEART OF AFRICA”, 1999 where he (a modern Egyptian) points out on page 126 that “The entire ancient Egyptian matrix of neteru (gods & goddesses) is almost intact in Africa…The divine rule of the King/leader…Language affinity/affiliation”. Orisha-Voodoo is African-Diaspora “reformists” African orthodoxy.
3a) BIG THANKS for the apology because I was “offended”. I don’t like that kind of communication and lean towards civilized diplomacy. No one’s perfect, and you’ve shown a good character. Be careful though as I meant it when I said the book was “elementary”. As I posted on another vid, he’s right on that quote concerning spirituality and forms of government, but he’s very wrong on other points that I will warn you so that you don’t swallow that book whole and get "poisoned":..
3a2) Contradiction: he says at one point that Egyptians fought for freedom and then he says that they weren’t a fighting people when they recorded wars and made weapons. He also say that Fulani are not Egyptians because the fight [page 270], are nomadic and Moslem fanatics, but he doesn’t deny the Beja and Somali being Egyptian remnants even though they’re pastoralist nomad notorious fighters and Moslems who fought under the Mahadi.
3a3) He also attempts to discredit the Berber and Tuareg as at least having Egyptian heritage when there’s a lot that’s shared between North-Africans and Egyptians -- the Tuareg still call themselves “Tamashek” which is their version of the name “Tamahu” (where the “h” is guttural), and they ruled Egypt as a Libyan Dynasty and mixed with Egyptians to the point that the Beja‘s next closest DNA relatives are the Turareg. Their blacksmiths still make the ankh sign as amulets.
3b) Ancient Egypt’s political policy was that of a policy of unity, balance and fairness, rationality, order and truth which is the essence of the physical sciences of matter which can be measured on scales or with a measuring rod. A false word is like a placebo -- it has no effect on the truth in the end. What is is what is. What’s happened is what’s happened and is fact. A falsehood is not fact accept that falsehood is a phenomenon. It is what it is. Ma’at.
2aa) The synthesis of Catholic saints into Orisha/Voodoo was not because Africans just admired them, it was so that they could practice their pagan religion so as not to be detected by their captors who were Catholic. It’s those ol’ Buh-Bunny and Ananse-Spider values why African-Diaspora Voodoo/Santeria used Saint Barbara as an icon to worship Oba Shango/Hevioso (a form of “Khnum” with a ram’s head). I just really said something to you with that.
2aaa) This is why the founder of my “ile” (“house”) started his work to reform/refine Voodoo-Orisha not 100yrs after Emancipation in 1865. Maybe other “ile” gravitate towards Catholicism, but our ile understands that was a temporary tactic to cloak our spirituality and worship our African Gods in peace -- now Santeria/Voodoo has converts even from the children of our oppressors because they see it as superior to Catholicism and reportedly used it to help resurrect Wicca.
2aaaa) Of course "Voodoo" (an indigenous African word from the Fon and Ewe Africans in the form of "Vodun") is not an unbroken line from Catholicism. But it is an unbroken line of cultural exchange between Ancient Egypt through Napata-Kush and Meroitic-Kush to the Guinea Coast to the African-Diaspora. We don’t need to project the essence of Egyptian Gods onto Voodoo spirits as They’re already there in our indigenous African spiritual systems…
why do u guys put arabs in some these pictures it should have been all africans who white people call niggers.at the time kemet was in power arabs was not even in africa even though their there now not 2000 -5000 years ago i hate seeing the histoy channel and seeing arabs as phorahs make me sick overall good video one love
when you see brown skinned or light skinned kings and queens of kemet think of will smith or keri hilson we come in all shades of brown not arab looking even shem was black probably darker than ham good video i give it a b dont do that shit again when u see a light skinned or brown king or queen u put a arab u put all black you will find a shade the match we come in all shade of brown
@jumbomojokat Exactly, they were slave dealers visiting from Nubia with slaves to sell to the Egyptians. thousands of years later they would continue to sell them to the Arabs and then the Europeans. They were likely captured in tribal warfare. Some Afrocentric lunatics believe that Da Evil White man invented slavery and tribal war and ruined the great African utopia.
5a) Although you apologized for offending -- and I accepted, I have to address and clean up some of your “pre-apology” statements that could misinform the young and inexperienced. I can’t just leave them there unaddressed (unless you wish to remove them). But, until then, I will address them. I even prefer you don’t remove them so I can have a reason address those misconceptions that I’ve seen elsewhere. I’ll be diplomatically civilized though.
@menacingshadows voodoo is a religion mixed with the traditions and beliefs from all over West Africa and indigenous Native American people. Voodoo is a "new world" religion mixed with the "old world"
The ancestors of American blacks were practitioners of Voodoo from West Africa, the shit hole of the world. Offering liquor to ghosts and demons and mutilating yourself in a state of possession, is your natural religion. Why do the afrocentric nut jobs ignore this and focus on (Eurasian) Egypt?
So amazing, science has proven that wee all stem from the African blood line.. It's so amazing to watch this!!! Look at the hair and style.. The colors in the skin.. Yes I believe this! It is sad that man cannot accept that we all stem and have branched of from one line. Now I believe that people left and integrated with other blood lines. & that is many of us today. But watching this makes me happy to see this, when they did the DNA on King Tut but they won't release the info. I believe this!!
Absoulutely AMAZING job! I got chills! This is going in my favs and I'm subscribing. It amazes me how anyone could argue with this.....it's like the modern people were staring back at themselves in another TIME! Wonderful
if you want to know the true history of pharaohs ,just click this title on youtube : " Somali Culture of Ancient Egypt & the Land of Punt :New Anthropological Movie by RAGEEDI Films 2012 "
Nice video, nice song, thanks so much for sharing, part of my family has dark skin, this is great information and pictures for them and us. Sending love to all.
"The tragedy of Africa is that the African has never really entered history. The African peasant only knew the eternal renewal of time marked by the endless repetition of of the same gestures and the same words. In this realm of fancy there is neither room for human endeavour nor the idea of progress" Sarkozy 2012
The American Black has added a little twist to it. Entitlement. Entitlement to welfare, entitlement to affirmative action, entitlement to history. All at the expense of others
Whites click on these videos to see what black peopel are up to. When they see that we are teaching our people about our history they get pissed off because they want us to stick with their white wash bullshit. That's why they start calling us niggers and other names. Blacks finding out who they really are and where they come from is a constant fear for whites. Whites are in a comfort zone as long as blacks remain dumb, videos like this one takes them out the zone, it puts fear in them devils!
@drmmhmd1 It's amazing how ugly you could be? By calling nigger and bitches show how shitty is your brain! If you don't like Black people, then go to another site, because anyway you wouldn't be able to say those words in front of them! Get away with your chicken balls!
Here’s an etymology of the originally Soninke word “Tubaab” used in Manding West Africa:
Soninke: “Tubaab” (“European, White man”); “Tubaabu” (“Europeans, White people” -- note the same plural suffix “-u“ formation in Ancient Egyptian); “baabo” (“foul-smelling pale infections vaginal discharge; any unhealthy pale discharge indicative of infection; foul infectious vagina issue”).
The idea here is that the birth of whites is like infectious vaginal pale discharge from a dirty woman. This word survived in rural parts of Florida around Ocala with some blacks past 50yrs old as one of my older country friend-girls told me she long knew that word since before Alex Haley’s book “Roots” where Kunta Kinte (a Mandingo) used it to denote whites. That’s her generic word for whites till this day.
“Freedom of speech” -- rriiiiight? “Political incorrectness” just plain old “sinks”, huh? I’d rather be called a “nigger” than a “honky Tubaab” any day. There are more languages in Africa than there’re in Europe which means blacks can continue to verbally insult Europeans when the latter have run out of vocabulary to do so. I know I’m not perfect, but you and I are just a little past the “name calling” stage -- aren’t we? Play nice -- okay? Hate’s not cool, we could be grandparents!
“Have you ever seen a white man chasing fat nigger bitches?” Yes, the last white man I fought and bare-fistedly broke his cheek (like I posted elsewhere, I was aiming to brake his jaw) sending him out of a so-called “fat nigger bitches” pad running down the street naked about 5am in the morning defending her after she called me for help. He was a bartender at a beach bar who let his muscles go to his head not knowing she knew someone much bigger -- me.
That “face breaking” is no jive as it became a minor domestic legal issue with court papers I possess. You’re from my generation, and you know sane black men who date interracially don’t esteem white women above other women. You’d better ask those white women they have at home. Remember, I said “SANE”.
Additionally, I saw this blond-haired blue-eyed pale chump naked running down the street in a daze from the impact, and I used to hang out with 3 ex’s (2 blacks and a mixed brother with a white mother) of this very very big so-called “fat nigger bitch” (as you say) who’s still very attractive with serious steatopygia. Her black ex’s “aint lacken” -- especially the short one. So, I have no idea what this big beautiful black woman was doing with this particular “average” white man?
If some black men like “big fat” white women, it’s because they just like “big fat” women generally like the Queen of Punt, the Candaces of Meroitic Kush or the so-called “Hottentot Venus” (Miss Saartjie Baartman) who’s “big fat nigger bitch bootie” (“steatopygia”) was so legendary that white men absolutely lost their minds and had her body “stuffed” on display (likely to masturbate to -- their necrophilia again I‘ll speak on latter) for almost 2 centuries after she died in 1815!
See pages 82-86 of Harriet A. Washington’s “Medical Apartheid”, 2006, for her discussion of the short life of Saartjie Baartman the “Hottentot Venus” so-called “big fat nigger bitch” still imbedded in the minds of men (white, black, etc…) almost 200 years after her death.
The 1800s was the time when white women were wearing dresses to artificially appear to have “steatopygia” (“fat buts”) like many African women (and white women of mixed ancestry) still do till this day -- my best friend-girl and my “helper” at my old business have this “steatopygia condition” as well -- and white women were curling their hair into locks like Harriet Beecher Stowe to look like the “mulattos” their husbands were spending so much time on “slave row” with.
As far as black men with “fat white chicks”. There was a time in my very young (under 21) reckless life where most of the white chicks I knew were strippers and drove “Trans-Ams” and other nice cars -- one of my ex’s was a stripper with a convertible I always had the keys to as I did the other chick’s Thunder Bird. These're tan bikini body Florida chicks -- just not as hot as my Afro-American friend-girl and helper with “steatopygia” I mentioned before. I've had big n petite.
