Source: www.africanholocaust...
What I hate is ignorance, smallness of imagination, the eye that sees no farther than its own lashes. All things are possible …Who you are is limited only by who you think you are
MENTAL ENSLAVEMENT
KIMANI NEHUSI
The Ten Commandments are a precis of the Declarations of Innocence
which were an integral part of Nile Valley spiritual system. Many
passages from the Bible are copies from Nile Valley writings that
existed long before the time of the Bible. There is compelling
evidence for the conclusion of some authorities that Buddah was one of
those Africans who lived in India long before the advent there of the
Aryans and who provided many of the bases of Indian culture. An
enquiring mind, which unfortunately is not to be associated with anyone
who accepts the white supremacist worldview, ought to ask some obvious
questions of documents easily available to all. For example, what
happened to Jesus Christ between the ages of 13, when he disappears
from the Bible, and 33, when he reappears to begin his ministry? Other
authorities say that he was in Kemet (Egypt) and India, where he learnt
much. Certainly, Christianity, Islam and Judaism are built upon
principles and often upon practices first observed by Africans in the
Nile Valley thousands of years ago. These include the ideas of
Resurrection, Heaven and Hell, Divine Judgement of the soul, the
creation myth, divine conception, the trinity, and others. Many of the
big time spiritual heavyweights of Christianity and Islam turn out to
have been at least heavily influenced by Africans. It will require
more space than is available in this entire issue of Emancipation to merely discuss these normally unacknowledged religious borrowings and influences from Africans.
Yet some jaundiced views reduce this tradition to 'tribal' customs,
ancestor worship, the worship of trees, stones, snakes and the ocean
and other natural forces and elements. The above is enough refutation
of this partial and highly misleading view of Africans. However, it
would be good to ponder upon what Christians do in relation to Jesus
and the saints. Are these latter not ancestors who are worshipped? Of
what materials are the Christian crosses, statues and alters made? Do
Christians not therefore bow down to wood, stone, etc. when they
worship? And what do practitioners of Islam do with regards to the
Kaba, the most sacred object to all Muslims? Do we always remember
that the Kaba is a black stone? For 1500 years Christians have been
busy 'drinking the blood of Christ' and 'eating His flesh', yet falsely
accusing Africans and Native Americans of cannibalism. For those who
suffer from this cockeyed view of the world, Africans worship 'idols'
while others have 'religious icons'; Africans have 'cults' while others
have 'sects'; Africans worship a multitude of gods while others have
one god and a number of saints.
Psychologists of all persuasions recognise a process of mental
conditioning they refer to as the Self Fulfilling Prophesy. Simply
stated, it says that whenever someone, who is thought to be important
by another person, persistently represents that person in a particular
way, that person will grow to behave in ways that fullfil and confirm
the expectation thus created and predicted. The person thought to be
important is called a significant other in this jargon. Africans have
been persistently and insistently misrepresented by persons they have
been taught to regard as important and who have been and continue to be
undoubtedly very influential in their lives. Parsons, parents,
teachers and even entire institutions fall into this category. Some
of these influential persons are themselves Africans who have been
indoctrinated with these negative views of themselves, very often in
the form of stereotypes. It does not help that most Africans are
unaware of this process. This insidious nature of much of this
conditioning makes it more difficult for it to be detected and
treated.
http://www.africanholocaust.net/html_ah/mentalenslavement.html
KIMANI NEHUSI
The Ten Commandments are a precis of the Declarations of Innocence
which were an integral part of Nile Valley spiritual system. Many
passages from the Bible are copies from Nile Valley writings that
existed long before the time of the Bible. There is compelling
evidence for the conclusion of some authorities that Buddah was one of
those Africans who lived in India long before the advent there of the
Aryans and who provided many of the bases of Indian culture. An
enquiring mind, which unfortunately is not to be associated with anyone
who accepts the white supremacist worldview, ought to ask some obvious
questions of documents easily available to all. For example, what
happened to Jesus Christ between the ages of 13, when he disappears
from the Bible, and 33, when he reappears to begin his ministry? Other
authorities say that he was in Kemet (Egypt) and India, where he learnt
much. Certainly, Christianity, Islam and Judaism are built upon
principles and often upon practices first observed by Africans in the
Nile Valley thousands of years ago. These include the ideas of
Resurrection, Heaven and Hell, Divine Judgement of the soul, the
creation myth, divine conception, the trinity, and others. Many of the
big time spiritual heavyweights of Christianity and Islam turn out to
have been at least heavily influenced by Africans. It will require
more space than is available in this entire issue of Emancipation to merely discuss these normally unacknowledged religious borrowings and influences from Africans.
Yet some jaundiced views reduce this tradition to 'tribal' customs,
ancestor worship, the worship of trees, stones, snakes and the ocean
and other natural forces and elements. The above is enough refutation
of this partial and highly misleading view of Africans. However, it
would be good to ponder upon what Christians do in relation to Jesus
and the saints. Are these latter not ancestors who are worshipped? Of
what materials are the Christian crosses, statues and alters made? Do
Christians not therefore bow down to wood, stone, etc. when they
worship? And what do practitioners of Islam do with regards to the
Kaba, the most sacred object to all Muslims? Do we always remember
that the Kaba is a black stone? For 1500 years Christians have been
busy 'drinking the blood of Christ' and 'eating His flesh', yet falsely
accusing Africans and Native Americans of cannibalism. For those who
suffer from this cockeyed view of the world, Africans worship 'idols'
while others have 'religious icons'; Africans have 'cults' while others
have 'sects'; Africans worship a multitude of gods while others have
one god and a number of saints.
Psychologists of all persuasions recognise a process of mental
conditioning they refer to as the Self Fulfilling Prophesy. Simply
stated, it says that whenever someone, who is thought to be important
by another person, persistently represents that person in a particular
way, that person will grow to behave in ways that fullfil and confirm
the expectation thus created and predicted. The person thought to be
important is called a significant other in this jargon. Africans have
been persistently and insistently misrepresented by persons they have
been taught to regard as important and who have been and continue to be
undoubtedly very influential in their lives. Parsons, parents,
teachers and even entire institutions fall into this category. Some
of these influential persons are themselves Africans who have been
indoctrinated with these negative views of themselves, very often in
the form of stereotypes. It does not help that most Africans are
unaware of this process. This insidious nature of much of this
conditioning makes it more difficult for it to be detected and
treated.
http://www.africanholocaust.net/html_ah/mentalenslavement.html
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