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From: Ocacia
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  • @LunarSunny

    14a) Salamulekum. Wana talk?

  • I wonder, why he did not mention Phoenicians, Israelites, Palestinians, Arabs? Natural neightbors who has influenced a thousands of years! Each of them have much longer and bigger influence to Egypt than English or Frenchs who has there only some years.

    If he dont know that, I can't listeh he seriosly! And his neightbor can be from Nubia. There was a thousand years influence from black Nubia too!

    I thin Egyptians was and is now similar to Palestinians.

  • @Bezdievis what the hell does ottomans mean.how old are you? 12?.

  • @ohmphthschwrhu Phoenicians 1200 BC–539 BC. Settled Carthage (now Tunisia, Sardinia, Lybia, Marocco). Also with greeks settled Egypt. White peoples!

    The "Ottomans" became first known to the West in 1227 when they migrated westward into the Seljuk Empire, in Anatolia.

    There was white peoples in Egypt at least a 2000 years before Ottomans!

    Arab Caliphate from 632 year. (600 years before Ottomans)

    Is a lot of ancient pictures with white egyptian and black nubian in opposite!

  • @Bezdievis black Nubia? Why not just Nubia? Afterall, both the Egyptians and Nubians were black Africans.

  • You Tube is restricting me to ~186 letter characters I can post at a time, and this restriction shows the power in my posts to draw attention and alarm on such a frivolous subject as Ancient Egypt.

  • @LunarSunny

    You Tube is sometimes giving me problems posting sufficient enough letter characters to communicate sufficiently as now while I’m trying to post 8a2, then I’ll answer your questions.

  • Apparently, I’m regularly (not always) being restricted by You Tube to the 2 lines I posted at A8a @LunarSunny.

  • @LunarSunny and the rest of yall

    You Tube is regularly decreasing the number of letter characters I can post for some reason which is more inconvenient than it is worth the trouble. I’ve posted enough for you to learn from and cross reference for now. I’ll likely only post short document references in the future if at all. I have no time for ad hoc and red herring arguments. We already know the truth -- outsiders are here trying to convince us to believe them. We know the truth. Hotep. Baibai.

  • @jumbomojokat

    outsiders??? you are the outsider here ,man !

    Sudanese are my brothers ,as much as the Turks , Ethiopians are my brothers , as much as the Arabs , why would I deny my brotherhoods?

  • @LunarSunny

    A8) You asked “why would I deny my brotherhoods?”, and one (not me) might respond “because THE BROTHERS IN THIS VIDEO JUST DENIED YOU” if you’re more “pale Arab/Turkish looking”. It's apparent that “you’re the outsider here” on this web page as no one agrees with you here -- not even your alleged “Sudanese brothers” in this video. I DON’T KNOW, maybe they’re your brothers too in part, but they’re definitely my AFRICAN brothers also…

  • @LunarSunny

    A8a) …I look like an “in-between” of both of them, and the brother in black looks almost like my father in the 1970s with his mustache. You couldn’t tell me apart from them.

  • @LunarSunny

    A8aa) Okay, they’re letting me post again for now. Anyway, [you couldn’t tell me from them] if I spoke with their accents as I’ve played this trick on both blacks and non-blacks in the past when I was younger. Actually, I don’t recall any people in my family as black as the brother in the “jalabiya” in this video, and more are lighter than the speaking brother even sometimes with the same curly hair and all with 2 black parents.

  • @LunarSunny

    A8aaa) …Again, you couldn’t tell me apart from these “Sudanese brothers” of yours in this video -- and neither could they tell me from themselves either as East-Africans have mistaken me for them before and they have even claimed me insistently after I told them I was African-American -- and I‘m very proud to be a member of such a people of survivors, accomplished scientists and inventors who‘s freedom struggles are known world wide.

  • @LunarSunny

    A8cc) I never asked you to deny ANY of your true “brethren” as you can’t choose one or two without the rest, and neither do you have the legitimate authority to do such “choosing” as Africans are senior to all other non-Africans on this planet. Interior Africans are the first of mankind, the oldest children of God -- even older than Ancient Egypt, and it is interior Africans who have the ultimate authority to do any choosing as the “original man” and not “outsiders”.

  • @LunarSunny

    A8ccc) As the old African saying goes: “No matter how fast you run, you can’t leave your back-side behind. No matter how much you try, you can’t deny your father”. The black man is the first man, so, like Vader told Skywalker, “I’m your father” and you can never deny us legitimately in truth. So, you might as well just “join the dark side of the Kemetic force Princes Luna”. What kind of dreams are you having Lunar?

  • @jumbomojokat

    Interior Africans can be the first of mankind. I don't argue that .I argue a man saying I am not descended of my ancestors(Ancient Egyptians) without giving any evidence.I am arguing a man who is ignorant !

  • @jumbomojokat

    Man, I know Egyptians from Alexandria(North of Egypt) who have the same skin color as this man in this video , what are you gonna allege now?that invaders occupied Egypt and the original Egyptians(whose ancestors are Ancient Egyptians)are living in Alexandria?I can tell you the same thing about different parts of Egypt , now where would ORIGINAL Egyptians be living?My Answer:They are all over Egypt , what is your answer?

  • @LunarSunny

    10a) The Egyptians in this video (your “brothers”) already answered this question for you, and I agree with them -- your Egyptian historical records tell you this as well as your modern Islamic culture in Egypt. I’m sure that there’re Egyptians like these guys in Cairo -- they’re the indigenous people of Egypt while others aren’t and you know it. Your predominantly Semitic culture and language reflects this mixed reality as does mine its Afro-Caucasian reality in the U.S.

  • @jumbomojokat

    you can't point to an Egyptian(any Egyptian,north ,south ,Muslim,Christian,Atheist,or whatever )and say that he is indigenous and the other is not ,that is(practically) impossible! And there is no historical records or evidence to support this Theory of yours,I am not even sure we can call it theory,it is pseudoscience !

  • @LunarSunny

    11a) The book by Moustafa Gadalla (a modern Egyptian) “Exiled Egyptians: The Heart of Africa“, © 1999; Wahb ibn Munabbeh (Arab/Iraqi?); El Mas’udi (Arab/Iraqi?); Sultan Mohamed Bello (Fulani) of Sokoto, Nigeria; the Kanem-Bornu Asben records; Herodotus of Greece, Diodorus of Sicily and the Ethiopians/Kushites he interviewed, the Egyptian brothers in this video; the name “Kemet/Keme”, etc… all say Ancient Egyptians were “blacks” and/or some Africans descend from them…

  • @jumbomojokat

    1-there're other books saying otherwise !

    2-let's assume that Ancient Egyptian were black,modern Egyptian are black too !

    3-let's assume that Ancient Egyptians are white,modern Egyptian are white too !

    4-Ancient Egyptian were mixed black/white,impossible to separate them from each other!

    DIG?!

