Monday, January 16, 2006

letter of the year 2006,cuba and the world

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LETTER OF THE YEAR The Organizing Commission of the Letter of the Year Havana, Cuba FOR CUBA AND THE WORLDTo Ifá priests, to Oriatés brethren, Babaloshas, Iyaloshas and Iworos.


To the religious general public.Last December 31, 2005, 992 Ifa Priests reunited in representation ofmost branches and religious Cuban families in the Temple-House located at Ave. 10 de Octubre # 1509 between Josefina and Gertrudis, Víbora,Municipe 10 de Octubre, Havana City, Cuba.

This ceremony was presided by the Ifá Priest Guillermo Diago "OgbeWeñe" and the Letter was drawn by the youngest priest.

Regent Sign: Oggndá Irete (Oggundá Aketé)
Prophecy: Osogbo Arun Otorunwa (Sickness that suddenly appear due tounknown and unexpected causes)
Orunla Onire (by Orunla it may be revealed)

Regent Divinity: Obbatalá, who represents Olodumare (The Supreme One) on Earth, thus he is considered Father of all Heads.
He also is theOrisha of Justice. He lives in high places. Pregnant women makesacrifices to him to assure having perfect and healthy children. He is the Osha of purity and spiritual cleanness. To his followers is tabooto ingest alcoholic beverages, horsemeat, peppers and highly seasonedor spiced foods.
White and sensible foods will provide a longer and comfortable life. He is worshiped in the city of Ifón and he is nativeof Irange, Nigeria. Albinos are his followers.


Accompanying Divinity: Oshún, Osha of Maternity and protector of thenewly born. Sacrifices are made to her to protect our children duringpregnancy and at an early age (postnatal).
She is wise and generous.Tribute is given to her in deep places where the river is born and at the river's mouth.
She is received in order to alleviate problems withchildren and she aids with their conduct and upbringing.

Banner of the Year: White with green edges.

Ebbo: 3 chickens (for Eshú) 3 nails, one flowerpot, 7 coconuts, 7kepis (hats) and rest of ingredients.Rogation to Orunmila with 2 white painted coconuts.

SICKNESS THAT SHALL INCREASE IN NUMBERS- Presence of illness unknown to Medical Science.- Presence of cerebral-vascular illnesses related, in many cases, withsexual orientation problems.- Presence of skin illnesses.- Stomach illnesses.- Danger of malformation in babies about to be born.- Serious disorders of the central nervous system.- Hormonal dysfunctions.

EVENTS OF SOCIAL INTEREST- Increase of criminal acts.- Modification within the penal system.- Rupture of agreements.- Problems in the Public Health sector.- High incidence of moral deformity.- Combat promiscuity at home.- A call is made to the World's Society in order to perform ananalysis regarding the high level of corruption found in every sphereof life.- A call is made to families regarding methods to reorganizechildren's education.- Sign that warns danger of increase in violence.- Protect water reservoirs. Danger of droughts.- This sign marks the validity of the care we must have with weatherchanges and their fatal consequences.- Be organized regarding economic management to avoid great money loses.- This sign demands of everyone the fulfillment of moral laws.

ADVICES1.- A call is made to all Health Systems in order to take propermeasures to prevent new sicknesses that have no known cause.2.- Be aware of robberies.3.- Avoid excess in the ingestion of alcoholic beverages.4.- Take precautions not to relegate, due to extreme trust, youresponsibilities to others.5.- Promote unity among neighbors and avoid nuisances that affectpeaceful coexistence (noise, scandals, etc.).6.- Promote family unity.7.- Avoid rivalry between men and women, from the familiar and´professional points of view.8.- Ebbó Omi without sacrifice (sacred water) with coconut water.

SAYINGS OF THE SIGN-
"He who entrusted his secret to another became his slave"-
"Discretion is a man's most valuable possession".-
"The fisherman does not know where the sea gets its water nor theorigin of the lagoon".-
"We cannot face to face deceit each other

"METAPHORIC MESSAGE- If we tell a lie, we seem to be agitated; if we tell a truth, we will seem to be comfortable.-

The road leading to a neighboring land became long.- The hat of the king who shaves his head and discovers it.- The tender leafs of the Inkin palm tree touch the soil and sprout again.

COLLECTIVE SACRIFICE IN FAVOR OF THE COMMUNITY1 goat, one nail (Spanish style) and rest of ingredients.Note: It is recommended to seek assistance from one's respectivegodparents in order to find individual orientation.

The Organizing Commission of the Letter of the Year wishes you a happyand prosperous year 2006.Babalawos, priests of Cuban Santería have predicted for 2006 threadsof war, natural catastrophes, sickness and all together such a darkscenario that they convoke for a "National Sacrifice" to safeguard thecommunity.

The Comisión Organizadora de la Letra del Año, one of two babalawo associations, that perform the "Lecture of the Letter of the Year" inCuba, has given alert about the loss of moral values and corruptionand requested Health Organizations to be prepared for the arrival of unknown diseases to science.

"We are in a propitious year, very similar to the one when AIDS and Ebola CAME to be known, for a new disease to science. What we aretrying to achieve" is to take proper measures for the arrival of this sort of disease that may strike Cuba and the world, said VictorBetancourt, one of the babalawos who made the announcement.

This prediction indicates that there shall be an increase in criminal activities, breaking of agreements and a high incidence of moraldeformation, promiscuity at homes, a high level of corruption,increase in violence, danger of droughts and warns of weather changesand their "fatal consequences".

The Letter of the Year is so dark that santeros are to perform onFebruary 12 an important ceremony with animal sacrifices, and haverequested the collaboration of all babalawos of the country.

The priest Lázaro Cuesta stated that "due to what this sign determinesand the magnitude of the danger it withholds" this year the sacrificeshall be made in a more public manner, that will include placingflowerpots with nails "with the aim to preserve ourselves from theattacks, both human and from Nature".

The symbols will be placed in different points of the city, as an armyof "invisible soldiers" that are to protect people from the "invasion"."By invasion we are not talking about an army of armed soldiers, butabout an army of vices, disease and weather changes" he affirmed whenpointing out that the symbols of protection will "not necessarily" areto be visible.Santeros, followers of the Afro-Cuban religion known as "Ifá Worship",explained that "neither these sacrifices nor the animal heads to beplaced are a menace to public health".

"On the contrary, we are convinced that they may preventconfrontations and foreign wars", he said.For this prediction were present priests from different countries:Colombia, Costa Rica, España, México, Panamá, Sweden, Uruguay,Venezuela, Belgium, Brazil, USA, Hungary, England, Italy, Norway andSwiss who left a great task ahead for 2006 to the Regent Divinity,Obatalá, who represents Olodumare (Supreme One) on Earth.

Alongside Obatalá, as Accompanying Divinity, Oshún, protector of love and children is present; she is identified with the Virgin of LaCaridad del Cobre, Patroness of Cuba in the Catholic religion.In spite that for the other organization that performs the reading ofthe Letter of the Year, the Asociación Cultural Yoruba de Cuba(Cultural Yoruba Association of Cuba), the regent divinity is Oggún(who is identified with Saint Peter in the Catholic religion) whodefends homes and roads, both concur with Oshún's company.

The lectures are similar, with warnings about health, attention tonatural phenomena, children's education and avoidance of violence, asweb as fidelity and fulfillment of commitments.Both organizations concur on the risk of treason and the lack offulfillment of acquired compromises.

The Commission for the Lecture of the Year warned that in 2006 "the road leading to a neighboring land became long" making reference topossible trouble between neighbors."We are close to USA, practically a neighbor country, and agreements may be broken; perhaps those about emigration" said Betancourt.

Thursday, December 15, 2005

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Friday, October 21, 2005

Criollos Foundation

Ethiopia and the Origin of Civilization

A Critical Review of the Evidence of Archaeology, Anthropology, History and Comparative Religion: According to the Most Reliable Sources and Authorities

By John G. Jackson (1939)



"It is pretty well settled that the city is the Negro's great contribution to civilization, for it was in Africa where the first cities grew up." E. Haldeman-Julius

"Those piles of ruins which you see in that narrow valley watered by the Nile, are the remains of opulent cities, the pride of the ancient kingdom of Ethiopia. … There a people, now forgotten, discovered while others were yet barbarians, the elements of the arts and sciences. A race of men now rejected from society for their sable skin and frizzled hair, founded on the study of the laws of nature, those civil and religious systems which still govern the universe." Count Volney

"The accident of the predominance of white men in modern times should not give us supercilious ideas about color or persuade us to listen to superficial theories about the innate superiority of the white-skinned man. Four thousand years ago, when civilization was already one or two thousand years old, white men were just a bunch of semi-savages on the outskirts of the civilized world. If there had been anthropologists in Crete, Egypt, and Babylonia, they would have pronounced the white race obviously inferior, and might have discoursed learnedly on the superior germ-plasm or glands of colored folk." Joseph McCabe



The late Professor George A. Dorsey noted that "H. G. Wells' heart beats faster in nearly every chapter of his Outline of History, because he cannot forget that he is Nordic, Aryan, English British, white, civilized." (Why We Behave Like Human Beings, p. 40.) This patriotic zeal of Mr. Wells' has, in truth, caused him to suppress certain facts that do not fit into his pet theories. In the latest edition of his Outline of History, Mr. Wells ends his chapter on The Early Empires with the following remarks: "No less an authority than Sir Flinders Petrie gives countenance to the idea that there was some very early connection between Colchis (the country to the south of the Caucasus) and prehistoric Egypt. Herodotus remarked upon a series of resemblances between the Colchians and the Egyptians." (Wells' New and Revised Outline of History, p. 184, Garden City, 1931.) It would have been proper for Wells to have quoted the remarks of Herodotus, so as to give us precise information on the series of resemblances between the Cholchians and the Egyptians. Why he did not do so we shall now see. In Book II, Section-104, of his celebrated History, Herodotus states: "For my part I believe the Colchi to be a colony of Egyptians, because like them they have black skins and frizzled hair." (See any English translation of The History of Herodotus. The translation by Professor George Rawlinson is the best. See also W.E.B. DuBois, The Negro, p. 31, and Count Volney's Travels in Egypt and Syria, Vol. I. pp. 80-81.) After discussing the civilizations of Egypt, Babylonia and India, Wells had already referred to them as a "triple system of white man civilizations." (Outline of History, Chap. XIII, Sect. 5, p. 175) On concluding that the civilization of Egypt was a white man civilization, he naturally would be careful not to quote the above passage from Herodotus.

Most history texts, especially the ones on ancient history, start off by telling us that there are either three, four or five races of man, but that of those races only one has been responsible for civilization, culture, progress and all other good things. The one race is of course the white race, and particularly that branch of said race known as the Nordic or Aryan. The reason for this is obvious; the writers of these textbooks are as a rule Nordics, or so consider themselves. However, prejudice alone will not account for this sort of thing. There is a confusion among historians and anthropologists concerning the proper classification of races, and this confusion is used by biased writers to bolster up their preconceptions. It is therefore necessary that we discuss the subject of race classification in a rational manner before proceeding further.

The early scientific classifications of the varieties of the human species were geographical in nature. The celebrated naturalist, Linneaus (1708-1778), for instance, listed four races, according to continent, namely: (1) European (white), (2) African (black), (3) Asiatic (yellow), and (4) American (red). Blumenback, in 1775, added a fifth type, the Ocieanic or brown race. This classification is still used in some grammar school Geographies, where the races of man are tabulated as: Ethiopian (black), Caucasian (white), American (red), Mongolian (yellow) and Malayan (brown). During the year 1800, the French naturalist, Cuvier, announced the hypothesis that all ethnic types were traceable to Ham, Chem and Japhet, the three sons of Noah. After that date race classification developed into an amazing contest; a struggle which still rages. By 1873, Haeckel had found no less than twelve distinct races of mankind; and to show the indefatigable nature of his researches, he annexed twenty-two more races a few years later, bringing the grand total of human types up to thirty-four. Deniker, in 1900, presented to the world a very imposing system of race classification. He conceived of the human species existing in the form of six grand divisions, seventeen divisions and twenty-nine races. And despite all this industry among anthropologists, ethnologists and the like, there is yet no agreement on the classification of races. Where one anthropologist finds three racial types, another can spot thirty-three without the least difficulty.