I almost forgot the shocking situation where my other business associate (a skinny little wrinkled balding old light-skinned black man with a soft voice and passive, but generally a nice guy most of the time) who smoked cigarettes dated seriously (publicly holding hands and all) a very attractive athletic Irish college student doctor under 22yrs old that I only playfully flirtatiously called into my business to make a sale to her standing in front of my business in her bikini!!!
She would bring him flowers and love letters!!! He’s apparently familiar with Roots medicine and I know he’s a Santeria initiate who told me he had Shango. I guess he‘s into those chicks, so Shango let him have that. I have white witnesses of this phenomenon. I don’t care about young women (black or white, etc…) like that as I love my beautiful do-or-die Jamaican woman I’ve had since the 1990s. But, I brought this up because of your stereotype of black men with white women.
I almost forgot to mention the “big fat Venus of Willendorf” found in Austria, West-Europe, that someone was obviously interested in to keep him warm in those cold Nordic winters. She is the ancestor of many Europeans and all Americans of part European ancestry. You have to admit that all men (“niggers, honky Tubaabu“, etc…) have always liked chicks like Saartjie Baartman, the Queen of Punt, Amanishakhito and Amanitore, and the Willendorf Venus at some point.
I “smoke crack” with my “crack pipe” as much as I can without shame -- the best “crack” that’s hairy on the outside and pink on the inside who’s been laying next to me with her super-sized natural Caribbean tits every night since the 1990s. You can call me the “crack man” on the “kude-pop” (literally “vagina-tight”) tip. I‘m into health and lift free Olympic heavy weights regularly (I haven‘t lifted over 400lbs on the bench in several months though) thus, the name “JUMBO”.
Ancient Egyptian transliteration: “khabu” (“hippopotamus”).
J=do=z; j(=ch)=kh.
I might be a natural athletic “mesomorph” (not bulky endomorph), but, I’ve built up so I’m not far from one over the years. People address me “big man” on the streets and not “slim” like when I was younger. I don't use drugs.
@drmmhmd1 "funny how you niggers all want one, especially big fat ones. have you ever seen a white man chasing fat nigger bitches?" Answer to your question, yes I have
There are two variants of the black race: (a) straight-haired, represented in Asia by the Dravidians and in Africa by the Nubians and the Tubbou or Tedda, all three with jet-black skins; (b) the kinky-haired blacks of the Equatorial regions. Both types entered into the composition of the Egyptian population
Well, these pictures don't lie. You can see the characteristics in the hair, nose and lips. Some Africans and black people have full lips, some thinner lips, other have a flat nose and some have slightly wide but pointed noses. Shows a true reflection. Nice video.
5a) I know nothing at all about the language of the Ijaw people. But like most Guinea Coast West-Africans, I know that yall have a great tradition of spiritual sculpture like the Ancient Nubians and Ancient Egyptians did. I hope other Ijaw youths like you still speak your language fluently and make sure you teach the best and most constructive of your traditional culture to your children with pride. Encourage your African neighbors to do the same in their cultures in unity.
5b) If you haven’t mastered your language, then after you have, study its possible connections to the partially deciphered language of Meroitic Kush/Nubia which -- along with Napata Kush/Nubia -- is a link between living indigenous African cultures/people and that of Ancient Egypt. I’m sure that the Meroites had a different word for “human being” (I don’t have those notes in front of me now), but it doesn’t mean that there’re not other etymologies you will likely discover.
5c) In your etymological research the following list of related phonologies will help you. All vowels are related and interchangeable -- some more closely than others though.
A=e=i=y=u=w=v=b=p=f; m=b=p=f=v=w=u=o=a. N=m sometimes after certain labials like b, f, p. But n=l=r=d=t=th (i.e “think”)=dh=z=j=s=sh=ch=kh=k=g=q; ch=h=e=i.
Thus, when doing etymological comparisons, focus more on what the consonants are first, and then the vowels and tones.
5cc) I checked the Ijaw Dictionary your referred to and I saw that the Ijaw word “nana” (“own; possess; have…”) is relate to the Ancient Egyptian genitive (“ownership”) preposition “n” (“of, for, to, towards…”). “Nua” (“thanks”) looks like the “dua” (“praise”) in the Ancient Egyptian “dua-Nouter” (“thanks” -- literally “praise God/Neter”). But, I suspect an element in the Ijaw word is likely the pronoun “you” that’s often a vowel in Niger-Congo languages.
5ccc) Also, I saw the verbs “na” (“hear; understand”) and “nemi” (“know”) which are sources of the African-American verb “nah” in the phrase “nah mean” (“understand what I mean”) in a regional (urban northeastern) dialect of African-American Vernaculars (“AAV”). This Ijaw word’s related to the Mende word “ndo” (“to find out by investigation”), the Bambara “don” (“to know”) and Geechee American “duh” (“know”)…
5cccc)…And these African words converged with each other among African-Diasporans and the English word “know”. But, the multi-ethnic predominantly African AAV/Gullah-Geechee versions (“nah” and “duh”) of these Ijaw words “na” and “nemi” betray its Ijaw, Mende and Bambara origins despite its obvious convergence with the English word “know”. I also see that the Ijaw number “nei” (4) is the same in Fulani “nai” (4) and Georgia Geechee “nai” (4).
5ccccc) Still, I see that you’re young and many Africans my age an older tell me that they’re struggling to teach their youths to not use foreign words when they speak their indigenous African languages. A good Soninke friend of mine (who speaks 13 languages) told me that he can speak better Wolof to Wolof elders than some of their own children who use French words every few Wolof words -- and they’re in their African land.
5cccccc) But, I say that to say this, if you know your language well and you can confirm the accuracy of this dictionary, good. But, if not, then double check with the oldest traditional conservative Ijaws you can find and produce a superior list to augment the one you mentioned if it’s not “Ijaw enough” to truly see how related it is to what’s deciphered of Ancient Egypt/Meroe for a possible full decipherment by Africans who might know a living cognate.
5d) The importance of peaceful and considerate African unity WITH cultural conservatism that I spoke of at (5a) is the fact that -- beyond the obvious socially stabilizing benefits conducive to self-security and independent modern technical progress -- is the fact that most (if not all) Africans have kept some element of Ancient Egyptian/Meroitic Nubian culture that could all be “re-assembled” together to recreate one big continental wide and Diaspora “mega-Kemet/Meroe”.
5dd) This could be an African reality if more intelligent Africans wanted it as evidenced by with just Nigeria (the so-called “Slave Coast”) alone as only one of many examples across the entire African continent, among all Nigeria’s cultures is literally almost every cultural element present to be re-assembled (like the “re-assembly of the divided body of Osiris”) into one big modern indigenous African continental mega-Kemet/Meroe.
5ddd) It is known that “In 1839…the British explorer Hutchinson noted the presence of women’s ’hieroglyphics’ in Old Calabar” [Thompson, Robert Farris “Flash of the Spirit: African and Afro-American Art and Philosophy”, 1983, pg 248]. Similar ideographic symbols were conserved from Kalabar in Afro-Cuban “Abakua” and other signs (apparently mostly Igbo) in African-American Underground Railroad quilt patterns used to send secret messages to escaping “slaves”.
5dddd) Like your Ijaw people, the Bini have an “alter to the hand” that is related to the Egyptian idea of a “ka” (“spirit essence“ represented by raised arms and hands); the “-ko” in the Coptic word “tchinko” (“what’s set, nature, fashion”); the Igbo words “ike“ (“essence energy power“), “chi” (“spirit, soul”), “aka” (“hand, arm”); and the Yoruba word “ashe“ (“spiritual power essence“).
5ddddd) Additionally, the Bini, Ile-Ife Yoruba, and Igbo have the royal serpent diadem that the Yoruba call “ere” (“uraeus“ in Greek). The Ancient Egyptian form is “ara-t” or “aar-t” (“uraeus cobra”), and a Coptic etymon is “ale” (“to go up, mount, go on board” like a cobra “rises up” and “mounts” the head of royalty) -- R=L. From the Fon, Yoruba and Kongo, the African-Diaspora kept this in the forms of Oxumare, Damballah (“ndamba” in Kongo) and Ayida-Hwedo.
5dddddd) Your Ejagham and Ile-Ife neighbors have the “obelisk”. The Esie, Igbo, Oron, Adah/Adda, and Yoruba Nigerians have the plaited beard custom associated with divine royalty like the Egyptian and Nubian pharaohs were divine. In sculpture at least, the Bini (and Bembe Kongo) have kept the layered locks of Ancient Egypt/Meroe. The Yoruba have the side-lock of a “hunter/youth” like Ancient Egypt. The Egyptian pantheon is significantly intact in Nigeria.
5ddddddd) Towards the north, the Fulani (Egypt descent), Hausa (Afro-Asiatic) and Tuareg (Afro-Asiatic) have conserved the Ancient Egyptian “ankh” sign of life, and the Fulani have kept the word “ankh” in the form of “yonki” (“life”). Hausa architecture is domestic Egyptian all day as is traditional Nigerian clothing. The Tuareg and Fulani have a square pectoral as does the Bini in the south. Most Africans have the Sacred Ram, and Bini Nigerians have the ibis as a symbol.
5dddddddd) Indigenous African sculptural realisms reached their peak not in Ancient Egypt, Napata or Meroe, but in Nigeria at Ile-Ife. Igbo have Egypt-Nubian ring money. The Yoruba have the crown of Upper Egypt that they call “ade”. Most traditional Africans (especially West-Africans, Bantu, and Nilotes) conserved the tradition of divine royalty. The Kanuri (Nubians) have “queen mothers, queen consorts and royal sisters". Thus, Nigeria still has the equivalent of “pharaohs”.
5ddddddddd) The construction of the Igbo “doors of honor” (“mgbo ezi”) is identical to Ancient Egyptian doors -- especially the Egyptian hieroglyph for a “door”. And the Igbo are known to have built stepped pyramids for alters which is a continuum from Meroe-Kush/Nubia, Napata-Kush/Nubia, and Ancient Egypt where, at least as far back as the New Kingdom, the pyramid was used as an alter place to make offerings for the deceased. The Jukun slept on headrest of their own style.
5dddddddddd) I have photographs of red coral (or bauxite?) netted broad collars for women that I saw and handled in a Nigerian store some years ago, and have also seen the same necklace in a Nigeria magazine (I have a photo of that one as well). I’m pretty sure they’re Edo/Bini. And they weren’t too expensive either. The Bini also have the royal beaded “flail” flywhisk (the Fon of Togo have the “crook”). Many Africans circumcise.