  • @LunarSunny

    12a) Ai kun dig it. But, you know it’s not exactly like you say at all. Again, YouTube is giving me trouble posting. I have other things to do. Check: PHARAOH SANDERS “YOU GOT TO HAVE FREEDOM”, Earth Wind & Fire “CAN’T HIDE LOVE”, Ahmad Jamal “DIALOGUE” and “SWAHILILAND”, and “AQUELLAS GAVIOTAS” by the Afro-Cuban Latin Jazz Project -- it’s kool jazz.

  • @LunarSunny

    12b) You posted “there’re other books saying otherwise!”, & I’m sure most (or all) of those books aren’t older than the 1700s (Western calendars), because all of the books that I’m aware of that are older than the 1700s consistently agree with my position on the Ancient Egyptians…

  • @LunarSunny

    12bb) …The idea of a non-black Egypt is not older than modern Egyptology (around 1790s to present)…

  • @LunarSunny

    12bbb) …Firearms lead to black-only chattel slavery which lead to the idea of white supremacy which was challenged by the example of a historically black Ancient Egypt...

  • @LunarSunny

    12bbbb) ...So, in the late 1700s, Europeans (not Arabs, Turks or anyone else) started to write that the Ancient Egyptians weren’t black because they were accomplished...

  • @LunarSunny

    12bbbbb) …Before the 1700s, no one wrote about a non-black Egypt to my knowledge.

  • @jumbomojokat

    So ,before 1700s ,all books were about black Egypt?!!

  • @LunarSunny

    13a) Look, this relationship just isn’t working out. All we do is fuss and argue -- we can’t seem to see things eye-to-eye (because I’m so tall). When writers before the 1700s described the Ancient Egyptians, they described them as either “black” (often including “woolly-haired”) and/or as “descendents of Ham” who’s been described as the “Ancestor of the Negroes” and “Palestinians” (a.k.a. “Philistines” or “Phoenicians”) in “Canaan“ -- the sons of “Canaan” @Bezdievis.

  • @jumbomojokat

    not exactly as I say HOW?!

  • @LunarSunny

    13b) I already told you throughout posts numbered “12“. But, this relationship is over until you can get yourself together.

  • Yall Kulluh-fo, yall Gullah-boi er Gichi-boi, yall Patwa-bo dem er Qashi-bo dem 'n yall Ginen-fo er Gini-fo all no wut da tam bi -- da Kammeu-fo eh Kemet bi kame-bakke-balak, n Kemet bi en Gini. BIM!!!

  • @jumbomojokat

    Is this your mother language?what is its name?Translate what you said here!

  • @LunarSunny

    9a) This is the 2nd time you’ve asked me this question already, and I’ve answered you in direct detail at my posts numbered 4a (the last 4 lines), 4aa, ESPECIALLY 6c through 6cccccc and 6f -- and maybe some other places also. I guess you didn’t “dig” (“understand”) the first time at post 4a…

  • @LunarSunny

    9aa) Kullud/Kulluh/Gullah/AAV: “dig” (“to understand, to comprehend, to know…”).

    Wolof (Senegal-Gambia): “deg” or “dega” (“to understand”).

    Bambara (Mali): “dege” (“to learn, to teach”)…

    Thus, our Kulluh/Gullah, etc… regional vernacular dialects reflect our multi-ethnic predominantly African African-American linguistic heritage. Yuh dig? Yuh ed Oke?!

  • @LunarSunny

    9aaa) A rough translation is: “You African-Americans, you Gullah-Geechees, you Jamaicans [and other Islanders] and you Africans all know what time it is -- the Hamites of Ancient Egypt are black-black-black, and Egypt is in Africa. MATERIALIZE!!!” “Bim” is okey and I’ve used it for this purpose before. But “bam” is actually more accurate to me. BAM!!! Oke?! Now, translate your Arabic. I’ll know if you told the truth sooner or later.

  • @jumbomojokat

    LOL...Actually what I said I already re-wrote it in English..when I talked in Arabic I was addressing the man in The video saying"it is shame of you to say what you said about your people,there're Egyptians with white skin color South/Upper Egypt,where did they come from , are they foreigners as you say..if they're foreigners ,then so are you !"

  • @LunarSunny

    9aaaa1) I already gave you the etymologies of “Kulluh, Gullah, Gini and Ginen” (K=G) at posts 6c through 6cccccc. The AAV plural 2nd person pronoun “yall” is a convergence between the English “you all”, the Yoruba “yin” (“yall”) and KiKongo “yeno” (“yall”) -- L=N. “Geechee” is PARTIALLY from the “Kissy” Liberian part of our mixed African heritage. The English “all” converged with the Yoruba “al-” or “alo-” (“general, every”) in AAV…

  • @LunarSunny

    9aaaa2) …The word “Patwa” (Jamaican Afro-English Creole) is PARTIALLY a retention of the Akan “Twi” (the “Akan Language”), and the Patwa word “Qashi” (“a black person, black man”) is a retention of the Twi words “kusu” (“dark”) and “kwasi” (“a boy born on Sunday”) -- and the Twi “kusu” is comparable to the Dinka “koch” (“people”) which is the origins of the Ancient Egyptian word “Kush” (“Sudan, Sudanese”) -- SH=CH.

  • @LunarSunny

    9aaaa3) The AAV “-fo” (“people, folks”) is directly from the Twi “fo” (“person, people”) and a convergence with the Vai “mo” (“person, mankind, somebody”) as well as the English “folk“ (“people“). The Gullah-Geechee “-boi” and the Patwa “-bo” are just regional dialectal variations of the same Afro-English convergence.

  • @LunarSunny

    9aaaaa) …The AAV verb “no” (“know”) is a convergence with the English “know” and the Mende “ndo” (“to find out by investigation”) and Bambara “don” (“to know”) as is evidenced by the deeper more regional Gullah-Geechee “duh“ (“to know“). The AAV “wut” or “wuh” is a convergence between the Bambara interrogative particle “wa?”, the Hausa equivalent “wonne?” and the English “what?”. T=D=R=L=N.

  • @LunarSunny

    9aaaaaa) …The AAV “tam” (“time”) is a convergence between the Mandingo “tumo” (“time”), the Wolof “tei” (“today”) and the English “time“ -- and the Wolof form “tei” is related to the Sa’idic Coptic Egyptian “te” (“time, season”) which originates from the Ancient Egyptian “ta” (or “at” = “time, moment”).

  • @LunarSunny

    9aaaaaaa) …the AAV adverb “bi” (“is, are, am…”) is directly from the Bambara “be” (“is”) which is from the Nubian “fi” or “fei” (“to be”) and a convergence with the English “be” -- B=P=F. The Gullah-Geechee “bakke” (“black”) is directly from the Hausa “bakki” (“black”). And the AAV “balak” (“black”) is a convergence between the Serer-Sin “bal-ig” (“black”) and the English “black” -- K=G...

  • @LunarSunny

    9aaaaaaaa) The Afro-English definite article “da” (“the”) is one of many Ancient Egyptian and Coptic Africanisms in Old World European languages that’s obviously the PARTIAL result of Greco-Roman influence on other Western languages after the Greco-Romans were influenced by Africans from Ancient Egypt and Nubia who they were inspired by -- that “concept of cultural exchange” again you wrote about.

