“Black people built the first shelters and housing structures over 800,000 years ago in the Near East. Before this, our ancestors used natural shelters or portable structures they could disassemble and move around with ease. By the time Europeans came, they were building multi-story complexes with glass windows and balconies.”
Have you seen American Gods? It’s a television series based on a book of the same name. The premise? A reluctant hero, Shadow Moon, realizes his familiar world is actually inhabited by gods and divine beings of all kinds. He runs into Odin, Anubis, Thoth, Ishtar, a Jinn (or genie), and a surprisingly tall leprechaun. What’s dope is the Black Gods are played by melanin-rich Black men and women. These characters are real flesh and blood, and you might miss them if you passed them on the street. In fact, they’re the personified deities of the many spiritual traditions found in this country. For example, Anansi (or Mr. Nancy) is the immortal trickster spirit of West Africa, remembered by Black Americans across the Caribbean and Southeast in legendary tales of rebellion and subterfuge. Mr. Nancy portrayed by Orlando Jones These “mythical” beings are sustained and empowered by those who believe in them, and at risk of disappearing once they are forgotten by all. These “old gods” represent the ancestors and cultural heroes of America’s many ethnic groups and communities. They represent the ancestral spirit of the people and the destiny they designed for their descendants. The “new gods” who could replace them represent materialism, vanity, convenience, and obedience to the state. In other words, these new “gods” represent an end of the world, for both humanity and the true and living Gods. The series follows Shadow Moon as he fights his way to salvation, for himself, the Gods, and the rest of humanity. What’s dope is that the Black Gods in this series are diverse. Thoth and Anubis are Black men who have been in America since before Columbus came, now running a funeral home in the Midwest. East African Bilqis is the goddess of love, loosely based on Makeda, the Queen of Sheba. Shadow Moon’s Black too, well half-way. But none of them have the passion and intensity of Mr. Nancy, or Anansi the Spider. That’s the original Spiderman, you know! An immortal “trickster” known for making the unexpected happen, Anansi stands against injustice and cruelty. From West Africa, he came along on a slave ship with his people. Throughout the series, Mr. Nancy is the show’s leading voice of outrage and resistance, arguing that only he among the Gods knows what it’s like to truly fight for survival. Now, as all the Gods find themselves at risk, they can understand the plight of Black people in America, who have been beaten and buried alive – until they forgot who they were, their power, and their gods. Orlando Jones, as coproducer of Season Two, wrote his lines to address real social issues affecting Black America today. This is why you’ll hear such authentic righteous fury on a show that otherwise wasn’t about race. Jones was named a consulting producer in Season Two, writing for other characters as well, especially characters of color, including Bilqis (Yetide Badaki), Salim (Omid Abtahi), Jinn (Mousa Kraish) and Sam Black Crow (Devery Jacobs). Above all, fans loved those moments when Anansi would “go in.” But the showrunners behind Season Three didn’t! So they wrote Jones (and Mr. Nancy) out of the show, saying his “angry gets shit done” attitude was “bad for Black America.” The showrunner in question didn’t deny that this was the issue, only saying he wasn’t from Connecticut! Jones also cited the show’s producer Fremantle for how they handle Black people like himself and Gabrielle Union. Union recently called out the “toxic culture” behind America’s Got Talent. American Gods also let go of several other actors of color as it becomes whitewashed. So I’m done watching the show. It was great visuals while it lasted, but this sort of change spells disaster for me. The moment any program or entertainer tries too hard to placate and pander to hypersensitive white supremacists, I know it’s their end. That show, minus its powerful social commentary, is just a show. Sure, it’s dope to envision a universe where Gods and divine beings are all around you…but you don’t need TV to do that! I suggest you leave the show alone (if you’ve been watching) and read the book instead. Reading allows you to see what you’re not being shown. If you’ve read Black God or Knowledge of Self, you know this is exactly the world we live in now! Yes, there are divine beings, both good and evil, all around you! And many of us are living out timeless stories over countless cycles, some with more clarity on our true origins than others! Just look around and you’ll see the ancestors among us. They’re in the faces of people you pass every day. They are in the voices we use when we speak our truths. They are with us in the form of our talents and abilities. And we are living out a legendary story right now. What’s your superpower and how will you use it?
