SAMURAI36 said:While I sincerely appreciate any Original Black relation that one might find in it, I nonetheless have pretty much come to rebuke everything from the Semitic legacy.
It's far to convoluted with Indo-Eurasian contradictions and non-sense to sift through, in order to get back to the "Blackness" of it.
In the meantime, there are plenty of Prophets and Saviors to be venerated in ATR's and other Afro-Asiatic traditions.
What use have I for another man's scraps, when I have a full plate of food sitting right in front of me? ESPECIALLY when their "scraps" came from my plate to begin with???
I shall chant HEQATU on the day that my people cease chasing after the meanderings of JEWS, and look within themselves and build Pyramids and Ziggurats once again.
PEACE
Brother Samurai, there is nothing in your post I can disagree with…well said. All I would like to add is that, in our scholarship we have given the Indo-Europeans the Semitic legacy too easily. The Semites were not originally an aboriginal white or Indo-European people. (Semite is really a useless word, but can be used for context) The idea that the word Semite means, “half this or that”, aka "mulatto" is insufficient. The same conquerors that polluted the rest of the African world polluted the Levant or Canaan as well.
We know that there is no true deep division between the Semitic and Hamitic Afro-Asiatic languages and this linguistic division was devised for racist and empirical reasons, just like the geographical boundaries denoting the Middle East.
It is said that Egypt (better Kemetic Africa) as an actual physical nation, is mentioned more times in the Bible than Israel proper itself (as an actual physical place). And the nation Palestine is only mentioned I believe 4 times in the Old Testament. I do believe as the modern African Hebrews said, that Palestine is just a part of northeast Africa. Even small or marginalized parts of the history of Black people play an important role in understanding of our story (Africans and African heroes in America are a good example of this). And as Dr. Ben (born an Ethiopian Israelite) once said (paraphrasing), “ we can’t totally ignore this story because so many of our people are Christians”. So we have the daunting task of ripping apart the layers of lies and redeeming our Brothers and Sisters.
Remember in the early days of Africans studying Egyptology and Kemetic history, the deceptions and lies were just as thick and are still ongoing. Just look at the recent depictions of Tutankhamen…
Peace