  • @LunarSunny

    9b) For more information on such convergences, check:

    Holloway, Joseph E “Africanisms in American Culture”, © 2005 (1990).

    Turner, Lorenzo Dow “Africanisms in the Gullah Dialect”, © 2002 (1949).

    Cassidy, Frederic Gomes “Dictionary of Jamaican English”, © 2002 (1967?).

    This phenomenon is well known and documented in cultural scientific communities. But, again, of course you do “understand the concept of cultural exchange“.

  • @LunarSunny

    9c) I guess one could call it “Kulluh Swag” (“African-American Pride”) that motivates me.

    Kulluh/AAV: “swag” (“style, pride…”).

    Gullah-Geechee: “swanggo” (“to be proud, haughty, arrogant, hate-magnetizing style”).

    Mende: “suango” (“haughty, selfish, evil…”).

    Umbundu: “suangula” (“to gloat, mock”); “esangi” (“ potentially annoying exultation and exuberance”).

    Ancient Egyptian transliteration: “suaga” (“to curse, to ban”); “saqu” (“to behave haughtily”).

  • @LunarSunny

    9cc) Check: Turner, Lorenzo Dow “Africanisms in the Gullah Dialect”, 2002 (1949), pages 201-2.

    Holloway, Joseph E. “Africanisms in American Culture”, 2005 (1990).

    Budge, Sir E. A. W. “An Egyptian Hieroglyphic Dictionary: Vol. 2”, 1978 (1920), pages 649b, 639b.

  • @jumbomojokat

    no , i didn't get what you said about you mother language , for Example when you ask me the same question I'll say Arabic ,not saying multi-ethnic African Arabic-Egyptian dialect..whatsoever...it takes one word to answer this question not a paragraph !

    Also, it is unusual to me when you deal with a language or religion as an expression of belonging to any ethnic group..maybe it is right in your case, but doesn't apply to many people ...Egyptians are one example !

  • @LunarSunny

    9aaaa) Sometimes people pretend that they can’t understand what others are saying to them. Thus, I tend to answer questions thoroughly to attempt to leave no room for misunderstandings which is a tactic that clearly is not always full-proof as evidenced by your responses to my posts. Anyway, I’m having trouble posting and will attempt to post etymologies of my Kulluh/AAV texts...

  • @Bsmurfdizzle

    you are just racist like any other white men you hate. It is disappointing that African American man like you believe that racism is something good and should be passed to the next generations.Racist White men conquered your mind !

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  • 5a) To avoid misunderstanding, I just wanted to add there’s nothing wrong at all if one’s not related to Ancient Egyptians even if one lives there as Arabs, Turks, Copts, Greeks, Italian/Romans, Syrians, Palestinians/Philistines/Phoen­icians, Jews/Hebrews, Persians, Hindus, etc… are all just people like the ANCIENT Egyptians were just people -- one not any more special than the other and all having learned from their far more ancient Ancient Egyptian/Kushite instructors.

  • 5b) Still, being that the Ancient Egyptians were their instructors, some of them very well might also be some of their Ancestors as well if they were in contact enough with them to instruct them either as acculturated slaves, immigrants, diplomatic exchange, or visors, intercultural marriages that we know took place as is recorded in Ancient Egyptian texts, as slaves themselves to their former slaves, etc… -- all of which is recorded in contemporary literature and art…

  • 5bb) …just as is the case with Ancient Egypt’s relations with the rest of Africa who first contributed to the very beginnings of Ancient Egyptian culture and then reabsorbed the Ancient Egyptians back into their indigenous African cultures when the Ancient Egyptians returned there as migrants and refugees escaping Assyrian, Roman, Arab slave raider caravans just to find themselves as sometimes newly nomadic and sometimes sedentary urban ethnic minorities in Africa…

  • 5bbb) …and vulnerable again to later African slave raiders selling them (as Fulani, Mandingo, Hausa, Tuareg, Kanuri, Yoruba, Akan, etc…) to European slave ships to contribute to who multi-ethnic predominantly African African-Americans like me are today as well as to those European-Americans who are partially African by DNA and/or cultural influence.

  • 5c) Again, Ancient Egyptian texts record that Ancient Egyptian men reproduced with Asiatic women (even though those same texts seem to indicate that Asiatic men didn’t regularly do so consensually with Ancient Egyptian women who were allowed to marry Nubian men as the Stele of Nenu demonstrates). That reality may have been a reason for the “darker-skinned male and lighter-skinned woman” color scheme that’s almost typical (not exclusively so) of Ancient Egyptian folk art silhouettes…

  • 5cc) …silhouettes (which are, by the way, an art style related to silhouettes from the ancient Sahara, Igbo Nigerians, Khoi-San “Bushman” rock silhouettes, Haitian silhouettes and Afro-American silhouette arts with hard bold edges, etc…), and even European silhouettes of family crest coat of arms “Black-a-Moors“. There’s even one Ancient Egyptian mural that shows Asiatics bringing Asiatic slaves (at least one a naked little girl) to Egypt just like there’re similar images of Nubians there…

  • 5ccc) …But, apparently the bulk of any mixing that was going on in Egypt was generally darker-skinned men (including Nubian archers like Nenu) with lighter-skinned women. Still, King Monthuhotep’s wives were “Nubian” chicks just like the divine queen mother who‘s name is often rendered “Ahmose Nefertari“ is often (if not exclusively) beautifully rendered “South Sudanese black“ in complexion.

  • 5d) Again, because Ancient Egypt is very ancient compared to Arabic culture and Islam, the Ancient Egyptian “Africanisms” in Arabic/Islamic culture are what Ancient Egyptian culture contributed to Arabic/Islamic culture as is evidenced by a number of factors a few of which I’ll illuminate here.

  • 5dd)

    Arabic: “Allah” (“God”); “Ali” (“Most High”).

    Semitic: “El” or “Elohiem” (“God”).

    Coptic: “hrai” (“upper part”); “Hor“ (“Horus“).

    Ancient Egyptian: “Hru” (“Sky God, High God, Horus”); “hrit” (“sky, heaven…”); “hriu” (“upper part, what’s above”).

    Meroitic-Kushite/Nubian: “Ar” (“Horus”).

    Soninke language of Mali: “Hari” (“God”).

    R=L.

  • 5ddd) The textual evidence that the name of the Ancient Egyptian God “Horu” (“Horus” in Greek) means “High, Above…” is supported by the Ancient Egyptians themselves on plate 19 and line 7 (from the right of the plate) of the “Papyrus of Ani” (or “Ancient Egyptian Book of the Dead”) where they “poetically” connect (as was their custom to show word relations) their word transliterating “hrit” (“sky, heaven…”) with “Horu” saying: “He [Horu] traverses \the\ sky [hrit], He’s Horu…”.

