American Autocthonous History aka Black/African American History & History of Autocthonous People World Wide

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Young adepts of Vodoun Mami Dan (The Giant Sea Deity). Children of the Universe, during the International Vodoun Festival in Ouidah, Benin.

“Vodoun is more than a Religion, it is a culture, a Science, an Art and a Lifestyle. As it is true that Africa is the Mother of Civilization, Vodoun is the mother of all Religions. We, Africans must proudly and respectfully honour the Heritage of our Ancestors. Every Year on the 9th and 10th January, we celebrate Life, the Forces that Govern the Cosmos and our African Culture. And it will be so for Eternity, I am making sure of that.”

Prince Randy Alam-Sogan Founder,Child of the Universe Project
 

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Candomblé (Portuguese pronunciation: [kɐ̃dõˈblɛ]) is an African-originated or Afro-Brazilian religion, practiced chiefly in Brazil by the “povo de santo” (saint people). It originated in the cities of Salvador, the capital of Bahia and Cachoeira, at the time one of the main commercial crossroads for the distribution of products and slave trade to other parts of Bahia state in Brazil. Although Candomblé is practiced primarily in Brazil, it is also practiced in other countries in the Americas, including Uruguay, Argentina, Venezuela, Colombia, Panama; and in Europe in Germany, Italy, Portugal and Spain. The religion is based in the anima (soul) of the natural environment, and is therefore a kind of Animism. It was developed in Brazil with the knowledge of African Priests that were enslaved and brought to Brazil, together with their mythology, their culture and language, between 1549 and 1888. The rituals involve the possession of the initiated by Orishas, offerings and sacrifices of the mineral, vegetable and animal kingdom, healing, dancing/trance,and percussion. Candomblé draws inspiration from a variety of people of the African Diaspora, but it mainly features aspects ofYoruba Orishaveneration.Click here for more
 

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Quote: DR. ANTHONY T. BROWDER

Entitled: As a man thinketh…

Commentary by Moorpheus Resurrected.

To measure how asleep OUR NATION has fallen, Eye once had a young Womban tell me that she “DIDN’T WANT TO LEARN ABOUT ANYTHING REALLY OLD! How sad for all of US that she is OUR future. But that is not to say that it reflexes poorly on her exclusively – BECAUSE IT DOESN’T! Things only happen when you allow them to! And WE have allowed OUR YOUTH to spin out-of-control. It took all of US to make this mess; it’s going to take ALL OF US to fix it.

To UNIFY is to LOVE YOURSELF!
~ Eye am Moorpheus Resurrected, and Eye am Moorpheus by choice
 

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Ceddo(in full)*

Ceddo is another film from the great Sengalese filmmaker, Ousmane Sembene about the “outsiders” - individuals that chose not to convert to either Christianity or Islam. the film centers around a village with new converts to Christianity and Islam, with the practitioners of traditional African beliefs/spirituality increasingly losing their political respect and social status. eventually turning into outright persecution, the daughter of the chief is kidnapped and held by the ceddo as ransom in exchange for their rights back.

interestingly, Sembene chose to portray the Christians and the Muslims differently. one lone Christian missionary has a small church filled with wooden pews and only one loyal convert. this missionary didn’t even speak throughout the film. on the other hand, the Muslims were portrayed as very aggressive and the main orchestraters or the persecution of the ceddo. they usurped the power of the chief, putting the imam in his place, and eventually waged jihad against the ceddo and forcibly converted them - shaving their heads (Sembene signified the traditionalists as those with braids, while the Muslims and Christians had short fades) and giving them Islamic names. the imam was the main antagonist, while his converts were reduced to “Allahu Akbar” babbling drones with no autonomy, let alone minds, of their own.

the genius of Sembene, showcased through all of his films, is that he chose to make films on topics no one else did or since has. and there certainly aren’t even enough books written on the Africans those refused to convert and the issues and cultural depletions that these conversions entailed. and the stark differences in depictions by Sembene possibly signals the religion he had the most intimate relationship and/or the most antagonism towards.

