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- The Tishkoff Study Confirms the Centrality of Africa to All People By : Robert Taylor
Sarah Tishkoff and her international team have confirmed that human life began in Africa. This lays the foundation for solving a host of social problems. - Are You Black, Black Enough and Who Decides By : Robert Taylor
With the election of a bi-racial president, discussion has emerged as to what makes one "Black." Actually, there are no current laws addressing the subject. It remains largely a cultural definition. - Segregation in Sixty-Seven By : Karen Cole-Peralta
When things were religiously, sexually and racially segregated, to the point of all obscurity, and nothing was real, nothing was right, and the world was upside down - I was not unhappy. This is because I was optimistic and had to maintain a “child’s mood”: overly boisterous and underly depressed. I only wanted to be a typical kid and have fun, but with segregation on, what was “typical?” - The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. By : Karen Cole-Peralta
The Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., (January 15, 1929 - April 4, 1968) was a man given a googolplex of titles from a wide variety of sources, including many widespread human rights organizations and grateful Southern universities. - Sister Betty X Shabazz By : Karen Cole-Peralta
Betty X (born Betty Jean Sanders) lived from May 28, 1936 to June 23, 1997. The widow of civil rights leader Malcolm X, she died three weeks after being severely burned in a fire allegedly set by her 12-year-old grandson. Shabazz's funeral service was held at the Islamic Cultural Center in New York City. Betty Shabazz Is buried next to her husband, Malcolm X. This is at the Ferncliff Cemetery in Hartsdale, New York. There’s also a major mosque in Harlem named after Sister Betty X Shabazz. - Ralph Abernathy – Dr. King’s Right-Hand Man By : Karen Cole-Peralta
Ralph Abernathy was the black man most recognized as Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s second-in-command. It’s easy to see him being King’s Vice President, had the good doctor ever attained the White House. In his last speech on April 3, 1968, MLK said, “Ralph Abernathy is the best friend that I have in the world.” Abernathy’s family has stated he loved them dearly, and that he risked everything for the American Civil Rights Movement - hard as it was. - Mrs. Coretta Scott King By : Karen Cole-Peralta
Mrs. Coretta Scott King (born April 27, 1927, died January 30, 2006) was a noted civil rights leader, widow of the slain Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. She founded the King Center in Atlanta, Georgia, in his name. - Brother Malcolm X Shabazz By : Karen Cole-Peralta
He was born Malcolm Little on May 19, 1925, and he was assassinated on February 21, 1965, when he was only 39 years old, the same age as the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was when he was assassinated. Malcolm X, however, was a few years older than the Christian leader Dr. King. At one time a major leader of the Nation of Islam, Malcolm X undertook the Hajj to Mecca in 1964, becoming a Sunni Moslem and taking the name Shabazz, in addition to the “X” that symbolized his lost African tribal name - From White Abolitionists to Black Reparationists By : Ali A. Mazrui
In January 1808, the US Congress abolished the slave trade. The British had abolished it the previous year. What neither legislature has done 200 years later is pass legislation to compensate Blacks for hundreds of years of enslavement and degradation. - Anuak History – In Memory of the Anuak 2003 Genocide in Neo-Nazi 'Ethiopia' (Part 2) By : Muhammad Shamsaddin Megalommatis
With the present article, second part of our focus on Anuak History, we complete a first circle of reference to the tyrannized Nation of Anuak who still today face an unprecedented set of racist Abyssinian (Amhara and Tigray) policies targeting their very existence. Contrarily with the previous articles that all evolved around the 2003 Anuak Genocide, we will republish here an excellent contribution by a great Africanist scholar, Professor Emeritus Robert O. Collins on the History of Anuak. - Anuak History – In Memory of the Anuak 2003 Genocide in Neo-Nazi ‘Ethiopia’ (Part 1) By : Muhammad Shamsaddin Megalommatis
With the present article, we complete a first circle of reference to the tyrannized Nation of Anuak who still today face an unprecedented set of racist Abyssinian (Amhara and Tigray) policies targeting their very existence. Contrarily with the previous articles that all evolved around the 2003 Anuak Genocide, we will republish here an excellent contribution by a great Africanist scholar, Professor Emeritus Robert O. Collins on the History of Anuak. - The Bogus-Ethiopian Millennium of Ignorance and Aberration By : Muhammad Shamsaddin Megalommatis
Within a few days the totalitarian colonial state of Abyssinia, comically self-styled as ‘Ethiopia’, will inaugurate the macabre ceremonials of the supposedly Ethiopian Millennium. This is not Ethiopian, and certainly not a Millennium by any means. - Oromo Intellectuals to Demolish Colonial Academia By : Muhammad Shamsaddin Megalommatis
As I wrote about Abyssinia and the lack of sufficient educational infrastructure in that dreadful tyranny, more particularly focalizing on problems Oromo nationals face when contacting European academia in order to pursue postgraduate and/or doctoral studies there, I will come up with some suggestions about ways to contravene this nefarious situation by young Oromo students and intellectuals. - Calling Abyssinia as 'Ethiopia': Part of the Oromo Ethiopian Genocide By : Muhammad Shamsaddin Megalommatis
As long as Semitic Amhara and Tigray Abyssinian culture, behavioural system, education, heretical religion, and authoritarian political ideology prevail in Eastern Africa's worst tyranny, overwhelmingly oppressing the outright Kushitic Oromo, Sidama, Ogadeni, Afar majority, as well as the Amhara and Tigray Muslims, the country must be called 'Abyssinia.' - The Legacy of Black Fatherhood By : D. Ross
A commentary exploring Black men in their roles as fathers from their time of enslavement to the present. - Campaign for Black Reparations Worldwide By : James N. Kariuki
Next month Zimbabwe will host a major conference to intensify the quest for reparations, a global effort for restitution for damages done to Global Africans by slavery, colonialism and racial degradation. What is the background to this phenomenon?
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