The Classifiers of race, however, regardless of how abundantly they disagreed with each other as to the correct groupings of human types, were of unanimous accord in the belief that the white peoples of the world were far superior to the darker races. This opinion in still very popular, but modern science is making it hard for intelligent people to accept the fallacy. Many years ago the German philosopher, Schopenhauer, remarked that, "there is no such thing as a white race, much as this is talked of, but every white man is a faded or bleached one." Schopenhauer possessed keen and sagacious foresight on this point. For example, the English scholar, Joseph McCabe, expresses the following view as the consensus of opinion among modern anthropologists: "There is strong reason to think that man was at first very dark of skin, woolly-haired and flat-nosed, and, as he wandered into different climates, the branches of the race diverged and developed their characteristics." (Key to Culture, No. 11, p. 10.)

Professor Franz Boas, the nestor of American anthropologists, has divided the whole human race into only two divisions. This classification of Boas' is admirably explained by Professor George A. Dorsey:

Open your atlas to a map of the world. Look at the Indian Ocean: on the west, Africa; on the north, the three great southern peninsulas of Asia: on the east, a chain of great islands terminating in Australia. Wherever that Indian Ocean touches land, it finds dark-skinned people with strongly developed jaws, relatively long arms and kinky or frizzly hair. Call that the Indian Ocean or Negroid division of the human race.

Now look at the Pacific Ocean: on one side, the two Americas; on the other, Asia. (Geographically, Europe is a tail to the Asiatic kite.) The aboriginal population of the Americas and of Asia north of its southern peninsula was a light-skinned people with straight hair, relatively short arms, and a face without prominent jaws. Call that the Pacific Ocean or Mongoloid division. (Why We Behave Like Human Beings, pp. 44-45.)

Professors A. L. Kroeber and Fay-Cooper Cole are of the opinion that the peoples of Europe have (been) bleached out enough to merit classification as a distinct race. This would add a European or Caucasoid division to the Negroid and Mongoloid races of the classification proposed by Professor Boas. If we accept this three-fold division of the human species, our classification ought to read as follows: the races of man are three in number; (1) the Negroid, or Ethiopian or black race; (2) the Mongoloid, or Mongolian or yellow race; and (3) the Caucasoid or European or white race. This is the very latest scheme of race classification.

Now that we have straightened out ourselves on the issue of the classification of races, we may property turn to the main subject matter of this essay, i.e., the ancient Ethiopians and their widespread influence on the early history of civilization. In discussing the origin of civilization in the ancient Near East, Professor Charles Seignobos in his History of Ancient Civilization, notes that the first civilized inhabitants of the Nile and Tigris-Euphrates valleys, were a dark-skinned people with short hair and prominent lips; and that they are referred to by some scholars as Cushites (Ethiopians), and as Hamites by others. This ancient civilization of the Cushites, out of which the earliest cultures of Egypt and Mesopotamia grew, was not confined to the Near East. Traces of it have been found all over the world. Dr. W. J. Perry refers to it as the Archaic Civilization. Sir Grafton Elliot Smith terms it the Neolithic Heliolithic Culture of the Brunet-Browns. Mr. Wells alludes to this early civilization in his Outline of History, and dates its beginnings as far back as 15,000 years B.C. "This peculiar development of the Neolithic culture," says Mr. Wells, "which Elliot Smith called the Heliolithic (sun-stone) culture, included many or all of the following odd practices: (1) Circumcision, (2) the queer custom of sending the father to bed when a child is born, known as Couvade, (3) the practice of Massage, (4) the making of Mummies, (5) Megalithic monuments (i.e. Stonehenge), (6) artificial deformation of the heads of the young by bandages, (7) Tattooing, (8) religious association of the Sun and the Serpent, and (9) the use of the symbol known as the Swastika for good luck. … Elliot Smith traces these associated practices in a sort of constellation all over this great Mediterranean / Indian Ocean-Pacific area. Where one occurs, most of the others occur. They link Brittany with Borneo and Peru. But this constellation of practices does not crop up in the primitive home of Nordic or Mongolian peoples, nor does it extend southward much beyond equatorial Africa. … The first civilizations in Egypt and the Euphrates-Tigris valley probably developed directly out of this widespread culture." (Outline of History, pp. 141-143).

This ancient civilization is called NEOLITHIC by Wells. This is a mistake; for we have overwhelming evidence that these ancient peoples had long passed out of the New Stone Age stage of culture, and were erecting edifices which could only have been constructed by means of hard metal tools. Iron is the very backbone of civilization, and the Iron Age began very anciently in Africa. The researches of scholars like Boas, Torday and DuBois would lead us to believe that the art of mining iron was first developed in the interior of Africa, and that the knowledge of it passed through Egypt to the rest of the world. (See W.E.B. DuBois, The Negro, pp. 114-116, Home University Library, New York and London, 1915.)

In modern geography the name Ethiopia is confined to the country known as Abyssinia, an extensive territory in East Africa. In ancient times Ethiopia extended over vast domains in both Africa and Asia. "It seems certain," declares Sir E. A. Wallis Budge, "that classical historians and geographers called the whole region from India to Egypt, both countries inclusive, by the name of Ethiopia, and in consequence they regarded all the dark-skinned and black peoples who inhabited it as Ethiopians. Mention is made of Eastern and Western Ethiopians and it is probable that the Easterners were Asiatics and the Westerners Africans." (History of Ethiopia, Vol. I., Preface, by Sir E. A. Wallis Budge.) In addition Budge notes that, "Homer and Herodotus call all the peoples of the Sudan, Egypt, Arabia, Palestine and Western Asia and India Ethiopians." (Ibid., p. 2.) Herodotus wrote in his celebrated History that both the Western Ethiopians, who lived in Africa, and the Eastern Ethiopians who dwelled in India, were black in complexion, but that the Africans had curly hair, while the Indians were straight-haired. (The aboriginal black inhabitants of India are generally referred to as the Dravidians, of whom more will be said as we proceed.) Another classical historian who wrote about the Ethiopians was Strabo, from whom we quote the following: "I assert that the ancient Greeks, in the same way as they classed all the northern nations with which they were familiar as Scythians, etc., so, I affirm, they designated as Ethiopia the whole of the southern countries toward the ocean." Strabo adds that "if the moderns have confined the appellation Ethiopians to those only who dwell near Egypt, this must not be allowed to interfere with the meaning of the ancients." Ephorus says that: "The Ethiopians were considered as occupying all the south coasts of both Asia and Africa," and adds that "this is an ancient opinion of the of the Greeks." Then we have the view of Stephanus of Byzantium, that: "Ethiopia was the first established country on earth; and the Ethiopians were the first who introduced the worship of the gods, and who established laws." The vestiges of this early civilization have been found in Nubia, the Egyptian Sudan, West Africa, Egypt, Mashonaland, India, Persia, Mesopotamia, Arabia, South America, Central America, Mexico, and the United States. Any student who doubts this will find ample evidence in such works as The Voice of Africa, by Dr. Leo Froebenius; Prehistoric Nations, and Ancient America, by John D. Baldwin; Rivers of Life, by Major-General J. G. R. Forlong; A Book of the Beginnings by Gerald Massey; Children of the Sun and The Growth of Civilization, by W. J. Perry; The Negro by Professor W.E.B. DuBois; The Anacalypsis, by Sir Godfrey Higgins; Isis Unveiled by Madam H. P. Blavatsky; The Diffusion of Culture, by Sir Grafton Elliot Smith; The Mediterranean Race, by Professor Sergi; The Ruins of Empires, by Count Volney; The Races of Europe, by Professor William Z. Ripley; and last but not least, the brilliant monographs of Mr. Maynard Shipley: New Light on Prehistoric Cultures and Americans of a Million Years Age. (See also Shipley's Sex and the Garden of Eden Myth, a collection of essays, the best of the lot being one entitled: Christian Doctrines In Pre-Christian America.) These productions of Mr. Shipley, have been issued in pamphlet form in the Little Blue Book Series, published by Mr. E. Haldeman-Julius, of Girard, Kansas.

The efforts of certain historians to classify these ancient Cushites as Caucasoids does not deceive honest historical students any longer. This may well be illustrated by a passage from the pen of our scholarly friend Bishop William Montgomery Brown: "For the first two or three thousand years of civilization, there was not a civilized white man on the earth. Civilization was founded and developed by the swarthy races of Mesopotamia, Syria and Egypt, and the white race remained so barbaric that in those days an Egyptian or a Babylonian priest would have said that the riffraff of white tribes a few hundred miles to the north of their civilization were hopelessly incapable of acquiring the knowledge requisite to progress. It was southern colored peoples everywhere, in China, in Central America, in India, Mesopotamia, Syria, Egypt and Crete who gave the northern white peoples civilization." (The Bankruptcy of Christian Supernaturalism, Vol., p. 192.)

Quite a few Egyptologists have defended the idea that the ancient Egyptians originally came from Asia. There never was any evidence to back up this view; and the only reason it was adopted, was because it was fashionable to believe that no African people was capable of developing a great civilization. Geoffrey Parsons refers to Egyptian civilization in his Stream of History, p. 154, New York & London, 1932, as "genuinely African in its origin and development." Herodotus came to the same conclusion over 2,000 years ago, but he is not taken seriously by the majority of modern historians, except where his facts agree with certain theories of said historians. Theories are more precious to some scholars than facts, even when the facts flatly contradict their theories. Dr. Froebenious, the great German anthropologist, has examined the ruins of ancient cultures in southern, eastern and western Africa, of an antiquity rivaling those of Egypt and Sumer. Sir John Marshall and Dr. E. Mackay have uncovered the remains of a great Dravidian civilization in India, which rose to its peak over 5,000 years ago. The newspaper generally report these discoveries as startling and unexpected. They tell us that nobody ever dreamed that these ancient nations ever existed. This novelty, however, does not exist for real students. Anyone familiar with the works of G. Elliot Smith, W. J. Perry, Sir Godfrey Higgins, Dr. H.R. Hall, Sir Henry Rawlinson, John D. Baldwin, Gerald Massey and General Forlong, will not be surprised at the very novel archaeological discoveries announced by the press. Since we are dealing with historical sources and authorities, a study of the researches of Sir Henry Rawlinson, the Father of Assyriology, on the Ethiopians in the ancient East, is in order. The following extract is condensed from an essay entitled: On the Early History of Babylonia:

The system of writing which they brought with them has the closest affinity with that of Egypt-in many cases indeed, there is an absolute identity between the two alphabets.

In the Biblical genealogies, Cush (Ethiopia) and Mizraim (Egypt) are brothers, while from the former sprang Nimrod (Babylonia.)

In regard to the language of the primitive Babylonians, the vocabulary is undoubtedly Cushite or Ethiopian, belonging to that stock of tongues which in the sequel were everywhere more or less mixed up with the Semitic languages, but of which we have probably the purest modern specimens in the Mahra of Southern Arabia and the Galla of Abyssinia.

All the traditions of Babylonia and Assyria point to a connection in very early times between Ethiopia, Southern Arabia and the cities on the lower Euphrates.

In further proof of the connection between Ethiopia and Chaldea, we must remember the Greek tradition both of Cepheus and Memnon, which sometimes applied to Africa, and sometimes to the countries at the mouth of the Euphrates; and we must also consider the geographical names of Cush and Phut, which, although of African origin, are applied to races bordering on Chaldea, both in the Bible and in the Inscriptions of Darius. (Essay-VI, Appendix, Book-I, History of Herodotus, translated by Professor George Rawlinson, with essays and notes by Sir Henry Rawlinson and Sir J. G. Wilkinson.)