*in Wolof with French and English subtitles

and a thanks toAstecfor the link
 

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Shinto parallels in African Indigenous Spirituality…

Learn more here:
www.ancestralvoices.co.uk/av2

#shinto #shintoism #shintoshrine #japan #japanese #nipon #japaneseculture #japanesefood #origins #of #the #world #africa #african #spirituality #samurai #black #zen #ase #ashe #AncestralVoices #Ancestralvoices2 #ritualsforliving
 

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Ever present, ever available to us for consultation to get assistance and direction in how we live our lives!

We see further when we stand on the shoulders of giants…what do you need to see this new cycle coming up?

Learn how:
www.ancestralvoices.co.uk/av2
 

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Each human being is comes to earth with a purpose in African Spiritual Philosophy; a divine destiny that is agreed in spirit before one takes on a physical form. The purpose of living then is to remember and actualise that purpose, the tools for remembrance are found in the various practices that enhance our connection to the Divine and elemental powers.

Start remembering today:
www.ancestralvoices.co.uk/filmsbooks
 

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This is a African brother in Libya he was crucified by Arab Muslims look at the little Arab Muslim children playing all around the brother like its okay to lynch a Negro and let him sit out in the street rotting like a dead animal carcass without retribution… I’m telling you negros wake the hell up this is war on the African race Islam Christianity Judaism or any of them religions don’t respect you as a believer your just a slave to be done to as they please it’s war on our people worldwide the Arabs are invaders of that land who never got kicked out… anybody who seeks to destroy and harm AFRICAN people need to be dealt with …
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hu0z6zyc2J8
http://www.nigeriadailynews.news/news/234031-christian-man-crucified-in-libya-by-islamist-picture.html
 

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From Selma to Montgomery: The Selma Voting Rights Movement
This year,Martin Luther King Jr.Day falls on January 18, the anniversary ofa marchthat Dr. King helped lead from Brown Chapel A.M.E. Church to the Selma Courthouse for the purpose of voter registration. The marchers were not allowed to register, but this was just one skirmish in theSouthern Christian Leadership Conference’s (SCLC) ultimately successful Selma Voting Rights Movement, which began on January 2, 1965 in Selma, Alabama.

Throughout January and February of 1965, Dr. King and members of both the SCLC andStudent Nonviolent Coordinating Committee(SNCC) organized a campaign of marches and civil disobedience with a goal of achieving voter registration for African-American citizens. On February 18, during a march to the courthouse inMarion, Ala., a state trooper shot protesterJimmie Lee Jacksonas he attempted to protect his mother from police. Jackson died eight days later.

In response to Jackson’s death,James Bevel, SCLC’s director of the Selma Voting Rights Movement, called fora march from Selma to the Alabama State Capitol in Montgomery. The first attempt was on March 7. In what is now known as “Bloody Sunday,” police brutally attacked the marchers as they crossed theEdmund Pettus Bridge. The images of the attack contributed to growing support for the Selma Voting Rights Campaign and President Lyndon Johnsonannounced his intention to send a voting rights bill to Congress.

On March 9, Dr. King led a second march that also halted at the Edmund Pettus Bridge. This time King led the marchers in prayer before they returned to Selma. That evening, James Reeb, a white Unitarian Universalist pastor from Boston was attacked and beaten by four white men. Reeb died two days later, leading to national displays of mourning and marches in solidarity with the Selma Movement. On March 15, President Johnson outlined a voting rights bill in an address to a joint session of Congress.

The events surrounding the two aborted marches from Selma to Montgomery and President Johnson’s address to Congress are summarized in thisUniversal Newsreel, released on March 15, 1965:




On March 21, SCLC and SNCC began a third march from Selma to Montgomery. Under the protection of the federalized Alabama National Guard, the marchers made their way along a 54-mile route. They arrived at the Capitol on March 25 and Dr. King delivered a speech now known as“How Long, Not Long”.