“History is not everything, but it is a starting point. History is a clock that people use to tell their political and cultural time of day. It is a compass they use to find themselves on the map of human geography. It tells them where they are, but more importantly, what they must be.” – John Henrik Clarke Why are there are Black communities all over the world, from southern Russia to southeast Asia, from South America to the islands of the South Pacific? Some of them are no longer around, but we know they were there. They were everywhere. But who were these people? Where did they come from? How did they get to distant outposts like Easter Island, Tierra del Fuego, and even the frigid regions of northern Europe, Canada, and Siberia? And what role did these people play in establishing the world’s first cultures and civilizations? Finally, what happened to them? These are the questions we’ll answer in this book. In this book, you’ll learn about the history of Black people. I don’t mean the history you learned in school, which most likely began with slavery and ended with the Civil Rights Movement. I’m talking about Black history BEFORE that. Long before that. In this book, we’ll cover over 200,000 years of Black history. For many of us, that sounds strange. We can’t even imagine what the Black past was like before the slave trade, much less imagine that such a history goes back 200,000 years or more. Can you imagine what that does to a person? To grow up believing their people started out as slaves? Perhaps some of us know a little about Africa, but how much do we really know? How much do we know about the extent of the ancient Black empires that spanned far beyond continental Africa? Chances are, very little. In this book, we’ll tell the stories you haven’t been told. We’ll talk about the Black migrations that settled the world. We’ll talk about the Black people who founded the first cultures and civilizations of Africa, Asia, Europe, Australia, the Pacific Islands, and North and South America. No exaggeration. This book covers more than 200,000 years of Black history across every square inch of the Planet Earth. We’ll rediscover a past when the world was Black. As we learn the history of our ancestors, we’ll learn more and more about ourselves. Why Study the Past? Why are ancient Black civilizations important? What do they have to do with us nowadays? Could this information serve as anything more than a source of inspiration? Or are these stories mere reminders of the greatness that once was? I could answer those questions myself, but it makes sense to draw on the wisdom of those who came before me. People like historian John Henrik Clarke, who said the profound words quoted above. Or Senegalese scholar Cheikh Anta Diop, who said, “Intellectuals out to study the past, not for the pleasure they find in so doing, but to derive lessons from it.”[i] This is what Malcolm X meant when he said in his 1963 “Message to the Grassroots”: Of all our studies, history is best qualified to reward our research. And when you see that you’ve got problems, all you have to do is examine the historic method used all over the world by others who have problems similar to yours. And once you see how they got theirs straight, then you know how you can get yours straight. He was echoing the sentiments of his teacher,[1] the Honorable Elijah Muhammad, who said in the classic Message to the Blackman: The acquiring of knowledge for our children and ourselves must not be limited to the three R’s – ‘reading, ‘riting and ‘rithmetic. It should instead include the history of the Black nation, the knowledge of civilization of man and the universe and all the sciences. It will make us a greater people of tomorrow. We must instill within our people the desire to learn and then use that learning for self.[ii] Later in the book, he connects the study of history with the pursuit of self-knowledge: I am for the acquiring of knowledge or the accumulating of knowledge – as we now call it; education. First, my people must be taught the knowledge of self. Then and only then will they be able to understand others and that which surrounds them. Anyone who does not have a knowledge of self is considered a victim of either amnesia or unconsciousness and is not very competent. The lack of knowledge of self is a prevailing condition among my people here in America. Gaining the knowledge of self makes us unite into a great unity. Knowledge of self makes you take on the great virtue of learning. [iii] What they’ve been telling us is that history is a rich subject because it can illuminate the problems of the present, and present solutions that have already worked for such problems. History can also highlight the failures of the past, to help us see what not to do again. The past is like an alternate universe that obeys the same