Sunday, May 31, 2009

dr ivan van sertima has gone on to the ancestors --rest in peace --ashe ashe



dr van sertima, historian from guyana,and professor at rutgers university in the Us, was best known for his book about the early african presence in the americas, "they came before columbus"


part 2



part 3





dr. van sertia is referring to the "ta seti" artifacts found in nubia that show that the building blocks of pharonic egypt were well established and in place in nubia before the dynastic period of egypt began. these cultural and physical building blocks were long established south of egypt by the blacks of nubia, thus refuting forever the european and asian claims that egyptian civilization was anything other than black african in origins. no evidence of any of these cultural and physical building blocks are found in europe or western asia, thus proving the source of egypt's civilization was black, african, and directly from the south. the western archeologist who recovered the ta seti artifacts buried them in the university archives for 17 years saying nothing of this discovery trying to hide our history. it was upon his death that one of his students finally brought the ta seti artifacts to light.

why would an archeologist cover up a discovery that would have made him famous in his field? racism in a "scientific" field that has sought to erase black history from world history promoted by a culture that has sought to physically marginalize and erase black people from the world, is the only realistic answer.


to physically erase a people you must also erase their history. from ancient times to modern, this is what has and is being done to black people. the global life and death struggle to save us all will be that much harder without dr. ivan van sertima.


"when one of our enemies dies, two more step forward to take his place. when one of us dies, there is a gap left in our ranks and a sorrow in our hearts." - chiksika the brother of tecumseh the shawnee warrior and leader of the united indian resistance circa 1800




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part 7