Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Maafa21

www.Maafa21.com



Please check this documentary out: Here's a little about the Maafa 21: Black Genocide in 21st Century America - This is perhaps the hardest hitting documentary of our generation, or at least within decades. It explains in awesome detail the evolution of a sinister conspiracy to eliminate black people from the U.S. from before the end of slavery up to the present. Shows how the covert eugenics movement went underground and ultimately found the perfect weapon to eliminate Blacks from the U.S. population, and how many black elites are fully cooperating with the plan.

Fast Time




Returning to the earth:



Start where you are...

As I spend time in my urban garden -- of my own design -- preparing the soil for next spring. Clearing old growth while collecting the falling leaves from off the property to add to my compost bin.

On a consistent basis I search the city for "organic" material otherwise know as "waste" from farmers markets, organic grocery stores, as well as smaller establishments with which I have an intimate relationship, and the like to collect my compost.

Obtain cow manure from grass fed and pasture raised cows. (This manure is used both in the second stages of my compost as well as in a burning ritual commonly known in North America as Agnihorta/ Homa therapy). The manure is to be mixed with organic soil mix, worm castings, house and collection compost material, as well as mushroom compost.


I will continue to collect leaves during the fall -- from parks, neighbors, and vacant lost -- and burn them, at lest the majority of them, in late autumn so as to have an ash covering for the soil.

I plan on also obtaining mushroom compost with a mixture of worm castings. This is an excellent source of nutrient for your garden. If you can find someone selling mushrooms inquire about getting your hands on their compost.

Purchasing organic soil mix might be a good idea as you want to cover your second stage compost with soil.

Always remember to give thanks to your creation. However you choose to give thanks -- burning incense, playing music, dancing, chanting -- whatever it may be take time and give back.

Remember to capture and reuse rain water - very important!

If you feel like your garden is overpowering you I suggest picking up a book or two. I won't give you any suggestions here since there's a book out there for each and every one of you but I will say that you should look for material that deals with renewable, organic, and permanent agriculture. Nuff said.

I can't stress the notion of community when regarding food and your garden/farm/market place. Grow your food with the knowing of universality and onesness. Feed as many people as you can from your crops.

Friday, September 18, 2009

The secret to life is to have NO fear

Good morning

Are Time is Now!

What do you wake up thinking? This is very important. I would argue it is most beneficial to wake with no thougts and a clear 'head'. Make it your routine not to shock yourself into a fully awaken state immediately but rather be peaceful and present. Observe yourself!

Realize all the thoughts that come to you and work on cultivating those notions of desire that are deeply rooted in your conscious. Work on breaking through your FEARS -- your patters of procrastination and non action -- that keep you from expanding your own power and not just being a surviving cog in a parasitic system.

Who do you live for? Life cannot be separated from circumstances and spirituality is the cause and affect that circumstance designs.



Guidance

Thursday, September 17, 2009

Maafa

Wikipedia describes the Maafa as follows:

Maafa (also known as the African Holocaust or Holocaust of Enslavement) is a word derived from the Swahili term for disaster, terrible occurrence or great tragedy.[1][2] The term refers to the 500 years of suffering of Africans and the African diaspora, through slavery, imperialism, colonialism, invasion, oppression, dehumanization and exploitation.[2][3] The term also refers to the social and academic policies that were used to invalidate or appropriate the contributions of African peoples to humanity as a whole,[2] and the residual effects of this persecution, as manifest in contemporary society.[4]

While Maafa can be considered an area of study within African history in which both the actual history and the legacy of that history are studied as a single discourse, it can also be taken as its own significant event in the course of global or world history.[5] When studied as African history, the paradigm emphasizes the legacy of the African Holocaust on African peoples globally. The emphasis in the historical narrative is on African agents, in opposition to what is perceived to be the conventional Eurocentric voice; for this reason Maafa is an aspect of Pan-Africanism.

Usage of the term Maafa to describe this period of persecution was popularized by Professor Marimba Ani's 1994 book Let the Circle Be Unbroken: The Implications of African Spirituality in the Diaspora.



Readings:

The Black Holocaust For Beginners, by S.E. Anderson
Let The Circle Be Unbroken, by Marimba Ani
Powell, Eve Troutt, and John O. Hunwick, ed. The African Diaspora in the Mediterranean Lands of Islam (Princeton Series on the Middle East)
van Sertima, Ivan. ed. The Journal of African Civilization.
Rodney, Walter. How Europe Underdeveloped Africa. Washington, D.C.: Howard University Press. 1974.
World's Great Men Of Color. Vols. I and II, edited by John Henrik Clarke. New York: Collier-MacMillan, 1972.
The Negro Impact on Western Civilization. New York: Philosophical Library. 1970.
Quarles, Benjamin. The Negro and the Making of the Americas.
The African Diaspora in the Mediterranean Lands of Islam by John Hunwick

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Creation

This blog spot is a perpetual creation of thoughts, emotions, intuition and above all wisdom surrounding the notion of blackness and the here and now.

This is an open forum -- debating sound facts and/or ideologies -- that aims to tackle global concerns in aims of creating change both on the micro cosmic -- community based organic and sustainable business -- and macro cosmic -- kinship and plan Afrikan trade -- plan.

Items for discussion:

Love of Afrikan self - identity/ roots and culture.
Nutrition - organic vegetarian and redefining what these ideologies mean
Environment - not a green revolution but a shepparding of the planet
Trade and Financing - valuation of life/ discovering methods of community building
Relationships - partnering up and compatibility/ children rearing
Conspiracy - what are we facing?
Creation - reforming and reshaping 'black' Afrikan spiritual conception to bond all this in their place.

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

So here we are at the present...