laws as our own, where we can see what happens when different things are attempted. Studying the past also allows us to see how our present-day conditions came to be. Both our strengths and our weaknesses are born from the triumphs and tragedies of our collective past. Thus, if we want a better present and future, we must come to understand the past. In writing this book, I gave myself the daunting task of covering all the cultures and civilizations of the world, going back as far as the earliest evidence of human settlement, and extending up to the point of European contact. That’s quite a lot of history. Thus, this book had to be split into two parts. Part One covers history from 200,000 to 20,000 years ago. These were the “prehistoric” cultures of the Paleolithic Age. This might make them sound “primitive,” but we’ll soon see that these cultures were actually highly advanced. Part Two covers history from 20,000 years ago to the point of European contact. This is the time that prehistoric cultures grew into ancient urban civilizations, a transition known to historians as the “Neolithic Revolution.” Right now, you’re looking at Part One. In this book, you’ll learn: Who the Original People of this planet are. Why a branch of these people left Africa and settled the rest of the world. How and when these people settled the entire Earth. Why these people settled everywhere from the arctic tundra of Siberia to the deserts of Peru, and what cultures they established there. The “extinction event” that nearly wiped out half of the human race. The people who were here before humans, and the threat they posed to human survival. How these threats affected those who survived and became us. How the actions and choices of these Original People affect our lives over 100,000 years later. What kind of culture the earliest humans had, and if they were “primitive savages” or scientifically and culturally advanced? The innovations and technology these Original People introduced to all of the world’s earliest human cultures. The threats faced by the direct descendants of these Original People who have survived into modern times. How we can apply the lessons of the past to the problems of the future. This book is, of course, not the first to explore the subject of ancient Black history. And it will certainly not be the last. What makes this book different is its scope, its depth, and its approach. This book covers the Black history of Africa, Asia, Europe, Australia, the Pacific Islands, and the Americas, whereas most texts focus on a very specific area, typically limited to popular regions like the Nile Valley. This book is also different because of how much work it took to put it together. To summarize, here are ten reasons why this book was so insanely difficult to research and write: Most popular texts on ancient Black history are NOT multidisciplinary (with a few exceptions, like They Came Before Columbus). This book is one of only a few works that looks at archaeological, linguistic, genetic, skeletal, mythological, and anthropological data to give readers the “whole picture.” Few works have attempted to dig any further back than 4,000 BC. This book covers the human journey from over 200,000 years ago, up to our first encounters with Europeans. That’s quite a lot to condense into one text. We did however find a way to fit it in two books. Thus, this book is split in two parts, one half covering the distant prehistoric part (where the foundations were laid), and the other half covering the ancient Black past when big cities were built. This book covers not just one part of the world, but the entire world. Asia, Africa, Australia, Europe, the Americas, the Pacific Islands, you name it, it’s covered. In many of these areas, you seriously have to dig to find any of the data you’re looking for. Our goal is to be respectful to Original People throughout the world, and considerate of their unique local heritages, while still being truthful about the Black foundations of these people, and later Black infusions into their civilizations. It’s not just a reference book, it’s an easy-to-read reference book. This book is meant be encyclopedic in nature, yet inviting and easy to read. The content is specific enough to warrant quoting in academic papers, while not so technical that readers can’t keep up. So by all means, quote us in your research papers! If you find us using conversational language to make something easier to understand, you may not want to quote THAT line. It’s just not as simple as saying “Black folks did this.” There is no such thing as a monolithic Black culture or people. Black people are the most diverse people on Earth. There were at least three separate waves of Black people who populated the planet, each with their own unique contributions. Many of these people branched off and evolved locally into smaller subgroups. We have to exemplify the methods of responsible scholarship. It’s too easy to offer