Monday, June 6, 2016

ANCIENT EGYPT (KEMET) IS NOT THE LAND OF SLAVERY

By Thando Sipuye


"The history of Black Afrika will remain suspended in air and cannot be written correctly until Afrikan historians dare to connect it with the history of Egypt" - Dr Cheik Anta Diop

The Bible demonizes ancient Egypt (Kemet) as a land of slavery where the so-called Jews were supposedly enslaved for 400 years before their emancipation by Moses. As a result, many Black people today have a negative perception of Egypt as a land of slavery and a place ruled by a ruthless King named Pharaoh (this was a title of all Egyptian Kings & Queens).

Majority of our Black people think that there was one single ruler named 'Pharaoh'. They don't know that hundreds of Black Pharaohs ruled ancient Egypt (Kemet) for thousands of years before any European human or civilization ever existed.

Black people have been tricked into hating Egypt (Kemet) and loving Rome.

Yet ancient Egypt (Kemet) & Ethiopia (Kush) are the original seats and cultural base of Afrikan civilizations, just as Greece & Rome are to Europe. Europains looted artifacts from Egypt (Kemet), Ethiopia (Kush) and thorughout the continent and destroyed Afrikan civilizations.

All Europain cities, libraries, archives and museums are filled with artifacts stolen and looted from Afrika. All the architecture of all the world's parliaments, universities, courts, museums and libraries are modeled after the ancient Temples in Luxor and Karnak in Egypt (Kemet).

All Europain philosophers - from Plato, to Socrates, to Democritus, to Pythagoras, to Thales, to Herodotus, to Hippocrates etc. - were all students in ancient Egypt (Kemet) for more than a decade each. The very foundations of all the disciplines taught in all universities in the world (science, medicine, mathematics, physics, chemistry, sociology, astronomy, theology etc..) originated in ancient Egypt (Kemet) and Ethiopia (Kush).

"The history of Black Afrika will remain suspended in air and cannot be written correctly until Afrikan historians dare to connect it with the history of Egypt" - Dr Cheik Anta Diop

This call of Dr Cheik Anta Diop to Afrikan historians remains critical today.