5ddddddddddd) The Igbo have a strongly silhouetted rigidly posed style of painting that’s related to Meroitic, Napatan, Ancient Egyptian and prehistoric Saharan folk murals -- all have a strong outline where the characters are in profile while the eyes are anterior. The Igbo style converged with the “Bushman” style and the European “Black-a-Moor” coat of arms style throughout the African-Diaspora and has been described as “typical” of African-American Vernacular folk art.
5e) SUMMERY: Just Nigeria alone has Ancient Egypt/Napata/Meroe styled traditional spirituality, divine government, crowns, royal serpents and other regalia, architecture, hieroglyphs, sculpture, groom (twists, side locks, plaited beards), attire, adornment (ankhs, broad collars, pectorals), alters, pyramids, vocabulary, headrests, murals, etc… to re-assemble Kemet/Meroe without loosing their traditional cultures which are the living evidence of their Kemet/Meroe humanities.
5ee) And I could do similar things with like (not identical) comparisons with almost any other part of sub-Saharan Africa that still has its indigenous cultures in tact. For example, the old version of the Vai writing system of Liberia has conserved abstracted (and sometimes identical) versions of all of the Meroitic characters (which are simplified Egyptian characters) while the Ethiopians have conserved the Meroitic punctuation system entirely.
5eee) The Amhara have a Christianized version of the Ancient Egyptian "Chapters of Going Forth into the Day" where essentially the Dynastic Egyptian names were replaced with biblical characters. Significantly, an informed individual only needs to know both versions well and extract the original Ancient Egyptian essence and magnify it.
5eeee6) I have even done similar reassemblies with the Africanisms in African-Diaspora cultures -- including us in the U.S. with traditional African Voodoo culture, etc... I know some may cringe at first, but being that African-Americans are predominantly African and part European by authentic blood, I even extract the Africanisms out of MY European blood heritage which includes the old African characters from which the Greco-Roman alphabet was developed. The Africa we know.
6a) By authentic blood DNA, I extract and magnify the originally Egyptian Africanisms out of The 10 Commandments, Free Masonry, astrological signs, astronomy, Greco-Latin terms of obvious Egyptian origins, mathematics, sciences, etc… so that my culture manifests itself as predominantly African as African-Americans are. Why not? Whites made sure we had the blood and the “acculturation” which is full of Egyptian Africanisms. So, it’s now mine to extract what I want legitimately.
6aa) Even entertaining the false idea that “…CAUCASIAN white people [actually their black instructors] built the great ancient Egyptian civilization…the titan race of CAUCASIANS…continued their great march of progress…” as ThirdConfession so eloquently put it, this still means that their recent African-American blood relatives also descend from those same alleged “Titanium White CAUCASIAN people who allegedly built the truly great ancient civilization of Kemet”…
6aaa) …The only difference being that the African-American recent blood relatives of these hypothetical “CAUCASIAN Titans” of “Kemet” (“Black Nation”) still resemble the murals of Ancient Kemet that even the Egyptians clearly admired being that they had themselves represented in sculpture thus even if their mummies don’t always match with what they found attractive, valuable and worth sculpting forever in granite.
@jumbomojokat The Titan race is an fictional Caucasoid race invented by White supremacists. There was never such a thing as "Titans", nothing but a good joke!
7a) I know which is why I called it a “false idea“ and “hypothetical” at posts 6aa-6aaa. My “Titan” comment was pure sarcasm -- a true “joke” -- to show that no matter what angle you come from, you can’t separate blacks from Ancient Egyptian history which I of all people know is indigenous Black History.
@jumbomojokat Not all cultures of Africa are intact as you think. Some were contaminated by European ideologies especially in recent colonial times. Remember, European colonialists tried their best to erase indigenous African cultures especially when they saw good in it. This was a way to propagate their culture above others!
7b) I know that as well my brother which is why I say to identify and magnify what does still survive intact in indigenous African culture -- some of which I listed here and outlined elsewhere. Of course, this is if Africans or the African-Diaspora want it rather than just sit passively and unnecessarily accept totally avoidable absolute cultural annihilation which hasn’t happened -- yet. There’s still enough that survives to be salvaged for that purpose if we ever apply ourselves.
7bb) If you see “good in it”, then don’t let it go. Find the possible contaminants, extract and discard them. Use Ancient Egyptian/Meroittic culture as standards because these records predate non-African contamination (or existence) to a degree. It’s really not as difficult as one may think because much survives in material culture as well as abstract ideologically -- at least it’s not too difficult for me because of my long conscious “pre-google” research spanning 20yrs now.
7bbb) Some of us allow “European colonialists” (or “family destabilizes” pushing drugs and immoral pop culture to our youth) to do things to us that we could avoid. Some of us participate via inaction or by allowing others to divide us against each other, etc… The European colonialist administrative policy was to “act upon the Negro by means of the Negro” via “Indirect Rule”. Some of us sold each other and helped these European colonialist like some still do today.
I’m a new initiate into interior African spirituality as it exist in the African-Diaspora for a couple of years now though I’ve studied as a scholar for about 20yrs. I’ve consulted an elderly Voodoo “houngan” (“priest”) for longer than I’ve been a practitioner. I’m scheduled to enter another “stage” tomorrow where there will be “ebo” (“sacrifice”). I’m sure you’re much younger than me, so you have more time to do more culturally and academically. Soar eternally like Horu! Hotep.
@amasonga the essence can still be seen even when African adopted Christianity the essence of the Hebraic Afro divinity couldn't be lost check out the way Christianity is practiced in Nigeria.
@jumbomojokat yes i know that money i still have it with me or i think i may have lost it. It is called igbi = my dialect, igbigi = okrika, kalabari ijaws or igbogi= nembe ijaw.
BLACK PEOPLE
5b) One must look towards Africa to understand Ancient Egypt. So, to understand the Ancient Egyptian outlook on “kem” (“kame” in Coptic) and why it was associated with “Asar Nesu Ankh” (“Osiris KING OF LIFE”), Amoun-Min, Ma’at, Queen “Ahmose-Neretari”, etc… one must look at the ancient texts, and one could look to the Nuba Hills in the Sudan where the “Kau Nuba” reside for just one example…
jumbomojokat 10 hours ago
BLACK PEOPLE
5bb) …with the Kau Nuba, “…only champions [wrestlers, martial artists] are privileged to use this black pigment [to paint their naked bodies], which is held to make the body invulnerable” as is reported on page 222 of “The People of Kau” by the ex-Nazi propagandist Leni Riefenstahl, © 1976. This “blackness” associated with champions was continued in the Far-East with “black belt” ranks for champions.
jumbomojokat 10 hours ago
BLACK PEOPLE
5bbb) …Another example is my personal experience living with and among West-Africans who carried some special water that they “washed” themselves with right before morning prayers. I don’t remember what they called it in their language and neither do I remember if I asked. But in English one brother told me it was “ink” and it was for protection. He was Soninke and Moslem, so I assume it was Quranic verses washed into water -- I don’t know…
jumbomojokat 10 hours ago
BLACK PEOPLE
5bbbb) …But the constant is the idea of “blackness” being associated with protection (like melanin) and superiority. Even a word for “shield” in Ancient Egypt is transliterated something like “akam” and uses the same “km” “biliteral” glyph in the words for “Kemet” (“Egypt”) and “kame” (“black”). See page 94a of Budge’s “An Egyptian Hieroglyphic Dictionary Vol. 1”…
jumbomojokat 10 hours ago
BLACK PEOPLE
5bbbbb) …On plate 18 of the “Papyrus of Ani”, “Chapter 15”, lines 2-3, is a “Hymn to the SUN-God” that states “One worships Your beauties/goodness with both my eyes and blessings manifest upon the skin”, and we all know what that “blessing” is -- at least physically. That blessing is melanin synthesis on the skin, a darkening of the skin as one worships the Sun-God.
jumbomojokat 10 hours ago
BLACK PEOPLE
5bbbbbb) …On plate 20 of the “Papyrus of Ani”, also “Chapter 15”, lines 12-14 is another “Hymn to the SUN-God” that states “I’ve come before You. I’m together with You concerning seeing Your Sun-Disc [“Aten”] every day -- unrestrained and unrepulsed. My members are renewed by the examination of Your beauties/goodness like all of Your favored ones. Because I’m one of those esteemed of You upon the Earth…”
jumbomojokat 10 hours ago
BLACK PEOPLE
5bbbbbbb) …On plate 26 of the “Papyrus of Ani”, “Chapter 78” called “The Chapter of Manifesting as a Divine Hawk“, lines 1-2 is a passage that states “I’m a beneficial spirit within the Divine Sunlight, created and manifesting as/in the Divine Flesh…”.
jumbomojokat 10 hours ago
BLACK PEOPLE
5c) …Thus, posts 5b through 5bbbbbbb show that the Ancient Egyptians at least started off as a black African people who valued the practicality of melanin in a tropical/sub-tropical environment with intense sunlight. The Sun gave life and melanin which was considered beneficial as well. This is the religion of a sun-worshipping black man with black values. The Ancient Egyptians were blacks and clearly proud of it…
jumbomojokat 10 hours ago
BLACK PEOPLE
5d) …So what. That was 1000s of years ago. It’s good to learn from and is full of good examples of what and what not to do. But, what are we going to do today? We have the potential. But, do we have the will, the values, the confidence, etc… to be as self-determined, truly free and productive as Kemet, Napata and Meroe? It’s 1000s of yrs later and we should’ve surpassed our Ancestors by now. We’re still talking about the “Super Bowl” of 1988b.c.e. -- it's 2012a.c.e.! Kum on nah!
jumbomojokat 10 hours ago
BLACK PEOPLE
5a) If blacks are “inferior mud-hut monkeys”, then why do some white people spend so much time communicating with us and posting vids about us? They look at their communications with us as either challenging or for the purpose of “gathering intelligence“. They don’t argue against the worst most self-destructive of our culture on thug videos, they only argue against Afro-centrist they feel threatened by. You know Afro-centricity is good when they don’t want you to have it…
jumbomojokat 10 hours ago
The Egyptian artist had at his disposal six colors, including black (kem) and white. One of the few real-life people to be deified, Queen Ahmose-Nefertari was the patroness of the necropolis. She was usually portrayed with black skin, although she was not Black. Anubis, the god of embalming was shown as a black jackal or dog, even though real jackals and dogs are typically brown.was a symbol of death and of the night. Osiris, the king of the afterlife was called "the black one."You got it wrong
HandsomeWhiteBoy333 19 hours ago
The Statue is Black do not mean the person was Black as well,,dumbass
Its more "Caucasoid"or "Caucasians",,its neither White nor Black
kafirstunner666er 4 days ago
@kafirstunner666er He is so much fucked up he thinks you can paint with white paint on white canvas !!!
arcadian33333 2 days ago
@arcadian33333 Are you retarded?
