"Because of the progress mankind has achieved and because of the difficulties that are at times part and parcel of progress and prosperity, we find ourselves at a crossroad where we might make the world safe for our future generations or we might all perish together." Haile Selassie the 1st
Tuesday, August 30, 2011
Friday, August 26, 2011
Afraid to go home? Who? Me?
"We have always been African. Slave-ships and a Holocaust, at home and abroad, could never change that. Garvey and RasTafari reminded us of that. And then gave us the voice to express, for the African within each of us."
Kwasi Abahu
Kwasi Abahu
Monday, August 22, 2011
The Whirlwind and The Storm
Love in the House. Is anyone following whats going on in Africa right now? We must support our brothers in this time. It troubles me personally that Brother Leader was not able to hold on, but he is correct: Africa must be defended from the imperialist regimes that are waiting like serpents to suck her dry. We must find a way as a House, rather we as Rastafari and Pan-Africans, must hasten to our calling and in defense of our pledge: Freedom Redemption and International Repatriation Now. I have a feeling this is not the last intervention in Africa. We must not let this happen on our watch. My Lord and Empress
One God, One Aim, One Destiny, One Love
Labels:
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Sunday, August 21, 2011
A Night to Remember: Marcus Garvey Remembered and Honoured
"We are going to emancipate ourselves from mental slavery because whilst others might free the body, none but ourselves can free the mind. Mind is your only ruler, sovereign. The man who is not able to develop and use his mind is bound to be the slave of the other man who uses his mind...."
Marcus Garvey
As cliche as the title of this blog is, it is ever appropriate. The night was balmy as most Florida summer nights. The place, Joseph C. Carter Park in Fort Lauderdale, FL. It was said that Carter Park, is the oldest park in an African neighborhood in Broward. It was my first time visiting the park and none other than The Rt. Hon. Marcus Garvey could have brought me out. In fact, the crowd was so diverse that I know in my heart, that while many people do not hold Garvey to the pedestal that many Rastafari and Garveyites do, there is strong national and race pride that we have gained as a Nation from Him.
Marcus Garvey
As cliche as the title of this blog is, it is ever appropriate. The night was balmy as most Florida summer nights. The place, Joseph C. Carter Park in Fort Lauderdale, FL. It was said that Carter Park, is the oldest park in an African neighborhood in Broward. It was my first time visiting the park and none other than The Rt. Hon. Marcus Garvey could have brought me out. In fact, the crowd was so diverse that I know in my heart, that while many people do not hold Garvey to the pedestal that many Rastafari and Garveyites do, there is strong national and race pride that we have gained as a Nation from Him.
Thursday, August 18, 2011
Wednesday, August 17, 2011
MAN KNOW THYSELF: Marcus Garvey 124th Birthday Anniversary
"For man to know himself is for him to feel that for him there is no human master. For him Nature is his servant, and whatsoever he wills in Nature, that shall be his reward. If he wills to be a pygmy, a serf or a slave, that shall he be. If he wills to be a real man in possession of the things common to man, then he shall be his own sovereign. When man fails to grasp his authority he sinks to the level of the lower animals, and whatsoever the real man bids him do, even as if it were of the lower animals, that much shall he do. If he says "go." He goes. If he says "come," he comes. By this command he performs the functions of life even as by a similar command the mule, the horse, the cow perform the will of their masters. For the last four hundred years the Negro has been in the position of being commanded even as the lower animals are controlled. Our race has been without a will; without a purpose of its own, for all this length of time.
Because of that we have developed few men who are able to understand the strenuousness of the age in which we live. Where can we find in this race of ours real men. Men of character, men of purpose, men of confidence, men of faith, men who really know themselves? I have come across so many weaklings who profess to be leaders, and in the test I have found them but the slaves of a nobler class. They perform the will of their masters without question. To me, a man has no master but God. Man in his authority is a sovereign lord. As for the individual man, so of the individual race. This feeling makes man so courageous, so bold, as to make it impossible for his brother to intrude upon his rights.