  • 5dddd)

    Arabic: “du’a” (“prayer”).

    Ancient Egyptian transliteration: “dua” or “dwa” (“to pray, worship, praise, honor, adore; to address, to make report” -- this is the very first word at the very beginning of the so-called “Egyptian book of the Dead“ properly translated the “Chapters of Going Forth into the Day“).

    Sa’idic Coptic Egyptian: “taeu” or “taeio”, etc… (“to adorn, to honor, to pay respect to”)…

  • 5ddddd)

    …Achmimic Coptic Egyptian: “taeio”, etc… (“to adorn, to honor…”).

    Bohairic Coptic Egyptian: “taeio”, etc… (“to adorn, to honor…”).

    Fayyumic Coptic Egyptian: “taeie-”, etc… (“to adorn, to honor…”).

    Yoruba Nigerian/Benin: “te” (“to worship, to adorn”).

    Hebrew: “yeda” (“to praise, to thank”).

    Fulani West-African: “yilo” or “yulo” (“to call; to go for”).

  • 5dddddd) So, as can be seen from posts numbered 5dddd and 5ddddd, in this case the Arabic word is far closer (if not identical) to its Ancient Egyptian etymon (as ascertained from the arrangement of glyphs) than their Coptic Egyptian or Yoruba Nigerian etymons where these last 2 are closer to each other in pronunciation -- the Coptic Egyptian and Yoruba Nigerian versions are closer to each other than these particular Coptic Egyptian etymons are to their Ancient Egyptian versions.

  • 5ddddddd)

    Arabic: “salam” (“peace” -- used in greetings).

    Hebrew: “shalom” (“peace” -- used in greetings).

    Fulani: “mjarama” (a greeting, “greetings”).

    Ancient Egyptian transliteration: “sharma” (“peace, content”).

  • 5e) Just as is the case with other writing systems in the region (including West-African Vai and Tuareg), even the modern Arabic script has a number of characters that are of Ancient Egyptian demotic and hieratic origins as are exemplified by the Arabic characters named “alif, ba, jim, ha (the guttural one), kha, dal, dhal, sin, shin, fa, lam, nun, waw, ya” for just a few examples.

  • 5f) Neither Islam nor Judaism has a tradition of spiritually charged religious sculpture inherited from Ancient Egyptian culture like some interior African and African-Diaspora cultures do. The only people in Egypt who still have a tradition of religious sculpture are Copts. The only problem is that all 3 of these (Judaism, Christianity, Islam) are scripturally openly hostile to Ancient Egyptian culture whereas Africa’s is less hostile (even friendly) to its Ancient Egyptian “denomination”.

  • 5g) Sufism is called the “Santeria of North Africa” because it’s Ancient Egyptian and Ancient Nubian spirituality with the façade of Islam like Afro-Cuban Santeria is significantly (if not predominantly) Yoruba spirituality with a façade of Catholicism as Haitian Voodoo is significantly Fon and Ewe spirituality with a façade of Catholicism as well. Like a true African religion, Sufism venerates ancestral “saints” and involves spirit possession (trances, ecstasy) though still Islamic-looking…

  • 5gg) …The focus of Sufism is the “PURIFICATION OF THE HEART” just like in Orisha/Santeria/Ifa where “GOOD CHARACTER” is the highest virtue. This “Purification of the Heart” is a remnant of Ancient Egyptian, Napatan and Meroitic spirituality as is recorded in the religious folk arts of all of these indigenous Nile Valley spiritual systems. In Santeria the focus is on a “GOOD HEAD” just like one of the Ancient Egyptian spellings for a “heart” uses a lion's head as a glyph…

  • 5ggg) …Although Sufism’s becoming popular with modern Egyptian elites, in Islamic Egypt it was traditionally considered the tradition of the “poor class” (and we all know what that often means in Africa -- “blacks”). The Beja and other Mahdist were/are Sufi for one example. Traditionally the same in the African-Diaspora with Voodoo, Santeria, Candomble, Orixa, etc… The Sudanese “qubba” is a rounded conical steep Islamic version of a Nubian pyramid.

  • 5h) Along with Sufism as the “Santeria of North-Africa” there’s also “Zar” spirituality called “Modern Egyptian Voodoo” and “Northeast-African Voodoo” where the 2 main Spirits are a masculine Spirit named “Azuzar” and a feminine Spirit named “Ausitu”. Do the names “Azuzar” and “Ausitu” sound familiar Afro-centrists? That’s right, “Azuzar” is “Asar” (“Osiris”) and “Ausitu” is “Aset” or “Auset” (“Isis”) -- and remember “Allah” is “Ali” and “Ar” and “Horu” (“Horus”)…

  • 5hh) …So, the worship of Osiris, Isis and Horus is still in Egypt in a modified form that just happens to contradict itself with its scriptural hostility towards the original form of worship, and only need to be reformed back to the original. Asar, Aset/Auset and Horu/Ar (or “Azuzar, Ausitu and Allah/Ali”) aren’t going to have their worship totally removed from their remnant in the Nile Valley or anywhere else in Africa or To-Nouter (the “Land of God”)…

  • 5hhh) …In Af-Soomaali, “Ausitu” is called “Aysitu” (“Isis” in Zar spirituality). Zar spirituality uses a type of harp/lyre called “tanbura” that’s like the type used in Ancient Egypt. In Mauritania is the spike lute called “tidinit” and the “ladle-harp” called “ardin” used in Moorish classical music called “azawan”. Harps similar to the Moorish “ardin” are known throughout sub-Saharan Africa with the Akan “seperewa” harp and the Luo/Acholi “adungu” harp as just 2 examples.

    

  • 5i) And finally the “eye amulet” called “nazar” is a remnant of the Ancient Egyptian “Eye of Horus/Ra” that was also worn as an protective amulet that promoted health. The name of the Egyptian version of the eye amulet transliterates something like “wdjt” or “utcht” which “rhymes” with their word “utch” or “wdj” (“health; green”), thus, it was often (not exclusively) “green” with a black pupil or a solid green glazed amulet in Ancient Egypt.

  • 5j) So, Arabic, Islamic, North-African culture is not at all totally void of an Ancient Egyptian heritage which is why I was specific to say at post numbered “4b @LunarSunny” that “much [not all] of the current Arabic/Islamic culture in ‘Egypt’ is not that of [many modern Egyptians] alleged ‘pharaoh’ Ancestors”. Very valuable remnants of Ancient Egyptian culture is still there however “corrupt”…

  • 5jj) Still, the divine king, the pantheon, the initiatory rites, etc… are in the African interior (“God’s Land” or “To-Nouter”) and the African-Diasporas in the U.S., Cuba, and Brazil...

  • 5jjj) …And also the Haitian and New Orleans Voodoo African-Diaspora forms are particularly important because not only have they united 2 forms of indigenous African serpent veneration (namely from Congo to Ghana and in between at least) to conserve modern equivalents of the Ancient Kushite-Egyptian “double uraei”, but are also role models for the promotion of indigenous African spiritual reunification and reformation. African-Diaspora Voodoo is All-African spirituality.