The opinions of Sir Henry Rawlinson are reinforced by the researches of his equally distinguished brother, Professor George Rawlinson, in his essay On the Ethnic Affinities of the Races of Western Asia, which directs our attention to: "the uniform voice of primitive antiquity, which spoke of the Ethiopians as a single race, dwelling along the shores of the Southern Ocean from India to the Pillars of Hercules." (Herodotus, Vol. I., Book. I., Appendix, Essay XI., Section-5.) Rawlinson adds an explanatory note to this section of his essay, which we here reproduce: "Recent linguistic discovery tends to show that a Cushite or Ethiopian race did in the earliest times extend itself along the shores of the Southern Ocean from Abyssinia to India. The whole peninsula of India was peopled by a race of their character before the influx of the Aryans; it extended from the Indus along the seacoast through the modern Beluchistan and Kerman, which was the proper country of the Asiatic Ethiopians; the cities on the northern shores of the Persian Gulf are shown by the brick inscriptions found among their ruins to have belonged to this race; it was dominant in Susiana and Babylonia, until overpowered in the one country by Aryan, in the other by Semitic intrusion; it can be traced both by dialect and tradition throughout the whole south coast of the Arabian peninsula."

In the study of ancient affairs, folklore and tradition throw an invaluable light on historical records. In Greek mythology we read of the great Ethiopian king, Cepheus, whose fame was so great that he and his family were immortalized in the stars. The wife of King Cepheus was Queen Cassiopeia, and his daughter, Princess Andromeda. The star groups of the celestial sphere, which are named after them are called the ROYAL FAMILY-(the constellations: CEPHEUS, CASSIOPEIA and ANDROMEDA.) It may seem strange that legendary rulers of ancient Ethiopia should still have their names graven on our star maps, but the voice of history gives us a clue. A book on astrology attributed to Lucian declares that: "The Ethiopians were the first who invented the science of stars, and gave names to the planets, not at random and without meaning, but descriptive of the qualities which they conceived them to possess; and it was from them that this art passed, still in an imperfect state, to the Egyptians." The Ethiopian origin of astronomy is beautifully explained by Count Volney in a passage in his Ruins of Empires, which is one of the glories of modern literature, and his argument is not based on guesses. He invokes the weighty authority of Charles F. Dupuis, whose three monumental works, The Origin of Constellations, The Origin of Worship and The Chronological Zodiac, are marvels of meticulous research. Dupuis placed the origin of the zodiac as far back as 15,000 B.C., which would give the world's oldest picture book an antiquity of 17,000 years. (This estimate is not as excessive as it might at first appear, since the American astronomer and mathematician, Professor Arthur M. Harding, traces back the origin of the zodiac to about 26,000 B.C) In discussing star worship and idolatry, Volney gives the following glowing description of the scientific achievements of the ancient Ethiopians, and of how they mapped out the signs of the zodiac on the star-spangled dome of the heavens:

Should it be asked at what epoch this system took its birth, we shall answer on the testimony of the monuments of astronomy itself, that its principles appear with certainty to have been established about seventeen thousand years ago, and if it be asked to what people it is to be attributed, we shall answer that the same monuments, supported by unanimous traditions, attribute it to the first tribes of Egypt; and reason finds in that country all the circumstances which could lead to such a system; when it finds there a zone of sky, bordering on the tropic, equally free from the rains of the equator and the fogs of the north; when it finds there a central point of the sphere of the ancients, a salubrious climate, a great but manageable river, a soil fertile without art or labor, inundated without morbid exhalations, and placed between two seas which communicate with the richest countries; it conceives that the inhabitant of the Nile, addicted to agriculture from the facility of communications, to astronomy from the state of his sky, always open to observation, must have been the first to pass from the savage to the social state; and consequently to attain the physical and moral sciences necessary to civilized life.

It was, then, on the borders of the upper Nile, among a black race of men, that was organized the complicated system of the worship of the stars, considered in relation to the productions of the earth and the labors of agriculture. … Thus the Ethiopian of Thebes named stars of inundation, or Aquarius, those stars under which the Nile began to overflow; stars of the ox or bull, those under which they began to plow, stars of the lion, those under which that animal, driven from the desert by thirst, appeared on the banks of the Nile; stars of the sheaf, or of the harvest virgin, those of the reaping season; stars of the lamb, stars of the two kids, those under which these precious animals were brought forth. … Thus the same Ethiopian having observed that the return of the inundation always corresponded with the rising of a beautiful star which appeared towards the source of the Nile, and seemed to warn the husbandman against the coming waters, he compared this action to that of the animal who, by his barking, gives notice of danger, and he called this star the dog, the barker (Sirius). In the same manner he named the stars of the crab, those where the sun, having arrived at the tropic, retreated by a slow retrograde motion like the crab of Cancer. He named stars of the wild goat, or Capricorn, those where the sun, having reached the highest point in his annuary tract, … imitates the goat, who delights to climb to the summit of the rocks. He named stars of the balance, or Libra, those where the days and nights being equal, seemed in equilibrium, like that instrument; and stars of the scorpion, those where certain periodical winds bring vapors, burning like the venom of the scorpion. (Volney's Ruins of Empires, pp. 120-122, New York, 1926)

The traditions concerning Memnon are interesting as well as instructive. He was claimed as a king by the Ethiopians, and identified with the Pharaoh Amunoph or Amenhotep, by the Egyptians. A fine statue of him is located in the British Museum, in London. Charles Darwin makes a reference to this statue on his Descent of Man which is well worth reproducing: "When I looked at the statue of Amunoph III, I agreed with two officers of the establishment, both competent judges, that he had a strongly marked Negro type of features." The features of Akhnaton (Amennhotep IV), are even more Negroid than those of his illustrious predecessor. That the earliest Egyptians were African Ethiopians (Nilotic Negroes), is obvious to all unbiased students of oriental history. Breasted's claim that the early civilized inhabitants of the Nile Valley and Western Asia were members of a Great White Race, is utterly false, and is supported by no facts whatsoever. A similar racial bias is shown by Elliot Smith in his work, The Ancient Egyptians and Their Influence Upon the Civilization of Europe, p. 30, New York & London, 1911. "Not a few writers," says he, "like the traveler Volney in the 18th century, have expressed the belief that the ancient Egyptians were Negroes, or at any rate strongly Negroid. In recent times even a writer so discriminating as Ripley usually is has given his adhesion to this view." (The writers referred to here, are Count Volney, the French Orientalist and Professor William Z. Ripley, of Harvard University, an eminent American Anthropologist.) Professor Smith is convinced that these men are wrong, because he holds that there is a "profound gap that separates the Negro from the rest of mankind, including the Egyptian." (Ancient Egyptians, p. 74.) Another English scholar, Philip Smith, is far more rational in discussing this point:

No people have bequeathed to us so many memorials of its form complexion and physiognomy as the Egyptians. … If we were left to form an opinion on the subject by the description of the Egyptians left by the Greek writers we should conclude that they were, if not Negroes, at least closely akin to the Negro race. That they were much darker in coloring than the neighboring Asiatics; that they had their frizzled either by nature or art; that their lips were thick and projecting, and their limbs slender, rests upon the authority of eye-witnesses who had traveled in the country and who could have had no motive to deceive. … The fullness of the lips seen in the Sphinx of the Pyramids and in the portraits of the kings is characteristic of the Negro. (The Ancient History of the East, pp. 25-26, London, 1881.)

We read of Memnon, King of Ethiopia, in Greek mythology, to be exact in Homer's Iliad, where he leads an army of Elamites and Ethiopians to the assistance of King Priam in the Trojan War. His expedition is said to have started from the African Ethiopia and to have passed through Egypt on the way to Troy. According to Herodotus, Memnon was the founder of Susa, the chief city of the Elamites. "There were places called Memnonia," asserts Professor Rawlinson, "supposed to have been built by him both in Egypt and at Susa; and there was a tribe called Memnones at Moroe. Memnon thus unites the eastern with the western Ethiopians, and the less we regard him as an historical personage the more must we view him as personifying the ethnic identity of the two races." (Ancient Monarchies, Vol. I, Chap. 3.) The ancient peoples of Mesopotamia are sometimes called the Chaldeans, but this is inaccurate and confusing. Before the Chaldean rule in Mesopotamia, there were the empires of the Sumerians, Akkadians, Babylonians and Assyrians. The earliest civilization of Mesopotamia was that of the Sumerians. They are designated in the Assyrio-Babylonian inscriptions as the black-heads or black-faced people, and they are shown on the monuments as beardless and with shaven heads. This easily distinguishes them from the Semitic Babylonians, who are shown with beards and long hair. From the myths and traditions of the Babylonians we learn that their culture came originally from the south. Sir Henry Rawlinson concluded from this and other evidence that the first civilized inhabitants of Sumer and Akkad were immigrants from the African Ethiopia. John D. Baldwin, the American Orientalist, on the other hand, claims that since ancient Arabia was also known as Ethiopia, they could have just as well come from that country. These theories are rejected by Dr. II. R. Hall, of the Dept. Of Egyptian & Assyrian Antiquities of the British Museum, who contends that Mesopotamia was civilized by a migration from India. "The ethnic type of the Sumerians, so strongly marked in their statues and reliefs," says Dr. Hall, "was as different from those of the races which surrounded them as was their language from those of the Semites, Aryans, or others; they were decidedly Indian in type. The face-type of the average Indian of today is no doubt much the same as that of his Dravidian race ancestors thousands of years ago. … And it is to this Dravidian ethnic type of India that the ancient Sumerian bears most resemblance, so far as we can judge from his monuments. … And it is by no means improbable that the Sumerians were an Indian race which passed, certainly by land, perhaps also by sea, through Persia to the valley of the Two Rivers. It was in the Indian home (perhaps the Indus valley) that we suppose for them that their culture developed. … On the way they left the seeds of their culture in Elam. … There is little doubt that India must have been one of the earliest centers of human civilization, and it seems natural to suppose that the strange un-Semitic, un-Aryan people who came from the East to civilize the West were of Indian origin, especially when we see with our own eyes how very Indian the Sumerians were in type." (The Ancient History of the Near East, pp. 173-174, London, 1916.) Hall is opposed in his theory of Sumerian origins by Dr. W. J. Perry, the great anthropologist, of the University of London. "The Sumerian stories or origins themselves tell a very different tale," Perry points out, "for from their beginnings the Sumerians seem to have been in touch with Egypt. Some of their early texts mention Dilmun, Magan and Meluhha. … Dilmun was the first settlement that was made by the god Enki, who was the founder of Sumerian civilization. … Magan was famous among the Sumerians as a place whence they got diorite and copper, Meluhha as a place whence they got gold. Dilmun has been identified with some place or other in the Persian Gulf, perhaps the Bahrein Islands, perhaps a land on the eastern shore of the Gulf. … In a late inscription of the Assyrians it is said that Magan and Meluhha were the archaic names for Egypt and Ethiopia, the latter being the south-western part of Somaliand that lay opposite." (The Growth of Civilization, pp. 60-61, 2nd Edition, Harmondsworth, Middlesex, England, 1937, Published by Penguin Books, Ltd.)

Another great nation of Ethiopian origin was Elam, a country which stretched from the Tigris River to the Zagros Mountains of Persia. Its capital was the famous city of Susa, which was founded about 4,000 B.C., and flourished from that date to its destruction by Moslem invaders about the year 650 C.E. (Christian Era). In speaking of the Elamites, H. G. Wells H. H. Johnston, to have been Negroid in type. There is a strong Negroid strain in the modern people of Elam." (Outline of History, p. 166.) Archaeological evidence favors this view. Reginald S. Poole, the English Egyptologist noted that: "There is one portrait of an Elamite (Cushite) king on a vase found at Susa; he is painted black and thus belongs to the Cushite race." (Quoted by Professor Alfred C. Haddon, in his History of Anthropology, p. 6, London, 1934. Thinker's Library Edition, published by Watts & Co., 5 & 6 Johnson's Court, Fleet St., London, E. c.-4, England.)