(viaFrom Selma to Montgomery: The Selma Voting Rights Movement| The Unwritten Record)

Don’t miss the series of aerial photographs of the March from last year’s 50th anniversary posts on the Selma-to-Montgomery March
 

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The Book of Negroes

TheInspection Roll of Negroes (NAID 5890797), more commonly referred to as the Book of Negroes, is a record that is not widely known, but will soon become more prominent and recognized for its value to the history of American slavery, the Revolutionary War, and Canadian history.

Tonight (February 16) Black Entertainment Television (BET) will premiere a three-part miniseries based on the novelThe Book of Negroes(orSomeone Knows My Name) by Lawrence Hill. The novel and miniseries tells the story of Aminata Diallo, a protagonist whose life is forever changed because of this real-life historical document.

The Book of Negroes is actually a set of two ledgers that lists the names, ages, and descriptive information of about 3,000 enslaved African Americans, indentured servants, and freedmen that were evacuated from the United States along with British soldiers at the conclusion of the American Revolution. Over the extent of about 200 pages, this record captures what is now invaluable genealogical information such as where a person was held in slavery, their owner’s name, and when and how the person obtained freedom.

Why was the list generated in the first place?

Keep reading at: Rediscovering Black History » Record of the Week:The Book of Negroes
 

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Selma, March 7, 1965: Bloody Sunday at the Edmund Pettus Bridge

On Sunday morning, March 7th, nearly 500 people met after church to begin the 54 mile march to Montgomery, Alabama. Hosea Williams of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) and John Lewis of SNCC led a march to protest continued violence and civil rights discrimination and bring attention to the need for federal voting rights legislation. The protesters made it to the Edmund Pettus Bridge, just outside of Selma when they were ordered to disperse by about 150 white police troopers. The violent response from Alabama State Troopers and a mob of citizens was broadcast on national television for all to see. Citizens from around the country were largely shocked by the way the marchers were abused, and many wrote to the government to express their outrage.

The persistence of the protesters and the violence and murders associated with the marches from Selma to Montgomery caused President Lyndon B. Johnson to take action. Public support for the marchers forced Congress to act on voting rights legislation. The Voting Rights Act of 1965 was signed into law by President Lyndon B. Johnson on August 6th.

In commemoration of the 50th anniversary of the marches from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama and the Voting Rights Act of 1965, the National Archives has released FBI case file#44-28492 Section 1, Serials 1-42, Alabama (1965) 3/7 Selma to Montgomery March, Edmund Pettus Bridge (Photos)…(NAID 7634471) in the seriesClassification 44 (Civil Rights) Headquarters Case Files, 1924-1978(NAID2329984). This series contains correspondence, memorandums, photographs, newspaper clippings, reports, transcripts, and telegrams relating to the attack on the Edmund Pettus Bridge.

More from these files at theRediscovering Black Historyblog:

 

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Malcolm X photographing his favorite subject, mentee, brother and friend Muhammad Ali.

Where are these pictures? Imagine an exhibit of Malcolm X photos!
 

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Civil War Era Tintypes: Randall Nash, USCT, Inf.
Learn more about this rare tintype photo found in the Civil War pension file of a United States Colored Troops (USCT) infantryman by@usnatarchivesstaff here in our newInnovation Hub:

Today’s blog was written by Jesse Wilinski, Archives Technician at the National Archives at Washington, D. C.:

While working on RG 15 Case Files of Approved Veterans’ Pensions Application (Civil War and Later Survivor’s Certificates), 1861-1934 series, I came across a rare object in a Civil War Pension file. It was a tintype of United States Colored Infantryman, Randall Nash. A tintype is a photograph made by creating a direct positive on a thin sheet of metal coated with a dark lacquer or enamel. It is a rarity to see a photograph, much less a tintype, in a pension file. When found, tintypes are generally removed from the series and stored in the specially protected vault at the National Archives at Washington, D. C.