Um you can't paint white paint on white canvas? what about the Egyptians loin cloth that's clearly white.
So if they had white paint, why didn't they use white paint to depict themselves they used white paint for Libyans n Asiatics.
Why are the egyptians depicted black n brown
Bsmurfdizzle 2 days ago
@Bsmurfdizzle Because if you were not retarded you should of known that white paint can not been depicted on white canvas.
Oh and another thing ...Ptolemies were not even African or Egyptian.. !!!
Search your history after Malcolm x BUT NOT BEFORE !!!
arcadian33333 2 days ago
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For the Forward progression of all races
Join the American Integralists Party Today!!
IntegralistsPartyUSA 4 days ago
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IntegralistsPartyUSA 4 days ago
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There are two variants of the black race: (a) straight-haired, represented in Asia by the Dravidians and in Africa by the Nubians and the Tubbou or Tedda, all three with jet-black skins; (b) the kinky-haired blacks of the Equatorial regions. Both types entered into the composition of the Egyptian population
Research: Badarian and Naqada Cultures
eazydee415 5 days ago
Nice brother , we need to burn this aberration here : watch?v=eiMfXZyCe9w&feature=related
Bless
616blabla 6 days ago
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"It is thus clear that it was THE WHOLE OF THE EGYPTIAN POPULATION WHICH WAS NEGRO,"
GENERAL HISTORY OF AFRICA (Ancient Civilizations of Africa II)
(Abridged ed. copyright 1981 publ.1990; Chapt.1 pg.16 para.5)
U.N.E.S.C.O.(United Nations Educational Scientific & Cultural Organization)
International Scientific Committee for the Drafting of a General history of Africa
asrafoo 1 week ago
go to -meira kwesi inside the cairo museum and see the nappy head wigs the khemites prefered to wear, for some reason straight hair or not they rocked nappy hair, the white demon race is a fraud !
theraisis 1 week ago
@menacingshadows
4a) I was doing some house work and I ran across a old small book on one of my bookshelves. It’s a more serious document than the Moustafa Gadalla book I referred to you that will help you through the Gadalla document: Charles G. Seligman’s “Egypt and Negro Africa: A Study in Divine Kingship”, Routledge, London, 1934. Also “A History of the Beja Tribes of the Sudan” by A. Paul, M. A., Cambridge University, 1954.
jumbomojokat 1 week ago
@menacingshadows
4b) I included the Paul book because the appendix in the Seligman book reminded me of one in the Paul document discussing the “Fellata/Tekruri” (“Fulani/Tucolor”) and “Melle” (“Mandingos”) who live among the Beja around Port Sudan…
jumbomojokat 1 week ago
@menacingshadows
4b1) …A. Paul pointed out on page 147 of his document regarding these Fulani and Mandingos living among the Hadendowa Beja that “…the younger generation with its mop of hair and scratching pins…baggy trousers…are, at first sight, indistinguishable from the Hadendowa among whom they live…”
jumbomojokat 1 week ago
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jumbomojokat 1 week ago
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@menacingshadows
4bb) …and if the Fulani/Mandingos are “at first sight indistinguishable from the Hadendowa among whom they live” -- and the Hadendowa Beja are a phenotypic, linguistic and DNA remnant of the Ancient Egyptians -- then the Fulani/Mandingos are also phenotypic approximates to the Egyptians from which they themselves say they descend according to the Fulani Sultan Mohamed Bello of Sokoto, Nigeria. And many African-Americans are of part Fulani/Mandingo descent…
jumbomojokat 1 week ago
@menacingshadows
4bbb) …we even know the names of some of the enslaved Fulani in the U.S. -- one of whom was an abducted royal/noble as is recorded, and he was a slave dealer himself before he was captured and sold into slavery as he was just preparing to sell some other Africans. The book “African Muslims in Antebellum America” by Allan D. Austin, Routledge, © 1997, gives several examples. In Fulani “yonki” means “life” -- “yonki” = “ankh” (“life”) in Ancient Egyptian…
jumbomojokat 1 week ago
@menacingshadows
4bbbc) …And this “Fulani/Mandingo/Beja/Ancient Egyptian connection” reminds me of a personal experience I had several yrs ago with a Fulani chick and her small Egyptian-born daughter as I was visiting an Azande guy and his Dinka wife (both from Sudan) who was babysitting for the Fulani chick who had lived in Egypt for so long that she forgot how to speak Fulani.
jumbomojokat 1 week ago
@menacingshadows
4c) …As I was sitting and talking with the Azande brother, I saw a little dark-brown-skinned girl with 2 small vertical cuts directly behind both of her eyes near her temples. I knew those marks from a Senegalese Tukulor/Fulani chick who’s married to the brother of one of my brothers’ Senegalese Mandingo wife, and I also knew those marks from 2 Fulani kats I know from Mauritania…
jumbomojokat 1 week ago
@menacingshadows
4cc) …I asked the little girl (who could speak better English than her mother) where she’s from and she said “Egypt”. I asked her what tribe she was from and she said she was told, but can’t remember and that her mommy would be there soon and she could tell me. So, I said to them that I knew those marks from West-Africans called Fulani and Tukulor…
jumbomojokat 1 week ago
@menacingshadows
4ccc) …Her very light, almost gold-skinned, mommy came in with the same marks. She only knew Arabic and couldn’t speak English beyond a few cordialities. So, the Sudanese Azande brother asked her my question for me in Arabic -- “What’s your ethnicity”, and she said “Fulani”. He was entirely shocked and said to me in excitement something along the lines that “You know Africa better than me and I’m African [born]!!!”.
jumbomojokat 1 week ago
@menacingshadows
4ccccd) …this Fulani chick always says “My brother!!!” when she sees me. During that visit, the ethnic name “Hadendowa” just happened to be mentioned and my Azande bro’s Dinka wife quickly looked up at me as if a “light bulb had lit in her head” and pointed at me saying something along the lines of “that’s what you are, you‘re Hadendowa” as if she had been trying to figure it out…
jumbomojokat 1 week ago
@menacingshadows
4d) …So, although I’m proud of the Congo side of my multi-ethnic predominantly African African-American heritage (biologically and/or culturally), my phenotype approximates between Fulani and Mandingo, and their phenotype is sometimes “indistinguishable from the Hadendowa Beja among whom they live”, and the Beja are a phenotypic and DNA remnant of the Ancient Egyptians as well as DNA relatives of the West-African Tuareg…
jumbomojokat 1 week ago
@menacingshadows
4dd) …which means that the descendants of the Mandingo, Fulani and Tuareg, etc… -- who were trafficked to the U.S. as slaves, POWs and abducted royals and nobles, and who are now called “African-Americans, Negroes, Negroids” and “Nigger thugs” today -- are also phenotypic approximates to the Ancient Egyptians as well as DNA relatives of the Tuareg who are the DNA relatives of the Beja who are the DNA relatives of Ancient Egyptians…
jumbomojokat 1 week ago
@menacingshadows
4ddd) …Thus, when African-Americans claim to be “descendants of kings and queens” and that “the Ancient Egyptians were blacks” and that we are related to them in part, that’s true and is well documented enough so that the data can be objectively assessed. When African-Americas say that the Ancient Egyptians were blacks, it’s because our phenotypes approximate theirs and we are called “blacks, niggers, etc…”…
jumbomojokat 1 week ago
@menacingshadows
4dddd) …This is true even for the Ancient Egyptians who had straighter hair because straight-haired Malagasy people where also trafficked to the U.S. as slaves according to slave ship records and other documentation from the time which shows that those individual Ancient Egyptians with similar hair texture and phenotypes as the Malagasy of the island of Madagascar were likewise considered “Negroes” in America like Adam Clayton Powell Jr…
jumbomojokat 1 week ago
@menacingshadows
4ddddde) …Thus, African-Americans are of the opinion that the Ancient Egyptians were “Negroes” like themselves -- or like our Adam Clayton Powell Jr. looking relatives who were “Negroes” with the rest of us. I have an appointment, so, I’ll talk to yall latter.
jumbomojokat 1 week ago
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King Tut a long head enlarged incisors,pronounced alveolar prognathism resulting in an overbite and a concomitant receding chin,thick lips.This is certainly not a typical European genetic phenotype, plus his grandmother Queen Tiye and Pharaoh Akenaten look black african.
TimAmerica1000 1 week ago
great video
CDW757 1 week ago
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jumbomojokat 1 week ago
I am Yoruba, born and raised in America though. For the longest time I've felt that Yoruba people are partly of Egyptian descent. There also seems to be a strong Hebrew influence.
atl2maryland 1 week ago
@atl2maryland
1a) Ba wo ni?! She-alafia ni!
I don’t know much conversational Yoruba as I would like, just a few cordialities and enough to get through “itubo” offerings. My godparent does all my “ebo” sacrifices for me in ede-Yoruba (with an American accent though so I’m told).
jumbomojokat 1 week ago
@atl2maryland
1b) Remember though that the Hebrews were not an ancient or numerous people, were students of the Ancient Egyptians for 100s of years and much of their culture (circumcision, sacrificial rites, moral codes…) were learned from Kemet. They wrote a very good book that I have next to my bed with several other spiritual books ranging from Orisha, Voodoo, Kemet, Islam, Ethiopian Orthodoxy, etc… and people admire them because of their popularity…
jumbomojokat 1 week ago
@atl2maryland
1bb) …my nephew’s mother’s Jewish and they are very accomplished people in the world which makes people want to be associated with them. But, it’s the true Spirit of God in us that we seek, not the blood of His creation as God is far to big to be worried about such things as bloodlines and such. As an Yoruba Ifa odu (“chapter”) says “it’s good character that we are looking for”. God bless you and o daabo.
jumbomojokat 1 week ago
At 4:21 those are Nubian slaves to the Egyptians. The Egyptians were a mixed race of Asiatic heritage. Your ancestors came from thousands of miles away, in the voodoo infested jungles of the Congo.
menacingshadows 1 week ago
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jumbomojokat 1 week ago
@menacingshadows
1a) The texts in front of mural image of the people at 4:21 from the Tomb of Huy says in Ancient Egyptian transliteration “Msw Wr Nw-Smtw Nbtw” (or with restored vocalization “Mesu Ouer Nu-Semyatu Nibtu”) “The Great Children of All Countries”. They aint slaves, but are nobles, royals and princes. Unfortunately not far behind them are some other brothers bound as if to be sold. So, these “Great Children” are apparently slave dealers whatever its nature.
jumbomojokat 1 week ago
@menacingshadows
1b) Yep, and my YT name is Kongo/Mbundu for the “Jumbo” part where it originally meant “elephant“,
Fulani for the “mojo” part where it originally meant “magic“,
and Wolof for the “kat” part that means “someone who does something“.