We cannot devote much space to the early inhabitants of India, though they were beyond all doubt an Ethiopic ethnic type. They are described by Professor Lynn Thorndike as "short black men with almost Negro noses." (Short History of Civilization, p. 227, New York, 1936.) Dr. Will Durant pictures these early Hindus as "a dark-skinned, broad-nosed people whom, without knowing the origin or the word, we call Dravidians." (Short History of Civilization, Part I, p. 396, New York, 1935.) The student is advised to consult pp. 650-666, of the new edition of Sir John A. Hammerton's Wonders of the Past, in which there is an instructive article, with fine illustrations, by S. G. Blaxland Stubbs, entitled: Wonder Cities of Most Ancient India. That Mr. Stubbs is a candid writer may be seen from the following excerpt:

The early Aryan literature of India, the Hymns of the Rigveda, which, it is commonly agreed, date from about 1,000 B.C., speak of the people whom the proud Aryan invaders found in India as black-skinned barbarians, Dasas or slaves. But Aryan pride of race has received something of a shock from archaeological investigations carried out by Sir John Marshall and, more recently, by Dr. E. Mackay in the valley of the Indus. Here ample evidence has been found of a race whose complex civilization and high culture were equal, and in some respects superior to those of early Mesopotamia and Egypt.

These Asiatic black men were not confined to the mainland, for we are informed by no less an authority than Sir Harry H. Johnston, that:

In former times this Asiatic Negro spread, we can scarcely explain how, unless the land connections of those days were more extended, through Eastern Australia to Tasmania, and from the Solomon Island to New Caledonia and even New Zealand, to Fiji and Hawaii. The Negroid element in Burma and Annam is, therefore, easily to be explained by supposing that in ancient times Southern Asia had a Negro population ranging from the Persian Gulf to Indo-China and the Malay Archipelago. (See An Introduction to African Civilizations, by Willis N. Huggins. Ph.D. and John G. Jackson, pp. 188-190, New York, 1937.)

Most readers of history know about the Celts, ancient inhabitants of Europe, whose priests were known as the Druids. It is generally thought that these Celts were Caucasoids, but Sir Godfrey Higgins, after much study came to the conclusion that they were a Negroid people. Higgins wrote a ponderous volume entitled The Celtic Druids. In the following passage from his Anacalypsis he modestly refers to it as an essay: "In my essay on the Celtic Druids, I have shown that a great nation called Celtae, of whom the Druids were the priests, spread themselves almost over the whole earth, and are to be traced in their rude gigantic monuments from India to the extremity of Britain. The religion of Buddha of India is well known to have been very ancient." (Higgins is here referring to the first Buddha, who is supposed to have lived between 5,000 and 6,000 years ago, and not to Gautama Buddha who lived about 600 years B.C. There were at least ten Buddhas mentioned in the sacred books of India.) "Who these can have been but the early individuals of the black nation of whom we have been treating I know not, and in this opinion I am not singular. The learned Maurice says Cuthies (Cushites), i.e. Celts, built the great temples in India and Britain, and excavated the caves of the former; and the learned mathematician, Reuben Burrow, has no hesitation in pronouncing Stonehenge to be a temple of the black curly-headed Buddha." (Anacalypsis, Vol. I, Book I, Chap. IV, New York, 1927.)

Though it is generally believed that Columbus discovered America, it is now definitely known to students of American archaeology that Columbus came late. Professor Leo Weiner has written a three volume work, Africa and the Discovery of America, in which he argues that the New World was discovered by Africans long before the time of Columbus. Professor Weiner was led to this conclusion partly from the following evidence:

African works in American Indian languages.

Vases and pipe-bowls found in the ruins of the Mound-Builders, showing Negro faces on their surfaces.

The presence of African foods in America, such the peanut and the yam.

The totemic organization of the Amerindians tribes, very similar to African totemism. (Totemism is a sort of primitive theory of evolution. For instance, certain tribes are divided into clans, and each clan is, as a rule named after some species of animal. Let us suppose a tribe is divided into four clans, bearing the following names: (1) eagle, (2) Bear, (3) Crow and (4) Wolf. A member of the Bear Clan will consider himself as descended from bears, a member of the Wolf Clan will tell you that he is a wolf and that all of his ancestors were wolves, and so on; this clan ancestor being known as the Totem. There are numerous definitions of totemism, the best I have come across being the following one by Professor A. VB. Haddon: "Totemism, as Dr. Frazer and I understand it in its fully developed condition, implies the division of a people into several totem kins, or as they are usually termed, totem clans, each of which has one or sometimes more that one totem. The totem is usually a species of animal, sometimes a species of plant, occasionally a natural object or phenomenon, very rarely a manufactured article. … The totems are regarded as kinsfolk or protectors of the kinsmen, who respect them and refrain from killing and eating them. There is thus a recognition of mutual rights and obligations between the members of the kin and their totem. The totem is the crest of symbol of the Kin." We see vestiges of totemism in our political organizations; for example, the Democratic DONKEY and the republican ELEPHANT. Baseball clubs present an even better example of totemistic atavism; for instance, who has not heard of baseball teams bearing such names as: TIGERS, CARDINALS, BEARS, BEES, BISONS, etc.) Weiner's theories have not been kindly received by his colleagues. Professor H. J. Spinden sneers sarcastically in the following condensed extract from Culture, the Diffusion Controversy, pp. 53-54, New York, 1927:

"Professor Weiner solves the riddle of old American civilizations with an Arabico-Mandingo lexicon and derives everything of importance in the New World from the highly civilized coast of Gambia and Sierra Leone. From brightest Africa came the principal American food plants, the Mayan calendar and the Mexican religion. It may be added that Professor Weiner swarms his Negroes across the Atlantic in no less than fifty voyages before Columbus."

The Indian was not the original American. Professor Ales Hrdlicka of the Smithsonian Institution, as authority on the Amerinds, contends that the ancestors of the Indians came from Asia via Bering Strait 10,000 years ago. American civilization is older than that. The ruins of Tiahuanaco, in Bolivia, according to Dr. Rudolph Muller, a noted German astronomer, are between 10,000 and 14,000 years old. The remains of this ancient city show that it was inhabited by a highly civilized people. (See an article entitled "The Oldest City in the World," by A. H. Verrill, in the N. Y. Herald-Tribune Magazine, July 31, 1932.) Excavations in Mexico have produced equally startling results. Dr. Maximus Neumayer, a distinguished Brazilian archaeologist, in cooperation with a group of Mexican archaeologists, has made a very thorough study of the pyramids and monuments in the vicinity of Mexico City. He estimates the monument of Cuicuilco to be about 13,000 years old. An interesting feature of this structure is that it resembles the Assyrio-Babylonian type of architecture, bearing a striking resemblance to the Tower of Babel as it has been restored by the Assyriologists. Dr. Neumayer also examined the pyramids of Teotihuacan, which he estimates to be 4,500 years of age. He thinks that these pyramids were built by a people akin to the Egyptians; and from their arrangement, suggests that they form a sort of model of the solar system, with a pedestal in the center, representing the sun. We must also mention the discoveries of Professor Ramon Mena, Curator of the Department of Archaeology of the Mexican Government. This scientist explored the ruins of the great city of Palenque, and concluded that the ancient metropolis was built over 10,000 years ago. He also found that the inhabitants of the city were familiar with the manufacture and use of Stucco. The celebrated French archaeologist, Desiree Charnay, unearthed statues around Mexico City, more than fifty years ago, with faces showing Negroid features. Pictures of some of them may be seen in Ignatius Donelley's Atlantis, pp. 174-175. Donnelly also has illustrations of two similar statues, one from Palenque and the other from Vera Cruz. Finding that the Indians show both Mongoloid and Negroid ethnic traces, Charnay justly concluded that the Amerinds were a mixed race of both Asiatic and African ancestry. (See The Ancient Cities of the New World, by Desiree Charnay.) We have perfectly reliable proof of the presence of men of the Ethiopian race in pre-Columbian America. Father Roman, one of he first Catholic missionaries to arrive in the New World, records that a tribe of black men came from the south and landed in Haiti, and that they were armed with darts of guanin (a composition of gold, silver and copper), and were known as the black Guaninis. "These might have been the Negroes of Quareca, mentioned by Peter Martyr d'Angleria, or some other American Negro nation," asserts De Roo, "the like of which there were many, as we may see in Rafinesque's Account of the Ancient Black Nations of America. Such are the Charruas of Brazil, the black Carabees of St. Vincent in the Gulf of Mexico, the Jamassi of Florida, the dark complexioned Californians who are perhaps the dark men mentioned in the Quiche traditions and by some old Spanish adventures. Such, again, is the tribe of which Balboa saw some representatives in his passage of the Isthmus of Darien in the year 1513. It would seem from the expressions made use of by Gomara, that these were Negroes." (History of America Before Columbus, pp.306-307, by P. De Roo, Philadelphia and London, 1900.) Spanish and Portugese explorers found colonies of black men on the eastern coasts of South and Central America, and in Yucatan and Nicaragua. De Roo quotes John T. Short, author of The North Americans of Antiquity, New York, 1880, on the similarity of African and American languages, as follows-"It is worthy of note that several eminent scholars have observed the remarkable similarity of grammatical structure between the Central American and certain transatlantic languages, especially the Basque and some of the languages of Western Africa." (History of America Before Columbus, pp. 164-165.)

Most of us are familiar with the Mayan civilization of Yucatan and Central America, since American archaeologists have devoted many years of intensive research to these territories. Among the speculations concerning the origin of this culture, those of LePlongeon and Raquena are the most valuable. Professor Rafael Requena, a Venezuelan archaeologist, holds that there was once an island in the Atlantic Ocean, of continental dimensions, known to the ancients as Atlantis, that this island was settled by Egyptians, who in turn established colonies in America before the submergence of Atlantis. The findings of Professor Augustus LePlongeon are of great interest. This Franco-American archaeologist discovered the ruins of a palace in Chichen Itza in 1874. He found in this structure, known as Prince Coh's Palace, pictographs and inscriptions which he was able to decipher. The story, as unraveled by LePlongeon, may be read by the student in Queen Moo and the Egyptian Sphinx, where the professor gives his interpretation of the inscriptions and reproductions of the pictographs. Mrs. LePlongeon's work, Queen Moo's Talisman, might also be consulted. The story runs roughly as follows:

About 11,000 years ago, two brothers Princes of Yucatan, sought the hand of the ruling monarch of the land, Queen Moo, in marriage. The brothers were named Coh and Aac, respectively. Prince Coh was the successful suitor; which so enraged Prince Aac that he stabbed his brother through the heart with a stone knife, which, needless to say, caused his death. Then Aac attempted to force Queen Moo to wed him. The Queen, rather than submit, decided to flee to Atlantis. On reaching the coast she learned that great earthquakes had submerged Atlantis beneath the sea; so she sailed for Africa instead, and ended her journey in Egypt. There she was hailed as Queen, and erected the Sphinx as a memorial to her slain husband.

The foregoing story sounds like a fable, but there is probably a core of fact in it. If the Sphinx, with its Ethiopian face, is a memorial to an ancient Mayan prince, it shows that the Mayas were of African origin.

Where flows the river Nile,

The queen found rest;

There once again her days

With peace were blessed.

Did Moo a giant Sphinx from

Out of the ground

Cause to arise, and

Thus Coh's fame renew?

Did she immortalize

Her consort true?"

(Queen Moo's Talisman, p. 65, by Alice D. LePlongeon.)