bold claims that can’t be proven, but that goes against everything SDP stands for, and we believe that kind of “scholarship” is part of the problem plaguing our communities today. This isn’t a collection of “famous firsts” or disconnected Black history trivia. We’re actually telling the story of how this world came to be the way it is today. Telling the processes behind the highlights (for example, the backstory to the construction of the pyramids) isn’t as exciting as just listing the highlights, but that’s what separates a history book from a book of “fun facts.” We’re not just telling what happened, we’re explaining how it happened. As you can imagine, you won’t find stories about 10,000-foot-tall temples on page one. And while it IS amazing that the Black people of the Indus Valley had toilets and sewers 4,000 years ago (in contrast to Europeans who were throwing their bodily waste out the window as recently as the 1600s) we have to understand how much actually led up to these developments.[2] This book is part of our company’s campaign to engender empowered readers. Too often, our great historians and scholars have died without anyone to continue their work as intended. In other cases, lecturers and academics refuse to teach others how to find what they’ve found. We’re doing things differently. This book is full of open-ended questions and theories to research or expand upon, as well as guidelines on how to do the research. On our website, we’ve created a forum where a new scientific community can come together and continue writing this history. We call it “open source history.” Finally, we work life lessons into all of our books. This can’t just be a history book. This has to be a window into our past that allows us to better plan our futures. This book is also different because we don’t resort to fantastic claims without proof. That’s just something we don’t do, even if readers nowadays tend to let other authors get away with it. We want to teach critical thinking, so we lead by example. If it’s an extraordinary claim, it requires extraordinary evidence. If we can’t back it up, we won’t say it. If it’s just a theory, we’ll say that, and we’ll identify all that facts that suggest our theory is plausible. Finally, we are big on reality. The facts are amazing by themselves. We don’t need to make it seem like Black people built civilizations all over the world with magic or psychic powers. Doing so makes the accomplishments of the past seem effortless, and that sets us up for failure today – because nation-building nowadays is certainly not effortless. Doing so also requires no explanation of the process by which nation-building occurs, so you’re left with some fun stuff to believe in, but nothing you can actually use. We actually consider this kind of “teaching” to be a form of exploitation, and advise you to keep your eyes out for the people who peddle this kind of fantasy to those who deserve better. The following guidelines should make it easier to read and understand this book: Think of this book like a reference book. It’s full of literally thousands of years’ worth of content. To support many of the arguments we make, I’ve had to incorporate lots – and I mean lots – of data. Sometimes, this can be overwhelming. The vocabulary isn’t always easy either. But here’s the first step: relax. You can reread this book as many times as you need to. And unlike The Science of Self, Volume One, you don’t necessarily have to read this book from front to back. You can skip around, because this work is meant to be encyclopedic like The Hood Health Handbook – a useful reference on over 1,000 different historical topics. In other words, if you come across a difficult concept, a technical-sounding quote, or a section that simply doesn’t catch your interest, skip it. Often, those long block quotes are followed by an explanation in laymen’s terms. And what doesn’t catch you on your first read might catch your interest on your second read. However, it might be easiest to understand if you don’t skip around too much, because difficult concepts are explained the first time they’re mentioned, but not again afterwards. If you don’t feel like keeping a dictionary next to you while you read, there are free dictionary apps for most smartphones, and Dictionary.com is easy to use as well. Wherever we can, we define tough words, but you still might run into a few that you need to clarify. Don’t stress! You’re improving your vocabulary. Soon, you’ll be able to use “anthropometry” in a sentence. When you read, write in the margins and highlight text as often as you can. You may even want to use one of those colorful sticky-tab bookmarking systems. It’s also helpful to keep a notebook where you take notes and record your thoughts. We always ask that you share our work with others. We appreciate when you take pictures of our books and share them online, or post quotes with the necessary credits. SDP thrives off word-of-mouth. At