  • @jumbomojokat

    Arabic is a Semitic language , there is nothing called Semitic as a language ,it would have been correct to say "Hebrew" , you need to study more and you need to tell us how what you said is relevant to the video !

  • @LunarSunny

    6a) Mjarama!, Sharamo!, Shalom, Salamulekum! my African Hamitic Nilotic Sister from the Lower Nile!

  • @LunarSunny

    6b) I said “Semetic” because the word is somewhat general in living and extinct Semitic languages that I didn’t have the room or desire to post all of their forms -- just enough to get through. I was following a scholarly patter that you can find in many Western “expert” documents speaking “generally” like one might say “Bantu” and not list all of such languages from that branch of the so-called Niger-Congo languages because it’s so general.

  • @LunarSunny

    6bb) Your expressed inability to see the “relevance” here is just like your expressed inability to see “what Ham has to do with anything” in Egypt as you posted, and there’s just a lot you don’t know which is why I said I’d have to stop talking to you directly at post 3c and didn’t direct my last posts numbered 5 to your YT name. I know you’re playing ignorant because you’re able to get technical with your “Semitic language” post.

  • @jumbomojokat

    there're many Semitic languages not one , but you didn't know that,it is ok to say I was wrong about something , AGAIN what does Ham to do with THIS video ? what does Bantu have to do with this video ? what do Western experts have to do with this video? why all your posts have nothing to do with this video?

  • إعمل لايك لو إنت مصري و مش موافق علي الكلام الفاضي ده

  • @LunarSunny

    3b) I almost wrote to you that I “learn languages very quickly and will figure out how to turn on the Arabic (and Amharic) font for this computer here (like I’ve turned it on before elsewhere) so I can address you directly. We’ll see. Shukran MY SISTER”. But, then I thought “Arabic isn’t a popular language to communicate in at this time in this current political atmosphere in the West”, and I need to be clearly understood by all in Roman letters not to be misrepresented.

  • @jumbomojokat

    That is all you know of Arabic "Shukran"?!

    Are lecturing me about the language I should use here? ! what is your mother language?

  • @LunarSunny

    4a) This is one of the posts I didn’t send to you at first and it would’ve answered your question: “Arabic hasn‘t been a major interest of mine as I‘ve been preoccupied with learning Ancient Egyptian, its related indigenous African languages as well as identifying the Africanisms in the African-American Vernalcular (“AAV“) I was raised in…” Check, AAV (a.k.a. “Florida Kullud, Kulluh, Gullah-Geechee, Geech, 'Angolish', 'Ebonics', etc…”) bi mai jabbah -- Yuh dig? Oke!

  • @LunarSunny

    4aa) I’m a multi-ethnic predominantly African African-American who's culturally and/or linguistically part Fulani, Mandingo, Kanuri, Hausa, Bantu, Yoruba, Wolof, Caucasian, etc… and my language/culture reflects that undisputable reality that I proudly embrace with out a reflex of diffidence. So, I’ve answered your question directly. I’m still waiting for an answer to the questions I asked you at posts numbered: 2dddddd, 2ddddddd, 1aaaaaaa, 2a, 2fff, 3c, 2c? Diffidence?

  • @LunarSunny

    4b) I wasn’t trying to “lecture you about the language you should use there” in the “ARAB Republic of EGYPT”. I was attempting to reinforce to our audience that much of the current Arabic/Islamic culture in “Egypt” is not that of your alleged “pharaoh” Ancestors while we literally still have “pharaoh religion” in Africa and in Afro-America as I already pointed out at post numbered 2ee where I mentioned page 126 of the book by Moustafa Gadalla (a MODERN EGYPTIAN) and other areas…

  • @LunarSunny

    4bb) …But there’s also the book called “EGYPT AND NEGRO AFRICA: A STUDY IN DIVINE KINGSHIP” by Charles G. Seligman (a white man) that shows that the African Ancestors of African-Americans have inherited the same kind of culture that was in Ancient Egypt and which was passed into African-Diaspora Orisha, Orixa, Voodoo, Santeria, Obeah, Hoodoo, Roots, etc… Like Ancient Egyptians, we have Gods and Goddesses. Don’t forget my questions at post 4aa.

  • @jumbomojokat

    you haven't answered my first question I posted here in English yet you were interested in my Arabic comment translation which wasn't addressing you ? and now you don't want me to forget your question , Ain't you hilarious?

  • @LunarSunny

    6e) You said that I haven’t “answered [your] first question [you] posted here in English”. Show me where so that I can address your “first question” and you might finally answer my questions at 4aa instead of avoiding them.

  • @LunarSunny

    6f) You understand OUR Kullud word “ain’t” which is not just “are not” as some think, but is really an convergence between the latter and the Mandingo: “hani” (“no”), Hausa: “hani” (“the act of prohibiting”), Bari: “an” (“not”), Coptic: “n” and “at” (“negative…”), and transliteration of Ancient Egyptian: “in” or “n” (“not, negative…”). But, don’t forget to “finally” answer my questions at 6e -- Okay?

  • @jumbomojokat

    you are American and yet you are connected to MY Ancient Egyptian ancestors more than me!!! that is the most ridiculous thing I have ever heard ! but I know you have more ridiculous stuff for me coming soon ! and there is nothing called pharaoh religion !

  • @LunarSunny

    6c) I’m a multi-ethnic predominantly African African-American as my culture and language reflects. Among the informed of my people we’ve always called ourselves variously “Kullud (Cullud or Kulud in older writings from before I was born in the 1960s), Gullah-Geechee, Geech, etc… as is all well documented. And all of those names are converged versions of indigenous African ethnic names and their African etymons briefly illustrated bellow:

  • @LunarSunny

    6cc) Afro-American Vernaculars: “Kullud” or “Kulluh” (an “African-American, a Black American…”); “Gullah” (the name of a very “deep” extremely African African-American regional vernacular culture and their Creole dialect of “Afro-English“).

    Gola: “Gola, Gora, Gula, Gura” (the “Gola” people and language of Liberia, West-Africa).

    Vai: “Gallina” (another name the Vai people of Liberia, West-Africa, call themselves)…

  • @LunarSunny

    6ccc) …Gola: “Gola” or “Gori” (a Mumuye related people of Nigeria, West-Africa).

    Ngola: “Ngola” (a Ndongo division of the Mbundu people of Angola, southwestern Africa); “ngola” (“king”).

    Kongo: “angolo” (“strong”); “Zulu” (“heaven, etc…”).

    Zulu: “Zulu” (“heaven, sky”).

    Ganda: “gulu” (“sky, heaven, high, above”).

    Nuer (South-Sudan): “kwaar” (“king”).

    Ancient Nubian/Meroitic: “qore” (“king”)…

  • @LunarSunny

    6cccc) …Coptic Egyptian: “shant” (“nose”).