That Atlantis was connected with the history of ancient Ethiopia there can be little doubt. The Greek philosopher, Proclus, stated in his works that he could present evidence that Atlantis at one time actually existed. He cited as his authority The Ethiopian History of Marcellus. In referring to Ethiopian history to prove the existence of Atlantis, Proclus plainly infers that Atlantis was a part of Ethiopia. (See Cory's Ancient Fragments of the Phoenician, Carthaginian, Babylonian, Egyptian and Other Authors, London, 1876. See also, Maynard Shipley's New Light on Prehistoric Cultures and Bramwell's Lost Atlantis.) Although there is scientific evidence that an island of continental dimensions once existed in what is now the middle of the Atlantic Ocean, many students of the problem of Atlantis have located it in other parts of the globe, particularly in Central America and Africa. Count deProrok ways that Atlantis, in the dimness of antiquity, covered the region now occupied by the Sahara Desert. Kirchmaier placed it in South Africa and Froebenius in West Africa. In reviewing James Bramwell's Lost Atlantis, Mr. Lewis Gannett states that: "The German anthropologist Frobenius definitely locates it in Nigeria, whose ancient civilization he relates to that of the Etruscans and the Assyrians." (New York Herald-Tribune, Mar. 3, 1938.) Doctor Froebenius found ruins of palaces, terra cotta fragments and beautiful statuary in Jorubaland, a district in Nigeria between the Niger River and the Atlantic Ocean; and he heard among the Jorubians legends of an ancient royal city and its palace with walls of gold, which in the long ago had sunk beneath the waves. The German scholar, Eugen Georg, is a keen student of the Atlantis question, and the following remarks of his are worthy of our attention:

The new age that began after the disappearance of Atlantis was marked at first by the world-wide dominance of Ethiopian representatives of the black race. They were supreme in Africa and Asia … and they even infiltrated through Southern Europe. … During the present era-that is the last 10,000 years-the white race…has come to possess the world. According to the occult tradition, Semitic peoples developed wherever the immigrating white colonists from the north were subjugated by the black ruling class, and inter-mixture occurred, as in oldest Egypt, Chaldea, Arabia and Phoenicia." (The Adventure of Mankind, by Eugen Georg, pp. 121-122, New York, 1931.)

So far we have given little or no attention to the evidence of comparative religion. The study of ancient religious history is important, for religion, like philosophy, changes but slowly. Institutional religion, being conservative and static in its outlook, has preserved much ancient lore that would have otherwise been lost to the modern student. The Greek philosopher Xenophanes (572-480 B.C.), pointed out a profound truth when he observed that the gods men worship very closely resemble the worshippers. In the words of this ancient sage: "Each man represents the gods as he himself is. The Ethiopian as black and flat-nosed the Thracian as red-haired and blue-eyed; and if horses and oxen could paint, they would no doubt depict the gods as horses and oxen." This being the case; when we find the great nations of the world, both past and present, worshipping black gods, then we logically conclude that these peoples are either members of the black race, or that they originally received their religion in toto or in part from black people. The proofs are abundant. The ancient gods of India are shown with Ethiopian crowns on their heads. According to the Old Testament, Moses first met Jehovah during his sojourn among the Midianites, who were an Ethiopian tribe. We learn from Hellenic tradition that Zeus, king of the Grecian gods, so cherished the friendship of the Ethiopians that he traveled to their country twice a year to attend banquets. "All the gods and goddesses of Greece were black," asserts Sir Godfrey Higgins, "at least this was the case with Jupiter, Baccus, Hercules, Apollo, Ammon. The goddesses Benum, Isis, Hecate, Diana, Juno, Metis, Ceres, Cybele were black." (Anacalypsis, Vol. I, Book IV, Chap. I.) Even the Romans, who received their religion mainly from the Greeks, admitted their debt to Egypt and Ethiopia. This may be well illustrated by the following passage from The Golden Ass or Metamorphosis, by Apuleius. The author, as an initiate of the Isis cult is represented as being addressed by that goddess: "I am present; I who am Nature, the parent of things, queen of all the elements … the primitive Phrygians called me Pressimunitica, the mother or the gods; the native Athenians, Ceropian Minerva; the floating Cyprians, Paphian Venus … the inhabitants of Eleusis, the ancient goddess Ceres. Some again have invoked me as Juno, others as Bellona, others as Hecate, and others Rhamnusia; and those who are enlightened by the emerging rays of the rising sun, the Ethiopians, Ariians and Egyptians, powerful in ancient learning, who reverence by divinity with ceremonies perfectly proper, call me by my true appellation, Queen Isis." (Doane's Bible Myths, Note, p. 478.)

A study of the images of ancient deities of both the Old and New Worlds reveal their Ethiopic origin. This is noted by Kenneth R. H. Mackezie in T. A. Buckley's Cities of the Ancient World, p. 180: "From the wooly texture of the hair, I am inclined to assign to the Buddha of India, the Fuhi of China, the Sommonacom of the Siamese, the Zaha of the Japanese, and the Quetzalcoatl of the Mexicans, the same, and indeed an African, or rather Nubian, origin." Most of these black gods were regarded as crucified saviors who died to save mankind by being nailed to a cross, or tied to a tree with arms outstretched as if on a cross, or slain violently in some other manner. Of these crucified saviors, the most prominent were Osiris and Horus of Egypt, Krishna of India, Mithra of Persia, Quetazlcoatl of Mexico, Adonis of Babylonia and Attis of Phrygia. Nearly all of these slain savior-gods have the following stories related about them: They are born of a virgin, on or near Dec. 25th (Christmas); their births are heralded by a star; they are born either in a cave or stable; they are slain, commonly by crucifixion; they descend into hell, and rise from the dead at the beginning of Spring (Easter), and finally ascend into heaven. The parallels between the legendary lives of these pagan messiahs and the life of Jesus Christ as recorded in the Bible are so similar that progressive Bible scholars now admit that stories of these heathen Christs have been woven into the life-story of Jesus. (These remarkable parallels are discussed and interpreted in a pamphlet, Christianity Before Christ, by John G. Jackson, New York, 1938.)

The late Mr. Maynard Shipley, President of The Science League of America, made a very scholarly study of the various mythologies and religions of the world, and in the concluding passage of a brilliant essay, Christian Doctrines in Pre-Christian America, he offers a profoundly thought-provoking statement:

That the ancient pagan creeds, legends and myths-part of the universal mythos-should be found embodied in the religion of the ancient Mexicans, and that all these again are found to be but the original sources of the modern orthodox Christian religion, is by no means inexplicable, and need not be attribute to the subtlety of the Ubiquitous Devil. The explanation is that all religions and all languages of the civilized races of men had a common origin in an older seat of civilization.

Where that original center of culture was is another story.

The evidence seems to show that the "original center of culture," referred to by Mr. Shipley, was that vast domain known to the classical geographers and historians as Ethiopia. A study of religious images throws much light on this early civilization. The tau (T-shaped) cross is thought by many Christians to be a unique emblem of their faith. The fact is that this cross is of ancient Ethiopian origin. In the words of an outstanding student of symbolism: "The Ethiopic form of the tau is an exact prototype of the conventional Christian cross; or, to state the fact in its chronological relation, the Christian cross is made in the exact image of the Ethiopian tau." (Sex Symbolism. P. 9, by William J, Fielding, Little Blue Book No. 904.) The cross was known to all the great ancient nations, and was sometimes shown with the image of a man upon it. The Church Father, Minucius Felix, writing in the early part of the third century, severely rebukes the Pagans for their adoration of crosses: "I must tell you that we neither adore crosses nor desire them; you it is ye Pagans … for what else are your ensigns, flags and standards, but crosses gilt and beautiful. Your victorious trophies not only represent a cross, but a cross with a man upon it." Commenting on the preceding extract, the American scholar, T. W. Doane, notes that:

It is very evident that this celebrated Christian Father alludes to some Gentle mystery, of which the prudence of his successors has deprived us. When we compare this with the fact that for centuries after the time assigned for the birth of Jesus Christ, he was not represented as a man on a cross, and that the Christians did not have such a thing as a crucifix, we are inclined to think that the effigies of a black or dark-skinned crucified man, which were to be seen in many places in Italy even during the last century, may have had something to do with it. (Bible Myths, p. 197, 7th Edition.)

The same writer also refers to "the Mexican crucified god being sometimes represented as black," and that "crosses were also found in Yucatan, as well as Mexico, with a man upon them." (Ibid., p. 201.)

The numerous black madonnas and infants in European cathedrals are discussed in detail by Sir Godfrey Higgins in The Anacalypsis, Vol. I, Book IV, Chap. I, to which the interested student is referred. However, the remarks of Mr. Shipley on this point are worthy of our attention:

Very suggestive is the fact that representations of the virgin mother and infant savior are often black. This is true in the case of the paintings and images of Isis and Horus, of Devaki and Krishna, and in many cases of Mary and Jesus. The most ancient pictures and statues in Italy and other parts of Europe, which are adored by the faithful as representations of the Virgin Mary and the infant Jesus, reveal the infant draped in white, but with face black and in the arms of a black mother. … How does it happen that the Virgin Mother of the Mexican Savior-God so closely resembled the Black Virgins of Egypt and Europe? Had they not all a common origin?" (Sex and The Garden of Eden Myth, pp. 50-51, by Maynard Shipley, Little Blue Book No.1188.) Mr. A. H. Verrill, an American archaeologist, visited an Indian shrine in a small town in Guatemala a few years ago, and found that on a special festival day Indians traveled to this little church to bow down to the image of a Black Christ. From the attendant ceremonies, Verrill judged the rite to be of Mayan origin. (see Verrill's Old Civilizations of the New World, New York, 1938.) The Mayas possessed knowledge of the arts and sciences equivalent to that of the ancients of the Old World, but upon that we cannot dwell, since limitations of space forbid it. The reader is referred to Professor Paul Radin's fine book on the American Indians, where after surveying the marvelous scientific achievements of the Mayas of Yucatan and Central America , Dr. Radin admits that: "No excavations have ever revealed to us any civilization of a simpler nature from which this very elaborate culture could possibly have been developed." (The Story of the American Indian, p. 77, Garden City, 1937.) Egypt and Western Asia tell the same story. "In each case we have a standard or measuring-rod of authentic historical record," declares Samuel Laing, "of certainly not less than 8,000 and more probably 9,000 or 10,000 years, from the present time; and in each case we find ourselves at this remote date, in the presence, not of rude beginnings, but of a civilization already ancient and far advanced. We have populous cities, celebrated temples, an organized priesthood, an advanced state of agriculture and of the industrial and fine arts; writing and books so long known that their origin is lost in myth; religions in which advanced philosophical and moral ideas are already developed; astronomical systems which imply a long course of accurate observations. How long this prehistoric age may have lasted, and how many centuries it may have taken to develop such a civilization, from the primitive beginnings of Neolithic and Paleolithic origins, is a matter of conjecture. All we can infer is, that it must have required an immense time, much longer than that embraced by the subsequent period of historical record." (Human Origins, by Samuel Laing, p. 30, London, 1913.)

Much more could be said on this subject, but since this essay is addressed mainly to readers who have little time for the study of history, it must be made as concise as possible. The numerous citations from standard scientific and historical works, it is hoped, will be of some benefit to students who are out of reach of large public libraries, or who lack the leisure time necessary for reading and research along these lines.

Sunday, October 16, 2005

pirate radio broadcast




THE LINK WILL TAKE YOU TO " Stations Currently Broadcasting",SCROLL DOWN TO RELIGIOUS SECTION AND CLICK ON "CRIOLLOS SOUND",IF YOU ARE BEHIND A FIRE WALL CLICK CLIPSTREAM.

http://pirateradionetwork.com/

If the listener has the Destiny Media Player™ as the default player, when they click on the hotspot, the Media Player™ will start playing your broadcast. Player-less Clipstream will launch and play as long as the listener's browser has Java enabled, (stats indicate 90% + are enabled and able to tune in) If the listener has the Destiny Media Player™ as the default player, when they click on the hotspot, the Media Player™ will start playing your broadcast. Player-less Clipstream will launch and play as long as the listener's browser has Java enabled, (stats indicate 90% + are enabled and able to tune in)

Wednesday, September 21, 2005

history of religious freedom day



At the end of the Constitutional Convention, Alexander Hamilton was asked why the framers had omitted the word "God" from the document. His reply: "We forgot." Yet when the first Congress assembled in 1790, among its very first acts were to select a chaplain and to ask President George Washington to declare a day of thanksgiving.

Virginia Statute of Religious Freedom
On his gravestone, Thomas Jefferson listed the three accomplishments for which he most wanted to be remembered: drafting the Declaration of Independence, founding the University of Virginia, and writing the Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom. Enacted in 1786, the Statute for Religious Freedom is one of the most important documents in American history on the subject of religious liberty. It prohibited government interference or support for religion and became an inspiration for the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution.