the same time, you may not get great results if you introduce this book to a friend who doesn’t like reading. You may need to start with a book like How to Hustle and Win, or Rap, Race, and Revolution, or Knowledge of Self. Those books are better suited for general audiences. This book, like The Science of Self, Volume One, is much heavier reader and will be tough for the uninitiated. Still, carry the book with you. We delay our eBook releases (sometimes for a year or more) for a reason! We want people to bring this knowledge into the REAL world. We love the internet as much as you do, but we’re trying to kill all that disconnectedness and “reinvent the world” by bringing our people back together. (You’ll get it when you read this book). So take this book out with you, and let those random conversations begin. You’ll be surprised how much good can come from such a small gesture. [1] It should, of course, be noted that Malcolm X also consulted heavily with others, including Dr. John Henrik Clarke and Queen Mother Moore. [2] They say “Rome wasn’t built in a day,” but Rome was copied off nearby Black civilizations that took thousands of years to establish. So what took Rome so long? [i] Cheikh Anta Diop. (1974). African Origin of Civilization. Lawrence Hill Books. [ii] Elijah Muhammad. (1965). Message to the Blackman. Elijah Muhammad Books. [iii] Elijah Muhammad. (1965). The post Introduction to When the World was Black, Part One appeared first on SDP Books.
Ever since I got back from India, I’ve been determined to write more and share the journey. For starters, the music is epic. And by epic, I mean literally, like gods and demons and love affairs between the undead. I’ll tell you about how much of that I was walked into in a later post! For now, here’s a video or two that come from that crazy part of the world that birthed my ancestors. [embedded content] And here’s another. [embedded content] Of course, none of this compares to the most awesome film I’ve ever seen with an Indian in it. And this includes those awful Harold and Kumar movies and anything with Aziz Ansari in it. It’s a film called Baahubali, and I learned about it watching Part 2 on a bus to Orissa in southern India. It struck me as epic, like a story of the Gods. Then I realized it was. Baahubali is the story of Shiva, a story that predates anything European in India. And both parts are on the Internet. Just watch it. You won’t regret it. It’s got everything Indian films are known for, from crazy fight scenes to the singing numbers to the moral drama meant to teach us all some important lessons about ourselves. And plenty of explosions. How could you not love this? [embedded content] If you’ve read the story of Shiva, one of the legendary gods described in my last book Black God, you’ll be familiar with some of this amazing story. If you like Part 2, watch Part 1, and then watch Part 2 again. Indigenous storytelling is cyclical, not linear, and this film pulls out the whole repertoire of indigenous Indian culture from ancient times to right before the white folks showed up…so you can watch em in any order. They slipped a ton of symbolism and myth into this film, so its deep if you deep. If not, its still a fun ass movie to watch! Let me know what you think! The post Black God: The Music Video (Ft. Shiva) appeared first on SDP Books. The post Black God: The Music Video (Ft. Shiva) appeared first on Modern Mel.
Listen to enough conversations in Black America, and you’ll eventually hear a Black man call another Black man “God.” And he’ll mean it. And not in a cult leader kinda of way, but as a serious form of address, often between men who look like they’ve been through some serious sh*t. You ever met a Five Percenter? Like a real one? They’ve all been through some serious sh*t. And these men wouldn’t play with the word “God.” Neither would most people in Black America, because God still means something deep there. So when you hear Black people describing themselves and each other as Gods, you’d naturally want to know why? Are they being serious? Is this just slang? Just some Hip Hop stuff? Nah son. God wouldn’t even allow that. As bad as the statistics are in the hood as it is, every Five Percenter woulda been outta here if our math didn’t add up right and exact. Godhood, in the Black community, is still a serious subject of study and honor. Even people who say it without meaning anything serious know there’s some real Black Gods out there who are what? On some serious sh*t. What’s a Five Percenter, Anyway? The history of Black people describing themselves as Gods didn’t start it in the sixties. As I explain in my book Black God: A Brief Introduction to the World’s Religions and their Black Gods, it goes back to ancient times. Think about it: All the Black people of Egypt seemed to know they were Gods, or at least somewhere in the divine hierarchy of the cosmos. Ancient India (which was Black-skinned until about 1800 BC) also