    Ancient Egyptian transliteration: “khnti” (“the first, the chief, leader, in first rank, at the head, forerunner”); “Khnt” (“the land south of Egypt, the African interior, Africa”); “khnt” (“nose, face”).

  • @LunarSunny

    6ccccc) Also:

    Haitian Voodoo: “Gini” (“Guinea, Ancient Ghana, Coastal West-Africa, Africa in general).

    Soninke: “Gana” (“Ancient Ghana, Guinea”); “Gannninke” (“Ancestors”); “ganne” (“first, front; front line warriors; first in battle”); “kaane” (“in front of”).

    Twi: “Akan” (the Twi-speaking people of modern Ghana); “kang” (“first”).

    Yoruba: “kini” (“first”).

    Vai: “kando” (“up, on top, above; up-land”); “kang” (“top, upper part, highland…”)...

  • @LunarSunny

    6cccccc) And to the above etymology of our Kulluh/Gullah/Gini “African-American” identity of indigenous African origins can be added the geographical indigenous African place name “Kong” (“Ivory Coast, Cote d’Ivorie”) which is a version of the name “Guinea” already etymologically described above.

  • @LunarSunny

    6d) If you’re of Ancient Egyptian descent, then you are, and I can’t deny that for you just like you can’t deny my identity -- my last posts numbered “5” actually said that some of you very well may be descended thus just like many African-Americans are also descended thus in part even if we were born outside the continent. Thus the name “African-American…” as our phenotypes betray where we originate from predominantly.

  • @LunarSunny

    6dd) Culturally, many of us just still do things more like Ancient Egyptians did without a break in continuity just like some Islamized Africans still do as I pointed out as posts “5”. I pour libations, make offerings and speak to my Ancestors directly calling their names in order which allows little room for identity crisis. Of course we are our Ancestors, but do you communicate with your Ancestors like I do with mine -- like the Ancient Egyptians did with theirs?…

  • @LunarSunny

    6ddd) …Do you live like your Ancient Egyptian Ancestors did like many African-Diasporans have never stopped doing. Do you even do the most basic and personal things like braid plait or twist your hair and sleep on a headrest like your Ancient Egyptian Ancestors did -- and I still do -- and many Africans have never stopped doing? Or do you live a Westernized Arabized lifestyle with non-Kemetic values? Do you even embrace the “Kemet” identity…

  • @LunarSunny

    6ddddd) You know what I mean by “pharaoh religion” -- divine kings who rule possessed by God’s spirit, Spirit worship, Ancestor worship, polytheism, spiritually charged religious sculpture, etc… all of which still survives in African and the African-Diaspora who worship Orisha/Urshu that your Ancestors DID and ours STILL DO.

  • @jumbomojokat

    That is Wrong . polytheism was part of Ancient Egypt religious heritage ,so was monotheism ,Akhenaten was Ancient Egyptian , you know that , don't you?

    Polytheism and monotheism are two different things , how come you make them one and say that is the Pharaoh Religion? , AGAIN , When someone changes his/her Religion , that doesn't mean he/she changed his/her Ancestors .so if a European becomes Buddhist,that doesn't mean that his ancestors were Indians .GOT IT ?! 

  • @LunarSunny

    8a) That’s right! I forgot to mention the brief example of blessed “Akhenaten” (or “Iakhenateen” or “Jokhenateen“) who was apparently also a monotheist who gave more prominence to the Spirit of the “Aten” (or “Ateen”) Sun-Disk of the Sun-God Ra (“Lisa“ in Vodun/Voodoo). Also, the Ancient Egyptian word “Aten”, with the exception of Oromo Ethiopian, appears to be a predominantly West-African word from what I can see from my old etymological notes:

  • @LunarSunny 8aa) Oromo Ethiopian: the “-iddeena” in “biddeena aduu” (“disc of the sun”). Bamana: “tele” (“sun”). Mandinka: “tele” (“sun”). Malinke: “tili” (“sun”). Vai: “tere” (“sun”). Mossi: “dare” (“day, sun”). Yoruba: “oorun” (“sun”). Hausa: “rana” (“sun”). Pular: “nange” (“sun”). T=D=R=L=N=NG. Thanks for reminding me.
  • @LunarSunny

    8aaa) Also, the pre-Islamic traditional pagan Efe (Ituri Forest “Pygmies”) have always been monotheists like the traditional pagan Maasai Nilotes and certain other traditional pagan Africans from the region. Thus, polytheism and monotheism are both originally African with its oldest records from Ancient Egypt just like circumcision is with pre-Islamic pagan Africans (Dogon, Maasai, etc…) with its oldest records in the Egyptian tomb of “Ankhmahor” in Africa. Si?

  • @LunarSunny

    8a1) Here are a few etymologies of the “Akh-” (or “Aakh” = “Spirit, beneficial spirit, blessed dead…”) part of “Akhenaten’s” name:

    Bohairic Coptic: “ikh” (“demon”).

    Dinka: “jok” (“spirit”), “jak” (“spirits”); “Jogdit” (“Great Spirit” -- a name for “God”/“Nhialich“).

    Oromo: “Waaqa” (“God”).

    Somali: “Waaq” (“God” -- indigenous, pre-Islamic).

  • @LunarSunny

    8a2) Thus, because the first hieroglyph in the full spelling of the “Akh-” part of “Akhenaten’s” name could be transliterated “a”, “j” or “i” according to both Egyptologists and indigenous African etymologies, therefore I rendered his name variously as “Iakhenateen” or “Jokhenateen” scientifically using African etymologies for restoring vocalization to the 2 nouns in his name rather than leave it voiceless as “J3khnjtn” as some Egyptology instructors might do. [FINALY]

  • I’ve Always known the ancient ancient Egyptians were black. The later were mixed…Don’t know why this is so hard for some to accept.

  • first white skinned Egyptians are not confined to the Cairo and the north parts of Egypt as this man says Second there are Egyptians with darker skin color in Cairo and the north parts of Egypt where did they come from if all true Egyptians live in Upper Egypt

    From Egyptian to Egyptian >>>SHAME ON YOU !

  • @LunarSunny i agree

  • @LunarSunny...WHITE SKINNED EGYPTIANS ARE NOT NATIVE TO EGYPT...THE ORIGINAL PEOPLE OF EGYPT WERE BLACK SKINNED AFRICANS...NO DIFFERENT THAN AMERICA...THE ORIGINAL PEOPLE OF NORTH AMERICA WERE BLACK PEOPLE AND THEN CAME THE INDIANS FROM THE BERING STRAIT AND AFTER THAT THE WHITES...WHITE PEOPLE ARE NOT NATIVE AMERICAN AND WHITE PEOPLE ARE NOT NATIVE EGYPTIAN....SHAME ON YOU!!

  • @bumperboy2sports

    What does American natives or non-natives has to do with Egypt here?

    we're talking about Egypt ,and since I am Egyptian I know about Egypt more than any European,African or Asian racist ...if you wanna talk about America no problem ,do that somewhere else ...white skinned EGYPTIAN and brown skinned EGYPTIAN are EGYPTIAN ..It is not our problem that you live in the American racist society..PETTY ON YOU !