So few of us can understand what it takes to make a man - the man who will never say die; the man who will never give up; the man who will never depend upon others to do for him what he ought to do for himself; the man who will not blame God, who will not blame Nature, who will not blame Fate for his condition; but the man who will go out and make conditions to suit himself. Oh, how disgusting life becomes when on every hand you hear people (who bear your image, who bear your resemblance) telling you that they cannot make it, that Fate is against them, that they cannot get a chance. If 400,000,000 Negroes can only get to know themselves, to know that in them is a sovereign power, is an authority that is absolute, then in the next twenty-four hours we would have a new race, we would have a nation, an empire, resurrected, not from the will of others to see us rise, but from our own determination to rise, irrespective of what the world thinks..."
Marcus Garvey
Because of that we have developed few men who are able to understand the strenuousness of the age in which we live. Where can we find in this race of ours real men. Men of character, men of purpose, men of confidence, men of faith, men who really know themselves? I have come across so many weaklings who profess to be leaders, and in the test I have found them but the slaves of a nobler class. They perform the will of their masters without question. To me, a man has no master but God. Man in his authority is a sovereign lord. As for the individual man, so of the individual race. This feeling makes man so courageous, so bold, as to make it impossible for his brother to intrude upon his rights.
So few of us can understand what it takes to make a man - the man who will never say die; the man who will never give up; the man who will never depend upon others to do for him what he ought to do for himself; the man who will not blame God, who will not blame Nature, who will not blame Fate for his condition; but the man who will go out and make conditions to suit himself. Oh, how disgusting life becomes when on every hand you hear people (who bear your image, who bear your resemblance) telling you that they cannot make it, that Fate is against them, that they cannot get a chance. If 400,000,000 Negroes can only get to know themselves, to know that in them is a sovereign power, is an authority that is absolute, then in the next twenty-four hours we would have a new race, we would have a nation, an empire, resurrected, not from the will of others to see us rise, but from our own determination to rise, irrespective of what the world thinks..."
Marcus Garvey
Labels:
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freedom,
Haile Selassie,
independence,
international,
Jamaica,
Marcus Garvey,
Nelson Mandela,
Nyahbinghi,
rastafari,
redemption,
South Africa,
success,
women
Tuesday, August 16, 2011
South Sudan: One month in.
“Don't wait until everything is just right. It will never be perfect. There will always be challenges, obstacles and less than perfect conditions. So what. Get started now. With each step you take, you will grow stronger and stronger, more and more skilled, more and more self-confident and more and more successful.”
Sunday, August 14, 2011
We really must really begin to fervently route out this kind off garbage meditation.
Honestly, if people like David Starkey want to believe they are right, they should pay for all Africans to leave out of their country and more importantly, GET OUT OF AFRICAN TERRITORY!!! NOW!!!
Thursday, August 11, 2011
Drought, Famine, and Death: Where is the African Diaspora helping?
"The decisiveness of the short period of colonialism and its negative consequences for Africa spring mainly from the fact that Africa lost power. Power is the ultimate determinant in human society, being basic to the relations within any group and between groups. It implies the ability to defend one's interests and if necessary to impose one's will by any means available. In relations between peoples, the question of power determines maneuverability in bargaining, the extent to which a people survive as a physical and cultural entity. When one society finds itself forced to relinquish power entirely to another society, that in itself is a form of underdevelopment."
Walter Rodney
Walter Rodney
Labels:
Africa,
Africa Union,
drought,
ethiopia,
famine,
kenya,
rastafari,
somalia,
South Sudan
Wednesday, August 10, 2011
Youth Empowerment
“You may never know what results come of your action, but if you do nothing there will be no result”
Mahatma Gandhi
Just came back home from a Youth Development and Empowerment workshop and feeling a bit put off. I mean we had very good intentions in developing this workshop for the community of under served youth who are far too often ushered into the criminal justice system. Sad to say, for me anyway, the turn out was quite sparse. It seems like for young people to come out to anything these days, you have to put the likes of Lil Wayne, Rhianna or Nicki Minaj as headliners.
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