kept up a tradition of recognizing divinity in their men and women. Throughout the rest of the world, dark-skinned indigenous people always saw themselves as one with the divine, not separate from and not lacking in the abundance that is the Creator’s. In other words, our most ancient ancestors, who were Black, knew they were personifications of the Divine, and the power that came with that knowledge. That changed with the introduction of foreign religions, but even those scriptures reveal a path to oneness with God. White people, are you still reading? I know it hurts to read it, but your most ancient ancestors were Black too. Chinese people, you too. All of our earliest ancestors were. We didn’t start out white, we started out black-skinned! Where did white people come from, then? We’ll come back to that! Let’s get back to Black folks. In America, Black people have known of their link to the divine from the moment they arrived here. After all, many brought their sacred traditions from home with them. In some areas, like Haiti, that secret knowledge of divine power survives. And I’m talking bout Voodoo, for you white folks reading. Yes, there’s some real power in Black folks. The Haitian Revolution wasn’t won with bullets alone, you know. How could they have had enough bullets? They beat a whole European nation and nearly bankrupted Bonaparte! That’s why Haiti’s been gettin hated on ever since, and you scary white folks are wrong for supporting/allowing that. Seems like all white folks do is go to Haiti to collection donation money while doing pervert stuff with the people they supposed to be helping! Don’t play innocent, Charlie. The rest let it happen. Nobody gets a pass. But keep reading, you might learn something! All Black People Deserve the Knowledge of Self In the 1930s a “wise man from the East” known as Wali Fard Muhammad began teaching Black people in America about their most ancient past, back to times before the invention of religion or government. Back when Black men were Gods. Master Fard and his leading minister, the Honorable Elijah Muhammad, built the Nation of Islam, which grew to reach millions with their teachings about the inherent divinity of the Original man and woman. In 1964, a brother named Clarence 13X left an NOI temple to bring these teachings to street youth, in the name of Allah. This would mark the first time a Black man had publicly declared himself to be Allah since ancient times, and his teachings would influence millions of others to walk the same path, towards their own self-realization as a Supreme personification of the Divine. Allah’s students nurtured the birth and development of Hip Hop culture as a means for those with knowledge to influence the masses. As you all know, this worked until sometime in the 90s when they figured out what the Gods were doing, and killed the conscious era in Hip Hop! Today, there’s a new wave of consciousness circulating across the planet again, and people are reawakening to the beauty of our ancestors and their dark skin, and what those things have to do with the cosmic order of everything. You can study how melanin is an “organizing force” for life in my book, The Science of Self. You’ll also learn about the reason why Black men and women have always seen their divine counterpart in God, the father, and the Earth, the mother. Typically known as Five Percenters (an allusion to how few they are, compared to the masses who follow society’s miseducation), they’re still out there, here and there, teaching whoever is smart enough to listen and walk the righteous path. For them, Black Lives mattered long before there was social media. In fact, the Five Percenters were the reason New York City didn’t collapse into chaos like other cities after Dr. King was killed. They were also the “Peace Guards” at all of Kool Herc’s early Hip Hop parties. Today, you’ll find em wherever you find Black men and women, although few would boast of who they are. Yet if you’re blessed to know a real one, you know that True and Living Gods and Earths change lives for the better, almost every day! (Excerpt from upcoming book Science of Self Volume Four) The post Why “God” Ain’t a Word Black Folks Play With appeared first on SDP Books. The post Why “God” Ain’t a Word Black Folks Play With appeared first on Modern Mel.