  • @LunarSunny C u already fucked up u said u kno more about egypt more than any African HAHAHA isnt Egypt in Africa

    Arent u a descendant of Invaders

  • @eazydee415

    I said I know about Egypt more than any African racist more than any European racist ,It is not my problem that you don't understand English,you don't have to be white to be racist ,there're black racist like you with fucked-up brains,you explain everything in the world according to your racism .Egypt is in Africa , and not everybody came to life after their mother was raped like you !

  • @LunarSunny

    1c) I would say that “I’m surprised at your ‘mother was raped like you’ comment at easydee415”, but I would be lying as it’s expected. This comment of your’s shows your values -- that you stigmatize the victim of a crime and their child who can’t help how they came about. And under slavery, these victims were often under 13yrs old which makes it pedophilia. Islamic chicks are always vulnerable to such assaults in the Near-East and then subsequent murder for just being a victim.

  • @LunarSunny

    1cc) If you‘re a woman, “Shame on you“ for your stigmatizing of the victim of invaders and not the crime of the invaders which seems to validate what eazydee415 said about you being “a descendant of invaders” whose values you clearly possess. Does that sound like the values of the noble pyramid building “sons of Ham”, or invaders? Your comment seems to betray who you really descend from because it was Ham’s children who built the pyramids and their daughters who were later “raped”.

  • @LunarSunny

    1ccc) Isaiah 20:3-5 -- “And the Lord said, Like as my servant Isaiah hath walked naked and barefoot three years for a sign and wonder upon Egypt and upon Ethiopia; so shall the king of Assyria lead away the EGYPTIANS prisoner, and the ETHIOPIANS captives, young and old, NAKED and BAREFOOT, even with their BUTTOCKS UNCOVERED to the SHAME OF EGYPT. And they shall be afraid and ASHAMED OF ETHIOPIA their expectation, and of EGYPT their glory.” KJV. This is the experience of Ham's chirn.

  • @LunarSunny

    1cccc) Genesis 10:6 -- “And the sons of Ham [Cham, Kam, Black…]: Cush [Kush, Ethiopia] and Mizraim [Egypt], and Phut [“Punt”? or “Libya“?], and Canaan [Philistines, Palestinians, Phoenicians…].” KJV.

  • @LunarSunny

    1ccccc) Therefore, being that according to Near-Eastern records, Egyptians and “our” mutual “Ethiopian brothers” have suffered the same fates and indignities as eazydee415’s (and all African-Diasporan’s) “mother” has as a daughter of Ham like Egyptians and Ethiopians are who were also “raped” at some point in history as “prisoners…captives…naked and barefoot, even with their buttocks uncovered to the same of Egypt. And they shall be afraid and ashamed of Ethiopia…”...

  • @LunarSunny

    1cccccc) …then, you of all women[?] should be one of the last of all people to glorify in the rape of anyone being a woman who is an alleged “sister” of your alleged “Sudanese brothers” and “Ethiopian brothers”, and thus an alleged “daughter of Ham” -- especially a woman in the Islamic world where being just such a victim is treated as severely as being the villain and could be given the death penalty for just being an innocent victim.

  • @LunarSunny

    1ccccccc) Again if you are an Egyptian daughter of Ham as you claim -- Hamite to Hamite >>> “SHAME” and “PETTY ON YOU!” Now, don’t you or your daughters go and get yourselves raped and then executed in the Islamic world -- be safe and “burqa-up” for protection.

  • @jumbomojokat

    what makes you think I am Muslim?

  • @LunarSunny

    2a) I thought you were Muslim because you’re a modern Egyptian who are mostly Islamic. If this is not the case -- woops. And why is it called “ARAB Republic..” and not by it’s indigenous Coptic name “Keme” at least since they are still there? As an “Egyptian” (which is the Greek word) are you comfortable with the indigenous “Keme” identity my African sister?

  • @LunarSunny

    2a1) I know modern Egyptians personally who know that the Ancient Egyptians were blacks as clearly you must know this if you claim Sudanese (meaning “Blacks” as you already know being fluent in Arabic) and Ethiopians (meaning “Burnt Faces” and is used interchangeably with “Kush”) as your “brothers”. Also, these Copts volunteered to tell me that Egypt is occupied by foreigners and other offensive things I will not mention.

  • @jumbomojokat you have a collection of fucked-up ideas ,first modern Egyptian are not the sons of ancient Egyptian ,second females in the Islamic world are being raped ,Actually in the Islamic world males are the ones being raped and you can ask your American friends who have been to Iraq .American piece of shit is taking about raping females in the Islamic world ,very funny !

  • @LunarSunny

    2c) I have a friend from Iraq I know from the boxing gym (he loves him some African-American women and is quick to show you his black grandchildren [he‘s in his 40s now like me]), but I have no friends in that war -- they wouldn‘t have joined to go. Isn’t sodomy “haram”? I’m of the noble type, and no matter how much I hated a man, I’d never think about getting an erection from a man! I’ll “lose the mood” quickly if the idea of anal anything crosses my mind with a chick! Values?

  • @jumbomojokat

    innocent victims who get death penalties are everywhere all over the world , but I guess it was because of me calling some racist here as a breed of rape,which is something u can't understand since you're biased .Let me ask you Should I accept someone calling me a daughter or a son of an invader in my country (which is wrong)and giving himself the right to say such a mean thing to me ,insulting me and my people and my country ?and that doesn't bother you?what a shame

  • @LunarSunny

    2a2)True on the innocent victim tip which is very bad -- as an African-American male I know, just like you being an female in the Islamic world you should know better than to mention such crimes in the tone in which you mentioned it. If I misinterpreted your tone, it’s because your mentioning of such things is nothing I haven’t heard before, and I know the tone in which it’s often mentioned.

  • @LunarSunny

    2aa) I know the tone in which many say such things because my Somali friend (one of your “Ethiopian brothers”) is my “brother” (“walaal” as he calls me in Af-Soomaalii) who looks like an African-American (he looks “blacker” than me) and he speaks fluent Arabic without an accent and tells me what Near-Easterners say about him before they learn he understands them clearly, and he’ll tell me. His children are Afro-American.

  • @LunarSunny

    2b) If you’re an indigenous Egyptian, then he’s “wrong” for saying something false against you. I honestly really hate bias and racism so bad. I don’t recall, but I don’t think that I called you any names when I addressed you. Actually, I frequently called you “my…sister” being that your alleged Nilo-Saharan (Nubian, Kanuri, Songhai…) and Afro-Asiatic (Ethiopian, Hausa, Tuareg…) “brothers” are my brothers also. I never called you a “piece of shit”.

  • @jumbomojokat

    My guess was right then ,ha?he is a child of rape so he thinks by calling people invaders or saying get off our land(which is not his land ,he even has never been to Egypt)that will make him feel better ?Again ,what you're saying here is WRONG and feeling ashamed by your black or white color won't change the truth that I am Egyptian and Ancient Egyptians are my ancestors !