The Fulani part “mojo” implies that I am an initiate into Orisha-Voodoo where the Gods and Goddesses of Ancient Egypt are still worshipped in an unbroken line.
jumbomojokat 1 week ago
@menacingshadows
1c) But, I’ve wondered if those big tall dark black shadow people that whites constantly report on Coast to Coast radio shows is really either some kind of white guilt or a lynching victim returned from the grave to haunt their descendants?
jumbomojokat 1 week ago
@menacingshadows
1d) Ancient Egyptian transliteration: “Urshu” or “Wrshw” (“Watcher Spirits” a class of divinities).
Yoruba language (Nigeria): “Orisha” (“Guardian Spirits, Spirits, Guardian Angel”); “Orisha-nla” (“Great Spirit” -- a name of the Orisha “Obatala”).
Fon: “Lisa” (the Fon version of “Orisha-nla”, the “Sun-God” in VOODOO sprituality).
Igbo: “Alusi” (“Spirit”).
R=L; S=SH
jumbomojokat 1 week ago
@jumbomojokat The Jamaican people speak an almost unintelligible form of English, but that does not mean their ancestors came from England. It points to a time period during which they were dominated by the English. Similarly, the people of West Africa may have been dominated by the people of Egypt. They may have had trade relationships that included being sold as slaves. The hieroglyphics indicate this. It does not mean that West Africans are descended from Pharaohs.
menacingshadows 1 week ago
@menacingshadows
2aa) My woman is Jamaican. Her accent is almost entirely gone, but her family speaks a very deep version of Patwa and I understand them. Some make it unintelligible to outsiders intentionally for fun. Another friend-girl I know who’s Bahamanian (where another group of Florida Gullah-Geechee Maroon Warriors escaped from “Angola” [a name for the Maroon community in Sarasota, Florida] and relocated in the Bahamas) speaks a dialect between Geechee and Patwa…
jumbomojokat 1 week ago
@menacingshadows
2aaa) …Patwa Jamaican Creole -- like Texas-Gullah/Afro-Seminole, Sea Island Gullah-Geechee, Kulluh/Kullud, Bahamanian, Louisiana Gumbo Creole (or “Nigger French”), etc… -- is an Afro-English Creole language that has dominant vocabulary from Twi/Akan, some Fulani, and Igbo, etc… See: Cassidy and Le Page “Dictionary of Jamaican English”. I’ve lived with my Jamaican woman since the 1990s and am quite familiar with that African-English dialect.
jumbomojokat 1 week ago
@jumbomojokat Evidence suggests that Ancient Egyptians of North Africa had a relationship with sub saharan peoples similar to the Arabs of North Africa thousands of years later. It is one of war and trade, including slavery, where the predominate North African culture is absorbed by the blacks. Even now you can hear the Islamic call to prayer throughout sub saharan Africa.
menacingshadows 1 week ago
Interestingly enough, one them spoke to a man when asked in great fear "who are you?" and he replied "Old Scratch", which is a pre civil war name for Satan. Considering blacks see them too, I doubt they are some kind of retribution for slavery.
According to laws of karma and reincarnation, all of the white slave masters may take birth as the descendants of the slaves they once abused, to experience the result of heir own hatred and learn. You may an old slave master yourself.
menacingshadows 1 week ago
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SriBhagavanUvaca 2 days ago
@jumbomojokat Humbug. The cosmology and structured worship of Egyptian temples closely resembled their Sumerian and Babylonian contemporaries.The ghost worship of West Africa is far inferior to the lavish and technical worship of exalted deities such as Amun.
menacingshadows 1 week ago
@menacingshadows
2a) The Ram-God Amoun is God of most indigenous African cultures. Even the “Dua Amoun-Re” (“Hymn to Amun-Ra”) says He’s a God of regions south of Egypt towards the African interior as His name is still the indigenous general name for “God” in a large percentage of African cultures…
jumbomojokat 1 week ago
@menacingshadows
2a1) …The Dogon “Ama” (“God”) is “Amoun” as is the Baule “Nyamien” (“God”). Nyamien is still represented as a sacred ram -- the Sacred Ram is common in indigenous African spirituality. Orisha/Voodoo worship is exactly scientifically technical and meticulous as it’s nature worship -- a worship of facts, herbs, essences, etc… I know this as an insider as it doesn’t seem to be lax at all. Above all, good character and gratitude is expected.
jumbomojokat 1 week ago
@menacingshadows
2a2) Again, at post 1d I already showed you that we still worship Re/Ra the “Sun-God” in the forms of “Lisa” in Voodoo/Vodun and “Orisha-nla” in Orisha/Santeria, and that “Lisa” is the word “Orisha” which is the words “Urshu” or “Wrshw” in Ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs. [NOTE: I accidentally posted my “2s” way out of order as I almost didn’t post them (because of your apology) and had to reedit them. Thus, my numbers are out of order here.]
jumbomojokat 1 week ago
@jumbomojokat Voodoo practitioners have an inclusive tendency that even adds inimical Catholic saints to their pantheon of Gods. That does not mean the Voodoo is the original unbroken line of Catholicism. Egyptian Gods may also be projected on to powerful voodoo spirits.
You will have to provide an authoritative reference to prove this claim, if you do I would consider it intriguing evidence. I am willing to listen.
menacingshadows 1 week ago
@menacingshadows
2a) [I first posted in the wrong place] This is an elementary source, I’ll give you Ancient Egyptian texts later: Moustafa Gadalla in his book “EXILED EGYPTIANS: THE HEART OF AFRICA”, 1999 where he (a modern Egyptian) points out on page 126 that “The entire ancient Egyptian matrix of neteru (gods & goddesses) is almost intact in Africa…The divine rule of the King/leader…Language affinity/affiliation”. Orisha-Voodoo is African-Diaspora “reformists” African orthodoxy.
jumbomojokat 1 week ago
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menacingshadows 1 week ago
@menacingshadows
3a) BIG THANKS for the apology because I was “offended”. I don’t like that kind of communication and lean towards civilized diplomacy. No one’s perfect, and you’ve shown a good character. Be careful though as I meant it when I said the book was “elementary”. As I posted on another vid, he’s right on that quote concerning spirituality and forms of government, but he’s very wrong on other points that I will warn you so that you don’t swallow that book whole and get "poisoned":..
jumbomojokat 1 week ago
@menacingshadows
3a1) False: that Meroites not loyal to Egyptian tradition but Napata was.
True: Meroites are Ancestors of Yoruba.
False: Meroites were ["mindlessly"] loyal to Greece and Rome (notable wars are recorded).
False: Copts are not Egyptians and neither is their language (which is related to Beja).
There’s more and it takes years of meticulous study to sort our the facts from distortions in such documents.
jumbomojokat 1 week ago
@menacingshadows
3a2) Contradiction: he says at one point that Egyptians fought for freedom and then he says that they weren’t a fighting people when they recorded wars and made weapons. He also say that Fulani are not Egyptians because the fight [page 270], are nomadic and Moslem fanatics, but he doesn’t deny the Beja and Somali being Egyptian remnants even though they’re pastoralist nomad notorious fighters and Moslems who fought under the Mahadi.
jumbomojokat 1 week ago
@menacingshadows
3a3) He also attempts to discredit the Berber and Tuareg as at least having Egyptian heritage when there’s a lot that’s shared between North-Africans and Egyptians -- the Tuareg still call themselves “Tamashek” which is their version of the name “Tamahu” (where the “h” is guttural), and they ruled Egypt as a Libyan Dynasty and mixed with Egyptians to the point that the Beja‘s next closest DNA relatives are the Turareg. Their blacksmiths still make the ankh sign as amulets.
jumbomojokat 1 week ago
@menacingshadows
3b) Ancient Egypt’s political policy was that of a policy of unity, balance and fairness, rationality, order and truth which is the essence of the physical sciences of matter which can be measured on scales or with a measuring rod. A false word is like a placebo -- it has no effect on the truth in the end. What is is what is. What’s happened is what’s happened and is fact. A falsehood is not fact accept that falsehood is a phenomenon. It is what it is. Ma’at.
jumbomojokat 1 week ago
@menacingshadows
2aa) The synthesis of Catholic saints into Orisha/Voodoo was not because Africans just admired them, it was so that they could practice their pagan religion so as not to be detected by their captors who were Catholic. It’s those ol’ Buh-Bunny and Ananse-Spider values why African-Diaspora Voodoo/Santeria used Saint Barbara as an icon to worship Oba Shango/Hevioso (a form of “Khnum” with a ram’s head). I just really said something to you with that.
jumbomojokat 1 week ago
@menacingshadows
2aaa) This is why the founder of my “ile” (“house”) started his work to reform/refine Voodoo-Orisha not 100yrs after Emancipation in 1865. Maybe other “ile” gravitate towards Catholicism, but our ile understands that was a temporary tactic to cloak our spirituality and worship our African Gods in peace -- now Santeria/Voodoo has converts even from the children of our oppressors because they see it as superior to Catholicism and reportedly used it to help resurrect Wicca.