The DEEP Black History of the Amazon And the Science of the “African American” Dr. Supreme Understanding What do you know about Brazil? Besides what you saw in City of Gods and clips from the Carnival in Rio? Cause all that is just wild. I mean, I love it, but it’s lowkey tragic too. Did you know Brazil is home to both the largest Black population in the Western Hemisphere? More Black folks than the US, yes. And way more racism. Watch a movie called Besouro to see how Capoeira was developed just to kick white colonizer ass there. That’s a fighting art that originates in Angola. Many came from West and Central Africa during the slave trade, but that’s not where ALL the Black people there came from, or when! Some of it happened in ancient times. And some of it was some super God mode stuff. You may know that Brazil is home to the Amazon Rainforest, one of the biggest rainforests in the world, responsible for a lot of the oxygen we breathe today. You probably also know that those rainforests are being cut down at a crazy rate, to make room for cheap soybean fields and cattle farms so that companies like McDonald’s can spend less to make more money! Well that tragedy turned into something else. First, the cutting of trees revealed ancient sites that would have otherwise remained hidden. In my 2012 book When the World was Black, we told the story of this ancient civilization and who were its founders. Thousands of years ago, these people settled around the Amazon River and converted the land into fertile soil. How? They invented tierra prete, or “Black Earth,” a revolutionary soil that cannot be reproduced today. If you dig up a 5,000 year old chunk of this soil and add it to barren wasteland, that land will become fertile! How? In addition to some very advanced composting, the builders of the Amazon civilization had knowledge of genetic engineering. They bred microbes that would live in the soil and maintain its amazing qualities. This is just the beginning. After all, there are five million acres and over 75% still hasn’t been explored! Since we published the story of the Amazon’s most indigenous people and their fight to protect their homelands, two things have happened: Amazon nations have begun winning MAJOR legal battles to protect their land AND be compensated in the millions for what they’ve lost. Yes, they’re getting their power back.Where the trees remain, radar that can see underground has revealed hundreds of sites, suggesting that the ancient population here could have been in the millions! And only 5% of the sites have been dug up for what they could reveal. Who were the people who built this little-known ancient civilization? We know they did trade with West African long before Columbus. In the appendix of When the World was Black, I list several times that genetic signatures from Africa and the Middle East made their way into the Americas, including a few waves coming from ancient Egypt! A MAJOR arrival point was Brazil, thanks to the ocean currents that act like a conveyor belt from West Africa to the Americas. Columbus heard about this Transatlantic current from the Moors, and recruited a Moor named Pedro Alonso Niño to show him the way in 1492. This current also sweeps into the Carribbean (where Columbus landed) and the Gulf of Mexico. Both had their own ancient civilizations, although the one in the Carribean is now mostly underwater near the Bay of Bimini, while few people understand the role of the Olmecs in founding Mesoamerican civilization. These were all Black people. In the Amazon, the most isolated indigenous people remain Black-skinned or darker than their neighbors. These people are not the descendants of slaves. They are the Original people. This is a reminder that many of the native people of the Americas, from Central America into the American Southeast, had Black ancestors. Some of these ancestors descend from the first settlers of the Americas, who came from both East and West, by both land and sea, and in many successive waves of migration. The earliest waves of human settlers, like all humans before about 6,000 years ago, were rich in melanin, their dark skin charged by the Sun. Later waves brought different features, like those of the Siberians and Mongolians who came after thousands of years adapting to Asia’s northern tundras and deserts. I think everybody had braids though. Probably everybody. And feathers. But Africans have braids and feathers too! And Africans have genetic evidence in South America so old they had to have been sailing there over 8,000 years ago! We know the Dafuna Boat found in Nigeria is that old, and we have rock art paintings of boats even older than that. Ivan Van Sertima’s They Came Before Columbus documents many of these journeys. We know they came to do trade, but they were treated as Gods almost everywhere they were received. This was certainly the case with the Olmecs and the mysterious Moundbuilders of the American Southeast. In most places, they say those people are no longer here. Those ancient Black folks just disappeared huh? In reality, those great men and women did not simply die off or disappear. Like the miraculous soil they crafted in the Amazon, they thought about things thousands of years in advance. This is something our ancestors could do, especially the wise who traveled the world, teaching and doing trade! So wouldn’t they have found ways to survive? To remain present in the world, like the life in the soil they left behind? Or like the trees they planted, which became our Amazon rainforest. Yes, that rainforest is not a natural jungle. It was carefully