Jefferson originally drafted the statute in 1777, during the American Revolution. But the measure was opposed by Patrick Henry and many of Virginia's larger religious denominations, who feared that churches would decline without tax support.
James Madison, who guided the Statute for Religious Freedom through the Virginia Assembly, argued that the right to religious liberty was one of the rights for which Americans had waged the Revolution. Jefferson and Madison held that the right to freedom of conscience extended to non-Christians and even to nonbelievers. Jefferson felt that religion would flourish if left alone. "It is error alone which needs the support of government," he wrote. "Truth can stand by itself."
During the years following the Revolution, every state ended tax support for churches and religious qualifications for voting and office holding. Religious denominations had to compete for followers without government support.

There can be no doubt that the "American system" of voluntary support for religious proved to be enormously successful. Between 1800 and 1840, the proportion of Americans who were church members doubled. Older denominations--including Baptist, Methodist, and Catholic churches--grew rapidly, while a host of new denominations arose, including the Church of Christ, the Mormons, and new African American churches. Today, a higher proportion of Americans regularly attend a religious institution than in virtually any other western nation.

George Washington, Letter to Moses Seixas, 1790
President Washington's letter to the Hebrew Congregation of Newport, Rhode Island, is a classic statement of the new nation's commitment to religious freedom. It is the first public declaration that Jews will be able to practice their religion free from government persecution.
In his letter, the President states that America's is a government "which gives to bigotry no sanction, to persecution, no assistance." According to Washington, it is not enough to merely tolerate (put up with) other religions. Freedom of conscience, he insists, is an "inherent natural right."
A year after Washington wrote his letter, the principle of religious freedom was included in the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.

George Washington, Letter to the New Church in Baltimore, 1793
In this 1793 letter to the members of Baltimore's New Church, President Washington expresses his pride in living in a country in which "every person may...worship God according to the dictates of his own heart." In the United States, people may reach for the highest government offices, regardless of their religious beliefs.
Thomas Jefferson, from Letter to Danbury Baptist Association, 1802
In this famous 1802 letter, Thomas Jefferson calls for a "wall of separation" between church and state. This phrase has profoundly influenced the way that twentieth-century courts have understood the constitutional relationship between government and religion. It led the Supreme Court to restrict prayer in schools and the display of religious symbols in public spaces.
In 1802 an alliance of 26 Baptist churches sent a letter to Jefferson congratulating him on his election to the presidency. In their letter, the Baptists also complained that Connecticut's government discriminated against religious minorities.

Jefferson used his response to present his views on the proper relationship between religion and government. He wanted to explain why he, unlike earlier presidents or governors, refused to designate days of public prayer, fasting, and thanksgiving. And he wanted to answer the Federalist charge that he was an enemy of religion because he opposed government support for churches.
The President stated that religion is a matter lying solely between an individual and that person's God. In his view, the First Amendment absolutely prohibited the federal government from meddling in peoples' beliefs or from favoring a particular religious denomination.
Currently, the U.S. Supreme Court imposes a three-prong test to determine whether a public activity violates the First Amendment's prohibition of freedom of religion.

Monday, September 12, 2005

JANUARY 16, RELIGIOUS FREEDOM DAY

Religious Freedom Day, 2005 A Proclamation by the President of the United States of America

George Washington wrote, "The liberty enjoyed by the people of these States, of worshipping Almighty God agreeably to their consciences, is not only among the choicest of their blessings, but also of their rights." On Religious Freedom Day, Americans commemorate the passage of the Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom in 1786, which helped set the course for freedom of religion to be included in the First Amendment to our Constitution.

Our Founding Fathers knew the importance of freedom of religion to a stable and lasting Union. Our Constitution protects individuals' rights to worship as they choose. Today, we continue to welcome the important contributions of people of faith in our society. We reject religious bigotry in every form, striving for a society that honors the life and faith of every person. As we maintain the vitality of a pluralistic society, we work to ensure equal treatment of faith-based organizations and people of faith.

As the United States advances the cause of liberty, we remember that freedom is not America's gift to the world, but God's gift to each man and woman in this world. This truth drives our efforts to help people everywhere achieve freedom of religion and establish a better, brighter, and more peaceful future for all.

NOW, THEREFORE, I, GEORGE W. BUSH, President of the United States of America, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the Constitution and laws of the United States, do hereby proclaim January 16, 2005, as Religious Freedom Day. I encourage all Americans to reflect on the great blessing of religious freedom, to endeavor to preserve this freedom for future generations, and to commemorate this day through appropriate events and activities in homes, schools, and places of worship.

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this fourteenth day of January, in the year of our Lord two thousand five, and of the Independence of the United States of America the two hundred and twenty-ninth.

GEORGE W. BUSH

Religious Freedom Restoration Act of 1993 Enrolled Bill (Sent to the President)
H.R.1308

One Hundred Third Congress of the United States of America AT THE FIRST SESSION Begun and held at the City of Washington on Tuesday, the fifth day of January, one thousand nine hundred and ninety-three An Act

TITLE: To protect the free exercise of religion.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled,

SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.
This Act may be cited as the 'Religious Freedom Restoration Act of 1993'.

SEC. 2. CONGRESSIONAL FINDINGS AND DECLARATION OF PURPOSES.

(a) Findings: The Congress finds that--

(1) the framers of the Constitution, recognizing free exercise of religion as an unalienable right, secured its protection in the First Amendment to the Constitution;

(2) laws 'neutral' toward religion may burden religious exercise as surely as laws intended to interfere with religious exercise;

(3) governments should not substantially burden religious exercise without compelling justification;

(4) in Employment Division v. Smith, 494 U.S. 872 (1990) the Supreme Court virtually eliminated the requirement that the government justify burdens on religious exercise imposed by laws neutral toward religion; and

(5) the compelling interest test as set forth in prior Federal court rulings is a workable test for striking sensible balances between religious liberty and competing prior governmental interests.

(b) Purposes: The purposes of this Act are--

(1) to restore the compelling interest test as set forth in Sherbert v. Verner, 374 U.S. 398 (1963) and Wisconsin v. Yoder, 406 U.S. 205 (1972) and to guarantee its application in all cases where free exercise of religion is substantially burdened; and

(2) to provide a claim or defense to persons whose religious exercise is substantially burdened by government.
SEC. 3. FREE EXERCISE OF RELIGION PROTECTED.

(a) In General: Government shall not substantially burden a person's exercise of religion even if the burden results from a rule of general applicability, except as provided in subsection (b).

(b) Exception: Government may substantially burden a person's exercise of religion only if it demonstrates that application of the burden to the person--

(1) is in furtherance of a compelling governmental interest; and

(2) is the least restrictive means of furthering that compelling governmental interest.

(c) Judicial Relief: A person whose religious exercise has been burdened in violation of this section may assert that violation as a claim or defense in a judicial proceeding and obtain appropriate relief against a government. Standing to assert a claim or defense under this section shall be governed by the general rules of standing under article III of the Constitution.
SEC. 4. ATTORNEYS FEES.

(a) Judicial Proceedings: Section 722 of the Revised Statutes (42 U.S.C. 1988) is amended by inserting 'the Religious Freedom Restoration Act of 1993,' before 'or title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964'.

(b) Administrative Proceedings: Section 504(b)(1)(C) of title 5, United States Code, is amended--

(1) by striking 'and' at the end of clause (ii);

(2) by striking the semicolon at the end of clause (iii) and inserting ', and'; and

(3) by inserting '(iv) the Religious Freedom Restoration Act of 1993;' after clause (iii).
SEC. 5. DEFINITIONS.
As used in this Act --

(1) the term 'government' includes a branch, department, agency, instrumentality, and official (or other person acting under color of law) of the United States, a State, or a subdivision of a State;

(2) the term 'State' includes the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, and each territory and possession of the United States;

(3) the term 'demonstrates' means meets the burdens of going forward with the evidence and of persuasion; and

(4) the term 'exercise of religion' means the exercise of religion under the First Amendment to the Constitution.
SEC. 6. APPLICABILITY.

(a) In General.--This Act applies to all Federal and State law, and the implementation of that law, whether statutory or otherwise, and whether adopted before or after the enactment of this Act .

(b) Rule of Construction.--Federal statutory law adopted after the date of the enactment of this Act is subject to this Act unless such law explicitly excludes such application by reference to this Act .

(c) Religious Belief Unaffected.--Nothing in this Act shall be construed to authorize any government to burden any religious belief.

SEC. 7. ESTABLISHMENT CLAUSE UNAFFECTED.


Nothing in this Act shall be construed to affect, interpret, or in any way address that portion of the First Amendment prohibiting laws respecting the establishment of religion (referred to in this section as the 'Establishment Clause'). Granting government funding, benefits, or exemptions, to the extent permissible under the Establishment Clause, shall not constitute a violation of this Act . As used in this section, the term 'granting', used with respect to government funding, benefits, or exemptions, does not include the denial of government funding, benefits, or exemptions.

Speaker of the House of Representatives.Vice President of the United States and President of the Senate.

first amendment: an overview



The First Amendment of the United States Constitution protects the right to freedom of religion and freedom of expression from government interference. See U.S. Const. amend. I. Freedom of expression consists of the rights to freedom of speech, press, assembly and to petition the government for a redress of grievances, and the implied rights of association and belief. The Supreme Court interprets the extent of the protection afforded to these rights. The First Amendment has been interpreted by the Court as applying to the entire federal government even though it is only expressly applicable to Congress. Furthermore, the Court has interpreted, the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment as protecting the rights in the First Amendment from interference by state governments. See U.S. Const. amend. XIV.

Two clauses in the First Amendment guarantee freedom of religion. The establishment clause prohibits the government from passing legislation to establish an official religion or preferring one religion over another. It enforces the "separation of church and state. Some governmental activity related to religion has been declared constitutional by the Supreme Court. For example, providing bus transportation for parochial school students and the enforcement of "blue laws" is not prohibited. The free exercise clause prohibits the government, in most instances, from interfering with a persons practice of their religion.

The most basic component of freedom of expression is the right of freedom of speech. The right to freedom of speech allows individuals to express themselves without interference or constraint by the government. The Supreme Court requires the government to provide substantial justification for the interference with the right of free speech where it attempts to regulate the content of the speech. A less stringent test is applied for content-neutral legislation. The Supreme Court has also recognized that the government may prohibit some speech that may cause a breach of the peace or cause violence. The right to free speech includes other mediums of expression that communicates a message.

Despite popular misunderstanding the right to freedom of the press guaranteed by the first amendment is not very different from the right to freedom of speech. It allows an individual to express themselves through publication and dissemination. It is part of the constitutional protection of freedom of expression. It does not afford members of the media any special rights or privileges not afforded to citizens in general.

The right to assemble allows people to gather for peaceful and lawful purposes. Implicit within this right is the right to association and belief. The Supreme Court has expressly recognized that a right to freedom of association and belief is implicit in the First, Fifth, and Fourteenth Amendments. This implicit right is limited to the right to associate for First Amendment purposes. It does not include a right of social association.

The government may prohibit people from knowingly associating in groups that engage and promote illegal activities. The right to associate also prohibits the government from requiring a group to register or disclose its members or from denying government benefits on the based on an individuals current or past membership in a particular group. There are exceptions to this rule where the Court finds that governmental interests in disclosure/registration outweigh interference with first amendment rights. The government may also, generally, not compel individuals to express themselves, hold certain beliefs, or belong to particular associations or groups.

The right to petition the government for a redress of grievances guarantees people the right to ask the government to provide relief for a wrong through the courts (litigation) or other governmental action. It works with the right of assembly by allowing people to join together and seek change from the government.