Randall Nash’s unit was first designated as the 4th Regiment Colored Infantry of Missouri Volunteers and was soon renamed the 68th United States Colored Troops (USCT) Infantry. It was mustered in Liberty, Missouri on January 28, 1864 and mustered out on February 5, 1866. Over two hundred former enslaved men from across Missouri were enlisted in this unit. The 68th travelled to Tennessee, Mississippi, Louisiana, Florida, Alabama, and Texas, performing duties in the defense of other units.

Nash’s pension file was listed under the name of Randall Talbot, an alias. The tintype was used to identify him, because no one knew Nash by any other name in the 68th USCT. The use of aliases made it difficult for surviving family members to collect pensions. In several cases, former enslaved black men who served during the Civil War would use an alias to prevent recapture or to take on a “free” name.

When I found this tintype, I had pulled the pension file and scanned it at theInnovation Hub. The Innovation Hub is new way of capturing information for researchers in a digital format for free and gives the National Archives the ability to put the records online for the public to use. Since this tintype is now in the vault, it is no longer physically available to researchers, but can be accessed through digital images. For assistance with pension files and tintypes, please contact the reference staff at theNational Archives at Washington, D.C.

ViaCivil War Era Tintypes: Randall Nash, USCT, Inf.| Rediscovering Black History
 

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William E. Scott,Toussaint Leads the Slaves to Victory, undated. Amistad Research Center, New Orleans, AFAC Collection.

Many African-American artists travelled to Haiti in the first half of the 20th century. Like these,William E. Scott(1884–1964) was intrigued by Haiti’s revolutionary past, and (supposed) quiet peasant life. By 1931, Scott was on his way to the Caribbean island where he produced more than 140+ oil paintings depicting different aspects of Haitian society, culture and history. In this piece, he takes inspiration from the tales of Toussaint Louverture and the Haitian Revolution.
 

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Meet Sada Mire: the First Somali Archeologist known to the
Somalia sits on the horn of Africa with the longest coastline on the continent’s mainland, while its capital city Mogadishu is known as the ‘white pearl’ of the Indian Ocean. In antiquity, Somalia is said to be “among the most probable locations of the fabled ancient Land of Punt;” in addition, it was an important commercial centre with ancient relations. Its long-distance trade by sea and camel caravan gave birth to a multi-cultural society with communities on the coast.

Somalia’s rich and ancient cultural heritage and treasure has been overshadowed by years of conflict and unrest. Undertaking the challenge of discovery to expose Somali’s cultural and archeological heritage –to make known the region’s riches– is one committed extraordinary Somali woman. Dr Sada Mire is claimed to be the first and only active Somali woman archaeologist in Somaliland, a de facto state in Northern Somalia.

In 1991, young Mire and her mother fled the civil war in Somalia and ended up in Sweden. In 2007, she returned to her country of birth for the first time. Upon her return, she began to discover that Somalia had a lot of archeological heritage but was unexplored and disregarded; furthermore, it didn’t have a department organized for cultural heritage or antiquity. It was then that she set up and headed Somaliland’s Department of Antiquities, a branch of the Ministry of Culture and Tourism. She’s currently the director of tourism for Somaliland and the executive director of Horn Heritage Organisation (established since September 2011). Concurrently, she’s conducting post-doctoral research at University of Leiden specializing in the archaeology, ethnography and history of the peoples of North-East Africa, particularly Somalia, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Djibouti and Kenya. Her work focuses on the indigenous institutions and pre-Christian and pre-Islamic belief systems, material culture, (rock) art, rituals, practices and landscapes.

When asked why she chose to pursue a career in archeology, Mire explains how her career was aspired from a need to understand and learn African history. “After my study in Scandinavian prehistory, I started to wonder and wanted to learn my own history so I went on to study archeology,” she says. While in school in Sweden, she recalls how while searching for books on African history, which was rare, she came across a sentence in one book that changed her life: “In order to write African history, we need to do archeological research”. Six years later she enrolled in archeology school in England (She obtained her Ph.D. in archaeology from University College London).