planned, organized, and planted by the Black folks who made its soil. They planted a massive garden of eden that would produce clean air (and medicine) for us, for thousands of years! This is the same ingenious Black people they’re saying were wiped out due to poor planning or disease. Um, no. I can’t see it. Just like the Amazon nations who survived by seclusion after encountering whites for the first (and sometimes last!) time, there are others who became a part of modern society. They became our ancestors. These were the Black people who were already here, who were quickly absorbed into the slave economy of the country for a few hundred years. That ended only recently, you know? Mexico may have abolished slavery before the US (thanks to Emiliano Zapata, Vinvent Guerrero, and others of African descent), but Brazil didn’t stop until much later. They had TOO many Black people! They still do! And as you may have seen in those video clips of Carnival or City of Gods, the Black people there aren’t anymore aware of this history than Black folks anywhere! Why? Racial miseducation is a major operation, tied into the underpinnings of how this whole neo-colonial world works! After all, if the poor and enslaved really knew who they were and what their rights are, this system wouldn’t function! In Brazil, they have over 18 different racial classes, meant to keep the people apart and fighting each other! This is why those Amazon victories give me hope. So does the news that Knowledge of Self is spreading across the Americas, even into the Amazon, at an even faster rate than they can cut down trees! Soon, thanks to native archaeologists, we’ll know even more of what these amazing Black communities established in the Amazon. We may never, however, find any written records. Our ancestors didn’t always need those, because we had both oral and mental traditions. We know that after Francisco Orelliano sailed down the Amazon, reporting big cities with massive walls and people everywhere, the same area was depopulated by the next time white folks came. Most of this was because disease was spreading and people were dying. White folks brought a bunch of nasty demons within em, leading with smallpox and syphilis (a dog disease!). This didn’t kill off everyone, however. Many among us knew that once we saw white people, it was time to go! In fact, many of the ancient American prophecies spoke of the coming of the white man and the end of Indian civilization. Thus, the wisest among us got away. Some remained free, establishing “palenques” and other fortified towns resisting enslavement for centuries. In the Carribean and South America, these Black revolutionaries were called Maroons. We republished some of their stories in a book called Black Rebellion: Eyewitness Accounts of Major Slave Revolts. In the Southeast US, the Seminoles were a major African-Indian confederation united against white rule, and Black men routinely married into Indian tribes as royalty. Outside of those Indians who had been rounded up and trained by whites, most Indians saw their own dark skin as a sign of connection with these Black men and women from far away, while some who knew their “old history” heralded them as Gods and leaders. These are the deep backstories of the Black and Indian people who make up the ancestry of most Black people in America today. Outside of folks like Barack Obama and Kamala Harris, most Black folks across North and South America can trace their ancestry directly back to two very strong Black communities – one side native to the Americas, and another side native to Africa. Does this mean Black folks are technically African-Americans after all? Dammit Jesse Jackson, did you know?! Why didn’t he explain? Ah, maybe cause you’d also realize what you’re entitled to as a result. Way more than 40 Acres and a Mule! After all, this land is yours not just because your family built it, but because your family may have been on this soil for over 5,000 years! No wonder some of us feel so connected to this crazy place! Must be the same for the people of Brazil and the Carribean, even if they don’t know the deep history. They’ve gotta feel it! So is this why we can become territorial, even on lands we may not think are ours! Cause they might be! And what if we really understood this? Could you imagine how our children would think and grow up? What if we showed them how to reclaim it all? I’ll tell you this much, it begins with knowing what’s what. Read up and learn your own history. Find your traditions. Read a book like Knowledge of Self or Black God to see who you might REALLY be. And this is the first step to reclaiming all of yourself, and your whole world with it. You with me? You know it’s never just a history lesson with me! Hope you’ve gotten some jewels to use, and some to share! Peace! Further Reading and References: La Brega Black Rebellion When the World was Black 1 When the World was Black 2 Black God Knowledge of Self