  • @LunarSunny

    2d) Again, that region of the world has been at war with itself for millennia just like some parts of interior Africa have. My mommy and daddy were married and the only man I ever saw in my mommy’s house with her is my daddy. Such assaults happen most often in such political conflicts as war. Most African-Americans I know are not the recent “children of rape” any more than the children of unfortunate kidnapped harem-girls, “kafirs, and hostages”.

  • @LunarSunny

    2dd) People have no problem reminding African-Americans of our blessed sub-Saharan ancestry whether we’ve been to Africa or not. So, we (at least me) accept that true identity some (not all) of which also has Ancient Egyptian (and even Coptic Egyptian) ancestry just like I accept the non-African side of my family (some of which is consensual and where the female is non-black) because to do otherwise would also be a form of irrational “self-hate”.

  • @LunarSunny

    2ddd) Again, I personally know modern Egyptians who will tell you that the “ARAB Republic” is called thus because “Keme” is occupied. The Ancient Egyptians liked “ma’at” (“truth”) not “goru” (“lies”). “I’m proud to be black [kame] yall, and that’s a fact yall…Say it loud, I‘M BLACK [KAME] AND I‘M PROUD!!!”. I was born during that “Black [Kame] Power” era.

  • @LunarSunny

    2dddd) Being of Ancient Egyptian ancestry is not more important to me as being true and in line with the Yoruba interior African “Orisha” (“Spirits” who you likely know nothing about, but who were also worshipped by the Ancient Egyptians under the name transliterating as “Urshu” or “Wrshu” -- check page 175b of Sir E. A. W. Budge’s “An Egyptian Hieroglyphic Dictionary Vol. 1”) as an initiate and worshiper of an African faith that’s always been practiced…

  • @LunarSunny

    2ddddd) … that’s always been practiced in some form by the African-Diaspora in the forms of “Orixa, Oricha, Santeria, Voodoo, Ifa, Obeah, Candomble, Shango, Hoodoo, etc…” without a break since our African Ancestors (who are a very important part of that worship) were trafficked from Africa where they had conserved the worship of Ancient Egyptian Divinities and Ancestors and then passed to us their African-Diasporas my African sister…

  • @LunarSunny

    2dddddd) …Did your Ancient Egyptian Ancestors pass any of their traditions of Ancestor worship, Orisha (“Urshu” or “Wrshu”) worship, “divine kings” (“Oni” and “Oba” in Yoruba and Benin/Edo), headrests, etc… down to you as you are “Egyptian and Ancient Egyptians are your ancestors”? Do you worship and sacrifice to your Ancient Egyptian Ancestors? Do you worship their "Urshu" (“Wrshu” or “Orisha”) divinities like we do?…

  • @LunarSunny

    2ddddddd) …Do you have an unbroken tradition of doing anything “Ancient Egyptian” other than reside there? We do in Orisha-Voodoo/Ifa. If you’re truly the child of Ancient Egyptians, then I know people who are qualified to initiate you into Their worship and how to make “itubo” (“minor offerings” transliterating “htpu” in Egyptian hieroglyphs [Budge, Vol. 1, pg 518a]) and “ebo” (“sacrifice” transliterating “aba” in Ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs [Budge, Vol. 1, 117a]).

  • @jumbomojokat

    if I don't worship Urshu so I am not Egyptian?! worshiping Urshu or whatever is a religion and so what my religion has to do with my ancestors ?If there is a Buddhist African ,would that mean he is not African anymore and he is Indian?!

  • @LunarSunny

    6g) It appears as though you clearly don’t even think like an Ancient Egyptian in spiritual ideological thought (which is African), or you wouldn’t have asked a question like “what my religion has to do with my ancestors?” which could border on blasphemy if you comprehended that Ancient Egyptian religion WAS significantly (if not absolutely) Ancestor worship just like indigenous African and Afro-Diaspora spirituality STILL IS.

  • @LunarSunny

    6gg) You asked “If there’s a Buddhist Africa, would that mean he’s not African anymore and he’s Indian?” I will attempt to answer that question hoping you won’t turn it into a red-herring argument to distract from this Egyptian discussion here. I would say “No” because Buddha was clearly of African descent with pepper-corn hair, stretched earlobes, and all the facial features. Still, one may be biologically and DNA something and not culturally something…

  • @LunarSunny

    6ggg) …Thus, you will hear native born Africans tell African-Americans that they’re “not African” because they don’t do African things even though we may obviously be phenotypic and DNA Africans. Some will even contradict themselves and say we “aren’t Africans” because we weren’t born in Africa and then say their American-born child is a particular African ethnic group regardless. This is indigenous African ideological thinking…

  • @LunarSunny

    2gggg) …And this traditional African thinking even survived among many African-Americans as we’re known to refer to another African-Americans as “white boy” or “white girl” because they do things that are often associated with whites (dress, recreation, speech, residence, groom, theology, tastes, general culture, etc…). We know they aren’t “white”, we’re just telling them they aren’t living traditionally African/Black/Egyptian, etc…

  • @LunarSunny

    6ggggg) …Thus, Ancient Egyptian “Urshu” spirituality was conserved in Yoruba “Orisha“, Fon “Lisa“/“Voodoo“, Igbo “Alusi“, etc… spirituality which shows cultural exchange and continuity, and the Yoruba, Fon, Igbo, etc… passed it to the African-Diaspora in Brazil, Trinidad (where it’s called “Shango”), Cuba, Haiti, and African-Americans who are all qualified to pass Ancient Egyptian “Urshu” back to Egypt and re-establish Kemet again no the Lower Nile River.

  • 6ggggg1) I meant to say “…on the Lower Nile River” at post 6ggggg.

  • @jumbomojokat Technically speaking everything is African as Africans were the 1st ppl on Earth which means they were the 1st to walk, talk, sing, breathe, see, drink, eat, have sex, write, basically every function you can think of, Africans did that all the way back at the Dawn of Time. So white ppl are basically acting African when they even use their motor functions!

  • @HeruTutankhamun

    1a) Sorry about that fam. My lady summoned me as I was making my last post at 6iii some hrs ago. You’re right, “God” created the first man (an African), and the Africans engendered and birthed the world in variations of our most noble and divine image as the first living images of God. I hate to be longwinded, but, I’m not finished playing with LunarSunny’s brain yet. Anyway, so, were was I… Oh yeah -- post 6j @LunarSunny

  • @jumbomojokat

    I don't know where you get your information from .the Pyramids all over Egypt have been built by Egyptians .what Ham has to do with anything here ?

  • @LunarSunny

    2e) You said “the Pyramids all over Egypt have been built by Egyptians. What Ham has to do with anything here?” Regarding Ham (Cham, Kemet), please tell me that you already know the answer to that question you being from that part of the world and clearly fluently literate in Arabic (unlike me) or else there’s no use in me continuing this communication accept as a lecturer to an attentive student my Egyptian sister and daughter in Ham.