jumbomojokat 1 week ago
@menacingshadows
2aaaa) Of course "Voodoo" (an indigenous African word from the Fon and Ewe Africans in the form of "Vodun") is not an unbroken line from Catholicism. But it is an unbroken line of cultural exchange between Ancient Egypt through Napata-Kush and Meroitic-Kush to the Guinea Coast to the African-Diaspora. We don’t need to project the essence of Egyptian Gods onto Voodoo spirits as They’re already there in our indigenous African spiritual systems…
jumbomojokat 1 week ago
why do u guys put arabs in some these pictures it should have been all africans who white people call niggers.at the time kemet was in power arabs was not even in africa even though their there now not 2000 -5000 years ago i hate seeing the histoy channel and seeing arabs as phorahs make me sick overall good video one love
MrGoku32 23 hours ago
when you see brown skinned or light skinned kings and queens of kemet think of will smith or keri hilson we come in all shades of brown not arab looking even shem was black probably darker than ham good video i give it a b dont do that shit again when u see a light skinned or brown king or queen u put a arab u put all black you will find a shade the match we come in all shade of brown
MrGoku32 23 hours ago
@jumbomojokat Exactly, they were slave dealers visiting from Nubia with slaves to sell to the Egyptians. thousands of years later they would continue to sell them to the Arabs and then the Europeans. They were likely captured in tribal warfare. Some Afrocentric lunatics believe that Da Evil White man invented slavery and tribal war and ruined the great African utopia.
menacingshadows 1 week ago
@menacingshadows
5a) Although you apologized for offending -- and I accepted, I have to address and clean up some of your “pre-apology” statements that could misinform the young and inexperienced. I can’t just leave them there unaddressed (unless you wish to remove them). But, until then, I will address them. I even prefer you don’t remove them so I can have a reason address those misconceptions that I’ve seen elsewhere. I’ll be diplomatically civilized though.
jumbomojokat 1 week ago
@menacingshadows voodoo is a religion mixed with the traditions and beliefs from all over West Africa and indigenous Native American people. Voodoo is a "new world" religion mixed with the "old world"
Jaydaravenstar 1 week ago
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The ancestors of American blacks were practitioners of Voodoo from West Africa, the shit hole of the world. Offering liquor to ghosts and demons and mutilating yourself in a state of possession, is your natural religion. Why do the afrocentric nut jobs ignore this and focus on (Eurasian) Egypt?
menacingshadows 1 week ago
So amazing, science has proven that wee all stem from the African blood line.. It's so amazing to watch this!!! Look at the hair and style.. The colors in the skin.. Yes I believe this! It is sad that man cannot accept that we all stem and have branched of from one line. Now I believe that people left and integrated with other blood lines. & that is many of us today. But watching this makes me happy to see this, when they did the DNA on King Tut but they won't release the info. I believe this!!
MzClementine 1 week ago
it is amazing how the picture aree matched up with actual people almost as if it was them...
bignasxl 1 week ago
Absoulutely AMAZING job! I got chills! This is going in my favs and I'm subscribing. It amazes me how anyone could argue with this.....it's like the modern people were staring back at themselves in another TIME! Wonderful
Chatzkies 2 weeks ago
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Chatzkies 2 weeks ago
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if you want to know the true history of pharaohs ,just click this title on youtube : " Somali Culture of Ancient Egypt & the Land of Punt :New Anthropological Movie by RAGEEDI Films 2012 "
sajokal20 2 weeks ago
Nice video, nice song, thanks so much for sharing, part of my family has dark skin, this is great information and pictures for them and us. Sending love to all.
electricfemale 2 weeks ago
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O and Forget the game Lets Go Nikki Manaj And MIA lookn to Sexy For half time with that sexy carmel skin LOL
eazydee415 2 weeks ago
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"The tragedy of Africa is that the African has never really entered history. The African peasant only knew the eternal renewal of time marked by the endless repetition of of the same gestures and the same words. In this realm of fancy there is neither room for human endeavour nor the idea of progress" Sarkozy 2012
The American Black has added a little twist to it. Entitlement. Entitlement to welfare, entitlement to affirmative action, entitlement to history. All at the expense of others
EuroCivilization 2 weeks ago
@drmmhmd1 Yeah, you bug head, dog smelling, bloody meat eating, non melanin, cave dwelling crackers give a fuck!
hebrewhair 2 weeks ago
Lol, bang on these cracker dogs!
Bsmurfdizzle 2 weeks ago
Whites click on these videos to see what black peopel are up to. When they see that we are teaching our people about our history they get pissed off because they want us to stick with their white wash bullshit. That's why they start calling us niggers and other names. Blacks finding out who they really are and where they come from is a constant fear for whites. Whites are in a comfort zone as long as blacks remain dumb, videos like this one takes them out the zone, it puts fear in them devils!
hebrewhair 2 weeks ago
@hebrewhair
whites don't give a fuck about what you niggers are up to. it is simply entertaining, niggers have always danced for massa.
drmmhmd1 2 weeks ago
@drmmhmd1
Was that etymological excursion “entertaining”? Did you like that “dance”? I wonder about something…
jumbomojokat 2 weeks ago
it is amazing how ugly nigger bitches can be
drmmhmd1 2 weeks ago
@drmmhmd1 It's amazing how ugly you could be? By calling nigger and bitches show how shitty is your brain! If you don't like Black people, then go to another site, because anyway you wouldn't be able to say those words in front of them! Get away with your chicken balls!
amasonga 2 weeks ago
@amasonga
I have no problem calling a nigger a nigger, nigger.
drmmhmd1 2 weeks ago
@drmmhmd1
Here’s an etymology of the originally Soninke word “Tubaab” used in Manding West Africa:
Soninke: “Tubaab” (“European, White man”); “Tubaabu” (“Europeans, White people” -- note the same plural suffix “-u“ formation in Ancient Egyptian); “baabo” (“foul-smelling pale infections vaginal discharge; any unhealthy pale discharge indicative of infection; foul infectious vagina issue”).
Mandingo: “Toubab” (a “European, White man”).
Kikongo: “tubombo” (“phlegm, nose mucus, slime”).
Hm.
jumbomojokat 2 weeks ago
@drmmhmd1
The idea here is that the birth of whites is like infectious vaginal pale discharge from a dirty woman. This word survived in rural parts of Florida around Ocala with some blacks past 50yrs old as one of my older country friend-girls told me she long knew that word since before Alex Haley’s book “Roots” where Kunta Kinte (a Mandingo) used it to denote whites. That’s her generic word for whites till this day.
jumbomojokat 2 weeks ago
@drmmhmd1
Here’s an etymology of the African-American word “honky” (“white person” -- disparaging).
African-American Vernacular: “honky” (“white person, European”).
Wolof: “hong” or “hungha” (“pink, red” like “red“ menstruation mixed with “white” infectious vaginal discharge to make “pink stink”).
Twi: “hangng” (“bright, light”).
jumbomojokat 2 weeks ago
@drmmhmd1
Here’s the etymology of the English word “nigger”.
English: “nigger” (a “Negro, Black person, African-American, African, Hamite Sand-Nigger, Arab, Gypsy-head or Nigger-head” -- “Gypsy“ = “Egyptian“).
Spanish: “Negro” (a “black person, African”; the adjective “black”).
French: “negre” (“black person, African”).
Latin: “niger” (the color “black”).
Hm, that wasn’t so bad. “Black, African, Hamite...” -- where’s the insult?
jumbomojokat 2 weeks ago
@drmmhmd1
“Freedom of speech” -- rriiiiight? “Political incorrectness” just plain old “sinks”, huh? I’d rather be called a “nigger” than a “honky Tubaab” any day. There are more languages in Africa than there’re in Europe which means blacks can continue to verbally insult Europeans when the latter have run out of vocabulary to do so. I know I’m not perfect, but you and I are just a little past the “name calling” stage -- aren’t we? Play nice -- okay? Hate’s not cool, we could be grandparents!
jumbomojokat 2 weeks ago
@jumbomojokat negus = ethiopian king forgot that
childofconvenant 2 weeks ago
@amasonga why do u answer him dont u have anything better to do?
childofconvenant 2 weeks ago
@drmmhmd1 It's amazing how ugly White bitches can be
RedMeatForDogs 2 weeks ago
@RedMeatForDogs
funny how you niggers all want one, especially big fat ones. have you ever seen a white man chasing fat nigger bitches?
drmmhmd1 2 weeks ago
@drmmhmd1
“Have you ever seen a white man chasing fat nigger bitches?” Yes, the last white man I fought and bare-fistedly broke his cheek (like I posted elsewhere, I was aiming to brake his jaw) sending him out of a so-called “fat nigger bitches” pad running down the street naked about 5am in the morning defending her after she called me for help. He was a bartender at a beach bar who let his muscles go to his head not knowing she knew someone much bigger -- me.
jumbomojokat 2 weeks ago
@drmmhmd1
That “face breaking” is no jive as it became a minor domestic legal issue with court papers I possess. You’re from my generation, and you know sane black men who date interracially don’t esteem white women above other women. You’d better ask those white women they have at home. Remember, I said “SANE”.
jumbomojokat 2 weeks ago
@drmmhmd1
Additionally, I saw this blond-haired blue-eyed pale chump naked running down the street in a daze from the impact, and I used to hang out with 3 ex’s (2 blacks and a mixed brother with a white mother) of this very very big so-called “fat nigger bitch” (as you say) who’s still very attractive with serious steatopygia. Her black ex’s “aint lacken” -- especially the short one. So, I have no idea what this big beautiful black woman was doing with this particular “average” white man?
jumbomojokat 2 weeks ago
@drmmhmd1
If some black men like “big fat” white women, it’s because they just like “big fat” women generally like the Queen of Punt, the Candaces of Meroitic Kush or the so-called “Hottentot Venus” (Miss Saartjie Baartman) who’s “big fat nigger bitch bootie” (“steatopygia”) was so legendary that white men absolutely lost their minds and had her body “stuffed” on display (likely to masturbate to -- their necrophilia again I‘ll speak on latter) for almost 2 centuries after she died in 1815!
jumbomojokat 2 weeks ago
@drmmhmd1
See pages 82-86 of Harriet A. Washington’s “Medical Apartheid”, 2006, for her discussion of the short life of Saartjie Baartman the “Hottentot Venus” so-called “big fat nigger bitch” still imbedded in the minds of men (white, black, etc…) almost 200 years after her death.
jumbomojokat 2 weeks ago
@drmmhmd1
The 1800s was the time when white women were wearing dresses to artificially appear to have “steatopygia” (“fat buts”) like many African women (and white women of mixed ancestry) still do till this day -- my best friend-girl and my “helper” at my old business have this “steatopygia condition” as well -- and white women were curling their hair into locks like Harriet Beecher Stowe to look like the “mulattos” their husbands were spending so much time on “slave row” with.