Thomas Jefferson on Religious Freedom




Jefferson's Bill for Establishing Religious Freedom in theState of Virginia


The Act for Establishing Religious Freedom is perhaps the most interesting feature in the revised code of Virginia. With the exception of the Declaration of Independence, it is the most celebrated of Jefferson's productions, and the one to which he recurred with the highest pride and satisfaction. The preamble which introduces the act defines with peculiar emphasis the premises upon which religious freedom is founded. The following is the bill with the preamble as originally proposed by Jefferson:


A Bill for Establishing Religious Freedom

"SECTION I. Well aware that the opinions and belief of men depend not on their own will, but follow involuntarily the evidence proposed to their minds; that Almighty God hath created the mind free, and manifested his supreme will that free it shall remain by making it altogether insusceptible of restraint; that all attempts to influence it by temporal punishments, or burthens, or by civil incapacitations, tend only to beget habits of hypocrisy and meanness, and are a departure from the plan of the holy author of our religion, who being lord both of body and mind, yet chose not to propagate it by coercions on either, as was in his Almighty power to do, but to exalt it by its influence on reason alone; that the impious presumption of legislators and rulers, civil as well as ecclesiastical, who, being themselves but fallible and uninspired men, have assumed dominion over the faith of others, setting up their own opinions and modes of thinking as the only true and infallible, and as such endeavoring to impose them on others, hath established and maintained false religions over the greatest part of the world and through all time: That to compel a man to furnish contributions of money for the propagation of opinions which he disbelieves and abhors, is sinful and tyrannical; that even the forcing him to support this or that teacher of his own religious persuasion, is depriving him of the comfortable liberty of giving his contributions to the particular pastor whose morals he would make his pattern, and whose powers he feels most persuasive to righteousness; and is withdrawing from the ministry those temporary rewards, which proceeding from an approbation of their personal conduct, are an additional incitement to earnest and unremitting labours for the instruction of mankind; that our civil rights have no dependence on our religious opinions, any more than our opinions in physics or geometry; that therefore the proscribing any citizen as unworthy the public confidence by laying upon him an incapacity of being called to offices of trust and emolument, unless he profess or renounce this or that religious opinion, is depriving him injuriously of those privileges and advantages to which, in common with his fellow citizens, he has a natural right; that it tends also to corrupt the principles of that very religion it is meant to encourage, by bribing, with a monopoly of worldly honours and emoluments, those who will externally profess and conform to it; that though indeed these are criminals who do not withstand such temptation, yet neither are those innocent who lay the bait in their way; that the opinions of men are not the object of civil government, nor under its jurisdiction; that to suffer the civil magistrate to intrude his powers into the field of opinion and to restrain the profession or propagation of principles on supposition of their ill tendency is a dangerous fallacy, which at once destroys all religious liberty, because he being of course judge of that tendency will make his opinions the rule of judgment, and approve or condemn the sentiments of others only as they shall square with or differ from his own; that it is time enough for the rightful purposes of civil government for its officers to interfere when principles break out into overt acts against peace and good order; and finally, that truth is great and will prevail if left to herself; that she is the proper and sufficient antagonist to error, and has nothing to fear from the conflict unless by human interposition disarmed of her natural weapons, free argument and debate; errors ceasing to be dangerous when it is permitted freely to contradict them.

"SECTION II. We the General Assembly of Virginia do enact that no man shall be compelled to frequent or support any religious worship, place, or ministry whatsoever, nor shall be enforced, restrained, molested, or burthened in his body or goods, nor shall otherwise suffer, on account of his religious opinions or belief; but that all men shall be free to profess, and by argument to maintain, their opinions in matters of religion, and that the same shall in no wise diminish, enlarge, or affect their civil capacities.

"SECTION III. And though we well know that this Assembly, elected by the people for the ordinary purposes of legislation only, have no power to restrain the acts of succeeding Assemblies, constituted with powers equal to our own, and that therefore to declare this act irrevocable would be of no effect in law; yet we are free to declare, and do declare, that the rights hereby asserted are of the natural rights of mankind, and that if any act shall be hereafter passed to repeal the present or to narrow its operation, such act will be an infringement of natural right."

Universal Declaration of Human Rights


ARTICLE 18

United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights, 1948
Everyone has the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion; this right includes freedom to change his religion or belief, either alone or in community with others and in public or private, to manifest his religion or belief in teaching, practice, worship and observance.
The First Amendment

The Constitution of the United States of America

Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof: or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.
If there is any fixed star in our constitutional constellation, it is that NO official, high or petty, can prescribe what shall be orthodox in politics, nationalism, religion or other matters of opinion or force citizens to confess by word or act their faith therein, If there are ANY circumstances which permit an exception, they do not now occur to us." United States Supreme Court (1943) West Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette, 319 US 624.


Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948) and other international covenants. While some actions taken in the name of religious rights may be ambiguous and will have to be addressed on a case-by-case basis, we believe that religious rights include at least the following:

Every person has the right to determine his or her own faith and creed according to conscience.

Every person has the right to the privacy of his belief, to express his religious beliefs in worship, teaching, and practice, and to proclaim the implications of his beliefs for relationships in a social or political community.

Every person has the right to associate with others and to organize with them for religious purposes.

Every religious organization, formed or maintained by action in accordance with the rights of individual persons, has the right to determine its policies and practices for the accomplishment of its chosen purposes, which implies the right:

to assemble for unhindered private or public worship

to formulate its own creed

to have an adequate ministry

to determine its conditions of membership

to give religious instruction to its youth, including preparation for ministry

to preach its message publicly

to receive into its membership those who desire to join it

to carry on social services and to engage in missionary activity both at home and abroad

to organize local congregations

to publish and circulate religious literature

to control the means necessary to its mission and to secure support for its work at home and abroad

to cooperate and to unite with other believers at home and abroad

to use the language of the people in worship and in religious instruction

to determine freely the qualifications for professional leadership of religious communities, freely naming their religious leaders at all levels and designating their work assignments.

MANIFESTO



OUR NOTIONS INTO IDEAS, OUR RULES INTO LAWS AND CUSTOMS INTO TRADITION SHOULD BE BASED ON THE FOUNDATION THAT EACH GENERATION IN IT’S TIME BECOMES THE CUSTODIAN AND GUIDING LIGHT RATHER THAN THE ABSOLUTE OWNER OF OUR RESOURCES THESE FUTURE GENERATIONS HAVE THE OBLIGATION TO PASS THIS INHERITANCE AND LEGACY ON TO FUTURE GENERATIONS, ALL BUILDING ON A STRUCTURE SET BY THE OLDONES FOR THOSE THAT HAVE NOT YET ARRIVED.

TODAY WE STRIVE TO ESTABLISH LEGITIMACY AND RESPECT AS AN ACCEPTED COMPONET OF OUR CULTURES AND WAYS IN THESE LANDS THAT ASPIRE TO FORM A GLOBAL REALITY. COMMUNITY IS WHAT MAKES THE DIVERSE GROUPS FOUND UNDER THE CRIOLLOS FOUNDATION UMBRELA.

HUMAN DIGNITY THE REALM WHERE MANIFESTAION OF “THE PEOPLES” SEEKING TO BE ESTABLISHED WITH THE RESPECT OF LAW AND ACCEPTED IN MAINSTREAM CIVILIZATION AS “THE PEOPLES”, HOLDING SACRED AND SELF EVIDENT THE FAITHS ALOWING THEM TO MEET DISADVANTGE AND OVERCOME ITS TYRANY BY THE VIRTUES OF MAN AND THE ASPIRATIONS OF HUMAN CONNECTIONS FROM THE SEEN TO THE UNSEEN REALITIES EACH ARE ADHERENT TO IN A MANNER GIVING CREDIT TO THERE OWN ANSECTORS.

RIGHT TO WORSHIP THIS IS THE ABILTY FOR THE PEOPLES TO WORSHIP AND GIVE VENERATION TO THE FORCES THEY DEEM QUALIFIED TO LEAD THEM BY INSPIRATION AND TO DELIVER RESOLVE FROM AGENDAS THEY SUFFER OR ARE BEING PURSECUTED FROM.

OUR FOUR PILLARS EXIST AS PART OF THE STRUCTURE OF OUR FOUNDATION, THEY ARE IN PLACE AS GUIDING POST AND LIGHT BECONS FOR OUR TRADTIONS / RELIGIONS.

1. BLACK PILLAR= THE RIGHT TO WORSHIP AS OUR FOREFATHERS AND TO ESTABLISH PLACES OF WORSHIP OUTSIDE OF OUR HOMES,THIS PILLAR IS ONE OF UNIVERSAL RESPECT FOR ALL PEOPLES AND RELIGIONS AND THE ABILTY FOR THE PEOPLES TO CHOSE WITHOUT THREATS OF HARM TO LIFE OR PROPERTY.

2. RED PILLAR=ADVOCACY FOR “THE PEOPLES” AND THEIR RIGHTS TO WORSHIP ON A GLOBAL PERSPECTIVE GIVEN THE SAME RESPECT RECEIVED BY RELIGIONS AND FAITHS ESTABLISHED AS SELF EVIDENT MAJOR SPIRITUAL SYSTEM FOR A PEOPLE BY THE GOVERMENTS AND POLITICAL BORDERS THEY ARE FOUND IN.

3. WHITE PILLAR=ADVOCATING THE RIGHTS TO DO MARRIGES AND PROVIDE FUNERAL SERVICES AND FINAL RESTING PLACES UNDER THE RUELS OF THE RESPECTIVE RELIGIONS/TRADITIONS,ALSO TO ESTABLISH CEMETERY GROUNDS AND TO HAVE FULL BODY BURIAL AT SEA UNDER INTERNATIONAL MARITIME LAWS.

4. YELLOW PILLAR=THE ABILITY TO SCHOOL OUR CHILDEREN AND TO OPEN ACADEMIC COLLAGES WHERE WE EXPRESS OUR SPIRITUAL REALITIES IN ACCREDITED PLACES OF STUDY UNDER THE LAWS OF THESE LANDS AND THE GOVERMENTS ESTABLISHED.

MUTUAL AID CRIOLLOS FOUNATION,INC IS A NOT FOR PROFIT DELAWARE DOMESTIC CORPORATION, SEEKING IRS 501[C]3 TAX STATUS.

WE ARE ORGANIZED AS A MUTUAL AID AND ADVOCATING UMBRELLA GROUP FOR AFRICAN TRADITIONAL RELIGIONS AND CRIOLLO/CREOLE SPIRITUAL SYTEMS ESTABISHED DURING THE IMPORTATION OF AFRICAN PEOPLES AS SLAVES INTO THE AMERICAS. WE SEEK TO EDUCATE THE PEOPLES IN “OUR STORIES” AS OPPOSED TO “HIS-STORY”.

WE SEEK TO ESTABLISHED PLACES OF WORSHIP FOR OUR RESPECTIVE RELIGIONS AND TRADITIONS AND TO HAVE ALL CITY,STATES,FEDERAL AND INTERNATIONAL LAWS RESPECT AND ADHERE TO OUR RIGHTS TO WORSHIP AS WE THE PEOPLES SEE FIT FOR OUR OWN CULTURAL PROGRESS AND ADVANCEMENT AS ACCEPTED PRIEST AND PRIESTESS, SERVITORS AND ADHERENTS IN PEACE AND HUMILTY COEXISTING IN HARMONY WITH ALL OTHER RELIGIONS SHARING THESE RIGHTS OF WORSHIP.

"THE CONSCIOUSNESS OF ONE'S DEPENDENCE ON A TRANSCENDENT BEING AND THE TENDENCY TO WORSHIP HIM;" IN THE SECOND, "RELIGION IS THE BODY OF TRUTHS, LAWS AND RITES BY WHICH MAN IS SUBORDINATED TO THE TRANSCENDENT BEING." WE MAY NOTE THAT THE USE OF THE PASSIVE FORM OF THE VERB IN THE SECOND DEFINITION INTRODUCES AN ELEMENT OF INVOLUNTARILY, SUGGESTING THAT MAN MAY BE INSERTED WILLY NILLY WITHIN A RELIGIOUS FRAMEWORK OF EXISTENCE.

NONETHELESS, THE TWO ASPECTS OF THE RELIGIOUS EXPERIENCE ARE OBVIOUSLY INTERCONNECTED: IT IS THE SUBJECTIVE CONSCIOUSNESS OF A GREATER-THAN-ONESELF IN THE COSMIC SCHEME OF THINGS WHICH PREDISPOSES TO THE ACCEPTANCE OF THE "TRUTHS, LAWS AND RITES" BY WHICH THIS AWARENESS IS MADE MANIFEST IN BEHAVIOURAL TERMS, WHETHER BY CHOICE OR BY SUBMISSION TO SOME EXTERNAL FIAT.