Ever since, the story of Mire has been her dedication to discover ancient treasures and preserve Somalia’s heritage, which she considers is at risk of disappearing. For this reason and more, she has been tenaciously and through methodical fieldwork making notable archaeological discoveries in the Horn of Africa. In this way, despite various challenges, believing that ‘cultural heritage is a basic human need’, she’s been on a mission for years, to discover, document, preserve, and educate Somali’s heritage.

In this archeological pursuit, Mire has been acknowledged for her various prehistoric findings: 5,000 year-old rock art at Dhambalin, revealing ancient writings from the Red Sea culture is only one of many notable discoveries. Moreover, during her public talks, she’s been calling attention to potential UNESCO world heritage sites. One such spotlighted site is the existence of the Masjid al-Qiblatayan of Zeila (in the ancient port city in the Awdal region of Somalia). The oldest mosque in Somalia with two qiblas (a semicircular niche in the wall of a mosque that indicates the direction that Muslims should face when praying), one facing Mecca and the other facing Jerusalem, established in the 7th century by the Prophet Mohammed on a stopover during his travel for refuge in Axum.

Prior to her discoveries, she admits how these heritage features were unknown to the world as well as many Somalis. Accordingly, she recognized how (many) Somalis were completely unaware of the existence and significance of archaeology. With that in mind, while grappling with the question of what cultural heritage means to Somalis, the lack of knowledge, it seems, has encouraged her to expose and educate Somali’s cultural heritage, first to Somalis and afterward to the world.

When educating, evidently conscious of the importance of building on existing knowledge, she points out how she uses and integrates local approaches; in this way, part of her process includes bringing in local people to try and talk about objects and monuments.

What’s more, recognizing the significance of mobile technology, and keeping in mind Somali’s ‘selective approach to technology’, she’s expressed focus on instituting digital preservation of heritage. All in all, eventually, she says her ultimate hope is that the discovery and archiving will not only have archeological importance and “enhance understanding about the prehistoric way of life across the region”, but also “help promote a sense of confidence and cultural pride in Somali’s”. Furthermore, underlining the power of archeology in understanding our identity, Mire reckons that “pride and dignity in knowing our heritage can be a basis for a collaborative approach to development in African nations.”
 

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The Kabyle myth is a racialist concept created from the 1830s onwards by French travellers and settlers claiming the moral and cultural superiority of Kabyle Berbers over the neighbouring Arabs and their closeness to Europeans in both physical and European respects. Although ultimately a failure for French colonial authorities, this myth still has a major influence on modern Berber nationalist ideology.​
 

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Ramesses II massacring his enemies
In this image Ramesses II wears an elaborate garment, the blue crown, sandals and holds three prisoners by their hair. In his right hand he grips an axe with which he is about to strike his prisoners. The facial features and hair styles of the three men indicate that they belong to three different people: the Nubians, the Libyans and the Asiatics. The block was reused in one of Merneptah’s buildings. New Kingdom, 19th Dynasty, ca. 1279-1213 BC. Now in the Egyptian Museum, Cairo.
 

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“It is widely believed that the practice of ancient Egyptian religion ceased with the end of pharaonic culture and the rise of Christianity. However, an organised reconstruction and revival of the authentic practice of Egyptian, or Kemetic religion has been growing, almost undocumented, for nearly three decades.Profane Egyptologistsis the first in-depth study of the now-global phenomenon of Kemeticism. Presenting key players in their own words, the book utilises extensive interviews to reveal a continuum of beliefs and practices spanning eight years of community growth.Profane Egyptologistsis both an Egyptological study of Kemeticism, and a critical study of the discipline of Egyptology itself. It will be of value to scholars and students of archaeology and Egyptology, cultural heritage, religion online, phenomenology, epistemology, pagan studies and ethnography, as well as Kemetics and devotees of Egyptian culture.”

Profane Egyptologists: The Modern Revival of Ancient Egyptian Religion, by Paul Harrison
 
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