jumbomojokat 2 weeks ago
@drmmhmd1
As far as black men with “fat white chicks”. There was a time in my very young (under 21) reckless life where most of the white chicks I knew were strippers and drove “Trans-Ams” and other nice cars -- one of my ex’s was a stripper with a convertible I always had the keys to as I did the other chick’s Thunder Bird. These're tan bikini body Florida chicks -- just not as hot as my Afro-American friend-girl and helper with “steatopygia” I mentioned before. I've had big n petite.
jumbomojokat 2 weeks ago
@drmmhmd1
I almost forgot the shocking situation where my other business associate (a skinny little wrinkled balding old light-skinned black man with a soft voice and passive, but generally a nice guy most of the time) who smoked cigarettes dated seriously (publicly holding hands and all) a very attractive athletic Irish college student doctor under 22yrs old that I only playfully flirtatiously called into my business to make a sale to her standing in front of my business in her bikini!!!
jumbomojokat 2 weeks ago
@drmmhmd1
She would bring him flowers and love letters!!! He’s apparently familiar with Roots medicine and I know he’s a Santeria initiate who told me he had Shango. I guess he‘s into those chicks, so Shango let him have that. I have white witnesses of this phenomenon. I don’t care about young women (black or white, etc…) like that as I love my beautiful do-or-die Jamaican woman I’ve had since the 1990s. But, I brought this up because of your stereotype of black men with white women.
jumbomojokat 2 weeks ago
@drmmhmd1
I almost forgot to mention the “big fat Venus of Willendorf” found in Austria, West-Europe, that someone was obviously interested in to keep him warm in those cold Nordic winters. She is the ancestor of many Europeans and all Americans of part European ancestry. You have to admit that all men (“niggers, honky Tubaabu“, etc…) have always liked chicks like Saartjie Baartman, the Queen of Punt, Amanishakhito and Amanitore, and the Willendorf Venus at some point.
jumbomojokat 2 weeks ago
@jumbomojokat
sure you did nigger, smoke some more crack
drmmhmd1 2 weeks ago
@drmmhmd1
I “smoke crack” with my “crack pipe” as much as I can without shame -- the best “crack” that’s hairy on the outside and pink on the inside who’s been laying next to me with her super-sized natural Caribbean tits every night since the 1990s. You can call me the “crack man” on the “kude-pop” (literally “vagina-tight”) tip. I‘m into health and lift free Olympic heavy weights regularly (I haven‘t lifted over 400lbs on the bench in several months though) thus, the name “JUMBO”.
jumbomojokat 2 weeks ago
@drmmhmd1
African-American Vernacular (“AAV”): “kude-pop” (“vagina-tight, vagina”).
Kikongo (Congo/Zaire/Angola): “kiadi” (“vagina...”); “nkazi” (“wife”); “nkento” (“woman, wife”).
Chishona (Zimbabwe): “-kadzi” (“woman”).
Tadoro Nuba/Hill Nubian (Sudan): “kella” (“matriarch…”).
Kenuzi Nile Nubian (Sudan, Egypt): “kudi” (“second wife”).
Old Nubian (Sudan): “koudh” (“wife”).
Meroitic Kush (Sudan): “KaZI” (“woman”).
Twi (Ghana): “pape” (“tight, fast”); “pepe” (“firm, dense”).
jumbomojokat 2 weeks ago
@drmmhmd1
AAV: “jumbo” (“big, great, large…”).
Kimbundu (Angola): “nzamba” (“elephant”).
KiKongo (Angola version): “nzamba” (“elephant”).
Umbundu (“Angola”): “ondjamba” (“elephant”).
Ancient Egyptian transliteration: “khabu” (“hippopotamus”).
J=do=z; j(=ch)=kh.
I might be a natural athletic “mesomorph” (not bulky endomorph), but, I’ve built up so I’m not far from one over the years. People address me “big man” on the streets and not “slim” like when I was younger. I don't use drugs.
jumbomojokat 2 weeks ago
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@drmmhmd1 "funny how you niggers all want one, especially big fat ones. have you ever seen a white man chasing fat nigger bitches?" Answer to your question, yes I have
Jaydaravenstar 2 weeks ago
@drmmhmd1 White people are Neanderthals (Non-Human) why don't you go take a look at what your grandmother looks like.
RedMeatForDogs 2 weeks ago
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There are two variants of the black race: (a) straight-haired, represented in Asia by the Dravidians and in Africa by the Nubians and the Tubbou or Tedda, all three with jet-black skins; (b) the kinky-haired blacks of the Equatorial regions. Both types entered into the composition of the Egyptian population
Research: Badarian and Naqada Cultures
nightmarehammer 2 weeks ago
Well, these pictures don't lie. You can see the characteristics in the hair, nose and lips. Some Africans and black people have full lips, some thinner lips, other have a flat nose and some have slightly wide but pointed noses. Shows a true reflection. Nice video.
BeautyHealthZoneBlog 3 weeks ago
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Google: Princess Ahmose-Meryet-Amon images. you will be surprise at what you will see
RedMeatForDogs 3 weeks ago
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guys guys i am in the flesh IJAW a tribe in Nigeria and i discovered that the word KEME mean human being in my language is the same as KEMET
KEMEBABO = murderer, killer of man
KEMENANABO = lord, someone that owns people
thumbs up so people can see
check it out for urself googe KEME IJAW LANGUAGE
childofconvenant 3 weeks ago
@childofcovenant
5a) I know nothing at all about the language of the Ijaw people. But like most Guinea Coast West-Africans, I know that yall have a great tradition of spiritual sculpture like the Ancient Nubians and Ancient Egyptians did. I hope other Ijaw youths like you still speak your language fluently and make sure you teach the best and most constructive of your traditional culture to your children with pride. Encourage your African neighbors to do the same in their cultures in unity.
jumbomojokat 3 weeks ago
@childofcovenant
5b) If you haven’t mastered your language, then after you have, study its possible connections to the partially deciphered language of Meroitic Kush/Nubia which -- along with Napata Kush/Nubia -- is a link between living indigenous African cultures/people and that of Ancient Egypt. I’m sure that the Meroites had a different word for “human being” (I don’t have those notes in front of me now), but it doesn’t mean that there’re not other etymologies you will likely discover.
jumbomojokat 3 weeks ago
@childofcovenant
5c) In your etymological research the following list of related phonologies will help you. All vowels are related and interchangeable -- some more closely than others though.
A=e=i=y=u=w=v=b=p=f; m=b=p=f=v=w=u=o=a. N=m sometimes after certain labials like b, f, p. But n=l=r=d=t=th (i.e “think”)=dh=z=j=s=sh=ch=kh=k=g=q; ch=h=e=i.
Thus, when doing etymological comparisons, focus more on what the consonants are first, and then the vowels and tones.
jumbomojokat 3 weeks ago
@childofcovenant
5cc) I checked the Ijaw Dictionary your referred to and I saw that the Ijaw word “nana” (“own; possess; have…”) is relate to the Ancient Egyptian genitive (“ownership”) preposition “n” (“of, for, to, towards…”). “Nua” (“thanks”) looks like the “dua” (“praise”) in the Ancient Egyptian “dua-Nouter” (“thanks” -- literally “praise God/Neter”). But, I suspect an element in the Ijaw word is likely the pronoun “you” that’s often a vowel in Niger-Congo languages.
jumbomojokat 3 weeks ago
@childofcovenant
5ccc) Also, I saw the verbs “na” (“hear; understand”) and “nemi” (“know”) which are sources of the African-American verb “nah” in the phrase “nah mean” (“understand what I mean”) in a regional (urban northeastern) dialect of African-American Vernaculars (“AAV”). This Ijaw word’s related to the Mende word “ndo” (“to find out by investigation”), the Bambara “don” (“to know”) and Geechee American “duh” (“know”)…
jumbomojokat 3 weeks ago
@childofcovenant
5cccc)…And these African words converged with each other among African-Diasporans and the English word “know”. But, the multi-ethnic predominantly African AAV/Gullah-Geechee versions (“nah” and “duh”) of these Ijaw words “na” and “nemi” betray its Ijaw, Mende and Bambara origins despite its obvious convergence with the English word “know”. I also see that the Ijaw number “nei” (4) is the same in Fulani “nai” (4) and Georgia Geechee “nai” (4).
jumbomojokat 3 weeks ago
@childofcovenant
5ccccc) Still, I see that you’re young and many Africans my age an older tell me that they’re struggling to teach their youths to not use foreign words when they speak their indigenous African languages. A good Soninke friend of mine (who speaks 13 languages) told me that he can speak better Wolof to Wolof elders than some of their own children who use French words every few Wolof words -- and they’re in their African land.
jumbomojokat 3 weeks ago
@childofcovenant
5cccccc) But, I say that to say this, if you know your language well and you can confirm the accuracy of this dictionary, good. But, if not, then double check with the oldest traditional conservative Ijaws you can find and produce a superior list to augment the one you mentioned if it’s not “Ijaw enough” to truly see how related it is to what’s deciphered of Ancient Egypt/Meroe for a possible full decipherment by Africans who might know a living cognate.
jumbomojokat 3 weeks ago
@childofcovenant
5d) The importance of peaceful and considerate African unity WITH cultural conservatism that I spoke of at (5a) is the fact that -- beyond the obvious socially stabilizing benefits conducive to self-security and independent modern technical progress -- is the fact that most (if not all) Africans have kept some element of Ancient Egyptian/Meroitic Nubian culture that could all be “re-assembled” together to recreate one big continental wide and Diaspora “mega-Kemet/Meroe”.
jumbomojokat 3 weeks ago
@childofcovenant
5dd) This could be an African reality if more intelligent Africans wanted it as evidenced by with just Nigeria (the so-called “Slave Coast”) alone as only one of many examples across the entire African continent, among all Nigeria’s cultures is literally almost every cultural element present to be re-assembled (like the “re-assembly of the divided body of Osiris”) into one big modern indigenous African continental mega-Kemet/Meroe.
jumbomojokat 3 weeks ago
@childofcovenant
5ddd) It is known that “In 1839…the British explorer Hutchinson noted the presence of women’s ’hieroglyphics’ in Old Calabar” [Thompson, Robert Farris “Flash of the Spirit: African and Afro-American Art and Philosophy”, 1983, pg 248]. Similar ideographic symbols were conserved from Kalabar in Afro-Cuban “Abakua” and other signs (apparently mostly Igbo) in African-American Underground Railroad quilt patterns used to send secret messages to escaping “slaves”.