IN OTHER WORDS, THE NOTION OF RELIGION COMPRISES FROM THE OUTSET BOTH A PSYCHOLOGICAL AND A SOCIAL DIMENSION. IT IMPLIES ON THE ONE HAND THE POSSIBILITY OF INDIVIDUAL MENTAL STATES ARISING OUT OF PERSONAL ENCOUNTERS AND CONFRONTATIONS WITH WHAT THE GERMAN RELIGIOUS HISTORIAN RUDOLF OTTO CALLS THE "NOUMINOUS" – THE SUFFUSION OF EXISTENCE AND ITS ENVIRONMENTAL PROPS WITH "AN ATMOSPHERE OF THE AWESOME," THE MYSTERIOUS AND FASCINATING. ON THE OTHER HAND, THIS POSSIBILITY OF A VARIETY OF INDIVIDUAL MYSTICAL STATES, EACH IN ITS OWN WAY CHARGING THE EXTERNAL WORLD WITH MENTAL AND SPIRITUAL ATTRIBUTES, CREATES A PERMANENT NEED FOR SOME KIND OF REGULATORY SYNCRETISM AT THE GROUP LEVEL, AND OUT OF THIS SYNCRETISM EMERGES A SOCIAL ORDER IN WHICH THE VARIETIES OF THE INDIVIDUAL EXPERIENCE OF THE SACRED ARE TRANSMUTED INTO THE REQUIREMENTS OF EXISTENCE AND SURVIVAL IN A GIVEN ENVIRONMENTAL SETTING.

ACCORDINGLY, WE MAY CHARACTERIZE RELIGION FOR OUR PURPOSES HERE AS A WAY OF LIFE; OR MORE PRECISELY AS A SYSTEM OF BELIEFS AUTHORIZING OR SANCTIONING A GENERALIZED SET OF OBSERVANCES BASED ON THE ACKNOWLEDGEMENT OF AN ULTIMATE RELATIONSHIP TO A UNIVERSAL PRINCIPLE OR ESSENCE WHICH IS REGARDED AS IMMANENT IN NATURE.

THE MENTAL CONCRETIZATIONS OF THIS UNIVERSAL PRINCIPLE ARE OF COURSE THE TRANSCENDENT BEING WHICH WE CALL GOD,THE DEITY.

THE BELIEF IN GOD LOGICALLY SIGNIFIES FAITH IN A DIVINELY-ORDAINED ORDER IN THE WORLD AND FURNISHES A PERMANENT SPIRITUAL MEANING FOR EXISTENCE IN THE SENSE OF AN EXTRA-MUNDANE FOCUS, THE ULTIMATE INDIVIDUAL AND COLLECTIVE CONSUMMATION IN WHICH BECOMES THE OBJECT AND THE JUSTIFICATION OF EXISTENCE, AND THEREFORE SALVATION. RELIGION IS THUS ESSENTIALLY A CULTURAL PHENOMENON.

THE PRESCRIPTIONS OF THE DEITY – I.E., THE PERCEIVED CONDITIONS OF SPIRITUAL SALVATION TRANSLATE INTO A MORAL CODE EXPRESSED AS THE BEHAVIOURAL FORMULATION OF THE OBJECTIVE REQUIREMENTS OF THE TRANSCENDENTAL ORDER, AND JUSTIFIED ON THIS BASIS. VIEWED THIS WAY, RELIGION BECOMES BOTH THE ASPIRATION TO AND THE REALITY OF INDIVIDUAL AND COLLECTIVE COMMUNION WITH THE DEITY, WITH THE UNIVERSAL PRINCIPLE OF EXISTENCE, THE MEANS OF ENSURING CONFORMANCE WITH THIS PRINCIPLE AS INTERPRETED AND CONCEPTUALIZED IN THE PARTICULAR SETTING.

THAT IS TO SAY, IT BECOMES A MECHANISM OF SOCIAL CONTROL OF ENCULTURATION INTO A WAY OF LIFE. IT BECOMES IN EFFECT THE CONSCIOUS MANIPULATION OF THE IDEA OF THE SUPERNATURAL FOR PURELY MUNDANE PURPOSES – INCLUDING SUCH PURPOSES AS OVERT OR SURREPTITIOUS SUPPRESSION OF ONE CULTURE BY ANOTHER. DISMISSING THE EUROPEAN CONCEPTION OF "PRIMITIVE" RELIGION AS THE SPIRITUAL EXPRESSION OF CULTURES WHICH SUPPOSEDLY HAVE NOT YET ACHIEVED A SHARP INTELLECTUAL DISTINCTION BETWEEN THE SPIRITUAL AND THE PRACTICAL, BETWEEN THE SACRED AND THE PROFANE, WE ASSERT THAT THE AWARENESS OF GOD "IS AND HAS BEEN AT ALL TIMES THE COMMON HERITAGE OF HUMANITY.

" THE SUPREME BEING IS NEITHER UNCERTAIN NOR REMOTE BUT AN INTEGRAL ASPECT OF THEIR COMMUNAL BEING; SUCH THAT "THE REFINEMENT OF PUBLIC MORALITY IN THE LIGHT OF CONTEMPORARY BELIEFS" CANNOT BE ACHIEVED WITHOUT A FRUITFUL DIALOGUE BETWEEN THE AFRICAN TRADITIONALIST AND CRIOLLO THEOLOGICAL HERITAGE AND THE CHRISTIAN BELIEF STRUCTURE WHICH HAS BEEN SUPERIMPOSED ON IT BY RECENT CONTRIBUTION, THIS NECESSARY DIALOGUE NOT ONLY HAS NOT BEEN FRUITFUL TO DATE, BUT IS UNLIKELY EVER TO BE. IT HAS CONSISTED ESSENTIALLY, HE SUGGESTS, IN A MONOLOGUE IN WHICH CHRISTIANITY HAS TALKED DOWN TO TRADITIONAL RELIGION AND HAS ENDED BY SUBVERTING IT.

WHAT HAS TRANSPIRED, THEREFORE, HAS BEEN "THE SYSTEMATIC AND UNCRITICAL DESTRUCTION AND NEGLECT OF TRADITIONAL RELIGION" IN A CONTEST WHICH HE SAYS SHOULD PROPERLY BE SEEN AS A CLASH OF CULTURES, "A CONTEST BETWEEN TWO THEOLOGIES. HUMAN NATURE INSTINCTIVELY SEEKS, ASSERTS, AND CONFESSES ITS AUTHOR, GOD.

IT IS, THEREFORE, NOT ONLY BY REFLECTION ON THE NATURE OF THE UNIVERSE THAT THE AFRICANS HAVE COME TO THE KNOWLEDGE OF THE EXISTENCE OF A SUPREME BEING, AS THE ELDERS HAVE REMARKED, BUT ALSO BY INSTINCT AND INTUITION. HERE IS THE SIGNIFICANCE AND IMPLICATION OF THE IDEA OF THE HUMAN SPIRIT AS THE IMAGE OF ITS CREATOR. PHILOSOPHICAL ANALYSIS OF THE EXISTENCE OF GOD AND LOGICAL PROOFS OF THE SAME, SIMPLY CONFIRM AND CONSOLIDATE THE NATURE FOUNDATIONS FOR OUR KNOWLEDGE AND RECOGNITION OF THE EXISTENCE OF THE CREATOR.

CONSEQUENTLY, THE AWARENESS OF GOD IS AND HAS BEEN AT ALL TINES THE COMMON HERITAGE OF HUMANITY.

1. FIRM AND CONSTANT BELIEF IN THE INVISIBLE UNIVERSE OF DIVINE BEINGS, GOOD SPIRITS AND BAD SPIRITS, AND THE SPIRITS OF DEPARTED ANCESTORS.

2. FIRM AND CONSTANT BELIEF IN THE VISIBLE UNIVERSE OF HUMAN BEINGS AND THE NATURAL FORCES AND PHENOMENA.

3. FIRM AND CONSTANT BELIEF IN THE COMMUNION AND INTERACTION OF THE VISIBLE UNIVERSE OF HUMAN BEINGS AND NATURAL FORCES AND PHENOMENA, FLORA AND FAUNA WITH THE INVISIBLE UNIVERSE OF THE DIVINE AND SPIRITUAL BEINGS AND DEPARTED ANCESTORS. FOR THE CRIOLLO AS A CONSEQUENCE, THE INVISIBLE, THE SPIRITUAL AND SACRED ON THE ONE HAND, OPERATE WITH THE VISIBLE, THE TEMPORAL AND SECULAR ON THE OTHER, NOT IN CONFUSION BUT IN CO-OPERATION, NOT IN SEPARATION BUT IN DISTINCTION OF COMPETENCE, NOT IN DIVORCE BUT RATHER IN HARMONY WITH EACH OTHER.

4. BELIEF IN THE SPIRITUAL IMMORTALITY OF THE HUMAN BEING, WITH EACH BEING ENDOWED WITH PERSONAL DIVINE ESSENCE, CHI/ORI/GUARDIAN ANGLE WITH WHOSE CO-OPERATION, ACTION AND INTERACTION, AUSPICES AND GUIDANCE EVERY HUMAN BEING LIVES OUT HIS OR HER DIVINELY ORDAINED COURSE OF LIFE.

5. THE STRONG BELIEF IN SPIRITUAL IMMORTALITY AND REINCARNATION PROVIDED THE NECESSARY PERSONAL AND SOCIAL MOTIVATION AND ENCOURAGEMENT TO SUBORDINATE ONE'S MORAL LIFE TO THE REQUIREMENTS OF ETHICAL DISCIPLINE AND PUBLIC MORALITY, WHICH OFTEN CAME UNDER DIVINE SANCTIONS.

IN CHRISTIAN THEOLOGICAL TERMS, CHI / ORI MAY BE IDENTIFIED AS PERSONAL GUARDIAN SPIRIT OR ANGEL. CHI / ORI IS THE ONTOLOGICAL BASIS OF AFRICAN TRADITIONAL BELIEF IN IMMORTALITY AND THIS BELIEF IS IN TURN THE GROUND FOR THEIR BELIEF IN REINCARNATION AND RELIGIOUS REVERENCE FOR DESERVING ANCESTORS.

IN THIS CONTEXT THE ELDERS COMMENTED AS FOLLOWS: ”THIS BELIEF OR DESIRE FOR IMMORTALITY IS PART OF THE BACKGROUND TO THE CULT OF THE ANCESTORS THROUGH WHICH THE DEAD SHARE IN LIFE OF THE LIVING.

" THE TRADITIONAL CULT OF MANY AFRICANS/CRIOLLOS IS MARKED BY LIBERTY, VARIETY, RELEVANCE AND COMMUNALITY.

(A) LIBERTY ENSURES THAT THE AFRICAN/CRIOLLO RELIGIOUS SYSTEMS RECOGNIZES AND RESPECTS THE LAWS OF CHI /ORI AND THE REQUIREMENTS OF MAN'S SPIRITUAL PERSONALITY.

(B) VARIETY AS A RELIGIOUS FACTOR IN AFRICAN/CRIOLLO RELIGIOUS PRACTICE TAKES INTO CONSIDERATION PERSONAL AND LOCAL CIRCUMSTANCES AND OTHER NATURAL CONTINGENCIES AND HUMAN EVENTS – SUCH AS WARS, EPIDEMIC, FLOOD, FAMINE, THUNDER, MADNESS, ETC.

(C) RELEVANCE, WHICH IS IDENTIFIED AS "UTILITY", AS A FEATURE OF AFRICAN RELIGIOUS SYSTEMS AND ATTITUDE, SEEKS TO ENSURE FOR THEM THE WORSHIP OF A DIVINITY WHOSE POWERS ARE EFFICACIOUS AND PRODUCTIVE OF POSITIVE AND SALUTARY RESULTS.