jumbomojokat 3 weeks ago
@childofcovenant
5dddd) Like your Ijaw people, the Bini have an “alter to the hand” that is related to the Egyptian idea of a “ka” (“spirit essence“ represented by raised arms and hands); the “-ko” in the Coptic word “tchinko” (“what’s set, nature, fashion”); the Igbo words “ike“ (“essence energy power“), “chi” (“spirit, soul”), “aka” (“hand, arm”); and the Yoruba word “ashe“ (“spiritual power essence“).
jumbomojokat 3 weeks ago
@childofcovenant
5ddddd) Additionally, the Bini, Ile-Ife Yoruba, and Igbo have the royal serpent diadem that the Yoruba call “ere” (“uraeus“ in Greek). The Ancient Egyptian form is “ara-t” or “aar-t” (“uraeus cobra”), and a Coptic etymon is “ale” (“to go up, mount, go on board” like a cobra “rises up” and “mounts” the head of royalty) -- R=L. From the Fon, Yoruba and Kongo, the African-Diaspora kept this in the forms of Oxumare, Damballah (“ndamba” in Kongo) and Ayida-Hwedo.
jumbomojokat 3 weeks ago
@childofcovenant
5dddddd) Your Ejagham and Ile-Ife neighbors have the “obelisk”. The Esie, Igbo, Oron, Adah/Adda, and Yoruba Nigerians have the plaited beard custom associated with divine royalty like the Egyptian and Nubian pharaohs were divine. In sculpture at least, the Bini (and Bembe Kongo) have kept the layered locks of Ancient Egypt/Meroe. The Yoruba have the side-lock of a “hunter/youth” like Ancient Egypt. The Egyptian pantheon is significantly intact in Nigeria.
jumbomojokat 3 weeks ago
@childofcovenant
5ddddddd) Towards the north, the Fulani (Egypt descent), Hausa (Afro-Asiatic) and Tuareg (Afro-Asiatic) have conserved the Ancient Egyptian “ankh” sign of life, and the Fulani have kept the word “ankh” in the form of “yonki” (“life”). Hausa architecture is domestic Egyptian all day as is traditional Nigerian clothing. The Tuareg and Fulani have a square pectoral as does the Bini in the south. Most Africans have the Sacred Ram, and Bini Nigerians have the ibis as a symbol.
jumbomojokat 3 weeks ago
@childofcovenant
5dddddddd) Indigenous African sculptural realisms reached their peak not in Ancient Egypt, Napata or Meroe, but in Nigeria at Ile-Ife. Igbo have Egypt-Nubian ring money. The Yoruba have the crown of Upper Egypt that they call “ade”. Most traditional Africans (especially West-Africans, Bantu, and Nilotes) conserved the tradition of divine royalty. The Kanuri (Nubians) have “queen mothers, queen consorts and royal sisters". Thus, Nigeria still has the equivalent of “pharaohs”.
jumbomojokat 3 weeks ago
@childofcovenant
5ddddddddd) The construction of the Igbo “doors of honor” (“mgbo ezi”) is identical to Ancient Egyptian doors -- especially the Egyptian hieroglyph for a “door”. And the Igbo are known to have built stepped pyramids for alters which is a continuum from Meroe-Kush/Nubia, Napata-Kush/Nubia, and Ancient Egypt where, at least as far back as the New Kingdom, the pyramid was used as an alter place to make offerings for the deceased. The Jukun slept on headrest of their own style.
jumbomojokat 3 weeks ago
@childofcovenant
5dddddddddd) I have photographs of red coral (or bauxite?) netted broad collars for women that I saw and handled in a Nigerian store some years ago, and have also seen the same necklace in a Nigeria magazine (I have a photo of that one as well). I’m pretty sure they’re Edo/Bini. And they weren’t too expensive either. The Bini also have the royal beaded “flail” flywhisk (the Fon of Togo have the “crook”). Many Africans circumcise.
jumbomojokat 3 weeks ago
@childofcovenant
5ddddddddddd) The Igbo have a strongly silhouetted rigidly posed style of painting that’s related to Meroitic, Napatan, Ancient Egyptian and prehistoric Saharan folk murals -- all have a strong outline where the characters are in profile while the eyes are anterior. The Igbo style converged with the “Bushman” style and the European “Black-a-Moor” coat of arms style throughout the African-Diaspora and has been described as “typical” of African-American Vernacular folk art.
jumbomojokat 3 weeks ago
@childofcovenant
5e) SUMMERY: Just Nigeria alone has Ancient Egypt/Napata/Meroe styled traditional spirituality, divine government, crowns, royal serpents and other regalia, architecture, hieroglyphs, sculpture, groom (twists, side locks, plaited beards), attire, adornment (ankhs, broad collars, pectorals), alters, pyramids, vocabulary, headrests, murals, etc… to re-assemble Kemet/Meroe without loosing their traditional cultures which are the living evidence of their Kemet/Meroe humanities.
jumbomojokat 3 weeks ago
@childofcovenant
5ee) And I could do similar things with like (not identical) comparisons with almost any other part of sub-Saharan Africa that still has its indigenous cultures in tact. For example, the old version of the Vai writing system of Liberia has conserved abstracted (and sometimes identical) versions of all of the Meroitic characters (which are simplified Egyptian characters) while the Ethiopians have conserved the Meroitic punctuation system entirely.
jumbomojokat 3 weeks ago
@childofcovenant
5eee) The Amhara have a Christianized version of the Ancient Egyptian "Chapters of Going Forth into the Day" where essentially the Dynastic Egyptian names were replaced with biblical characters. Significantly, an informed individual only needs to know both versions well and extract the original Ancient Egyptian essence and magnify it.
jumbomojokat 3 weeks ago
@childofcovenant
5eeee6) I have even done similar reassemblies with the Africanisms in African-Diaspora cultures -- including us in the U.S. with traditional African Voodoo culture, etc... I know some may cringe at first, but being that African-Americans are predominantly African and part European by authentic blood, I even extract the Africanisms out of MY European blood heritage which includes the old African characters from which the Greco-Roman alphabet was developed. The Africa we know.
jumbomojokat 3 weeks ago
6a) By authentic blood DNA, I extract and magnify the originally Egyptian Africanisms out of The 10 Commandments, Free Masonry, astrological signs, astronomy, Greco-Latin terms of obvious Egyptian origins, mathematics, sciences, etc… so that my culture manifests itself as predominantly African as African-Americans are. Why not? Whites made sure we had the blood and the “acculturation” which is full of Egyptian Africanisms. So, it’s now mine to extract what I want legitimately.
jumbomojokat 3 weeks ago
6aa) Even entertaining the false idea that “…CAUCASIAN white people [actually their black instructors] built the great ancient Egyptian civilization…the titan race of CAUCASIANS…continued their great march of progress…” as ThirdConfession so eloquently put it, this still means that their recent African-American blood relatives also descend from those same alleged “Titanium White CAUCASIAN people who allegedly built the truly great ancient civilization of Kemet”…
jumbomojokat 3 weeks ago
6aaa) …The only difference being that the African-American recent blood relatives of these hypothetical “CAUCASIAN Titans” of “Kemet” (“Black Nation”) still resemble the murals of Ancient Kemet that even the Egyptians clearly admired being that they had themselves represented in sculpture thus even if their mummies don’t always match with what they found attractive, valuable and worth sculpting forever in granite.
jumbomojokat 3 weeks ago
@jumbomojokat The Titan race is an fictional Caucasoid race invented by White supremacists. There was never such a thing as "Titans", nothing but a good joke!
amasonga 2 weeks ago
@amasonga
7a) I know which is why I called it a “false idea“ and “hypothetical” at posts 6aa-6aaa. My “Titan” comment was pure sarcasm -- a true “joke” -- to show that no matter what angle you come from, you can’t separate blacks from Ancient Egyptian history which I of all people know is indigenous Black History.
jumbomojokat 2 weeks ago
@jumbomojokat Not all cultures of Africa are intact as you think. Some were contaminated by European ideologies especially in recent colonial times. Remember, European colonialists tried their best to erase indigenous African cultures especially when they saw good in it. This was a way to propagate their culture above others!
amasonga 2 weeks ago
@amasonga
7b) I know that as well my brother which is why I say to identify and magnify what does still survive intact in indigenous African culture -- some of which I listed here and outlined elsewhere. Of course, this is if Africans or the African-Diaspora want it rather than just sit passively and unnecessarily accept totally avoidable absolute cultural annihilation which hasn’t happened -- yet. There’s still enough that survives to be salvaged for that purpose if we ever apply ourselves.
jumbomojokat 2 weeks ago
@amasonga
7bb) If you see “good in it”, then don’t let it go. Find the possible contaminants, extract and discard them. Use Ancient Egyptian/Meroittic culture as standards because these records predate non-African contamination (or existence) to a degree. It’s really not as difficult as one may think because much survives in material culture as well as abstract ideologically -- at least it’s not too difficult for me because of my long conscious “pre-google” research spanning 20yrs now.
jumbomojokat 2 weeks ago
@amasonga
7bbb) Some of us allow “European colonialists” (or “family destabilizes” pushing drugs and immoral pop culture to our youth) to do things to us that we could avoid. Some of us participate via inaction or by allowing others to divide us against each other, etc… The European colonialist administrative policy was to “act upon the Negro by means of the Negro” via “Indirect Rule”. Some of us sold each other and helped these European colonialist like some still do today.
jumbomojokat 2 weeks ago
@amasonga
I’m a new initiate into interior African spirituality as it exist in the African-Diaspora for a couple of years now though I’ve studied as a scholar for about 20yrs. I’ve consulted an elderly Voodoo “houngan” (“priest”) for longer than I’ve been a practitioner. I’m scheduled to enter another “stage” tomorrow where there will be “ebo” (“sacrifice”). I’m sure you’re much younger than me, so you have more time to do more culturally and academically. Soar eternally like Horu! Hotep.
jumbomojokat 2 weeks ago
@amasonga not a single culture in Africa and the world is intact we are one big melting pot but one can still see the essence
childofconvenant 2 weeks ago
@amasonga the essence can still be seen even when African adopted Christianity the essence of the Hebraic Afro divinity couldn't be lost check out the way Christianity is practiced in Nigeria.
childofconvenant 2 weeks ago
@jumbomojokat yes i know that money i still have it with me or i think i may have lost it. It is called igbi = my dialect, igbigi = okrika, kalabari ijaws or igbogi= nembe ijaw.
childofconvenant 2 weeks ago