A Legacy of Black Intelligence pt. 1: African Holistic Health…
Background Harmonics: Fat Jon’s “Repaint Tomorrow”
Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser. Peace, In honor of Black History month, I just started a new facebook photo album called “A Legacy of Black Intelligence.” The main idea is here is to build on African greatness in the past, present AND future, not just history itself. Here’s the latest image from the archive:

“Marimba Ani is a visionary scholar of the greatest dimension…
gifted with keen insight and an opportunity to matriculate through
the hallowed academies of European-American education…this gift combined
with the spirit of an activist and a love of Afrikan Scholarship has produced,
Yurugu: An African-Centered Critique of European Cultural Thought & Behavior>>
one of the true landmark keys to Afrikan liberation and by extension
the liberation of peoples around the world who suffer under Global
White Supremacy…” THIS SISTER IS A GENIUS…TRUST ME.
& here’s an old research paper I did back in the day (at Hampton University) called “Heal Thyself: Afro-centric Perspectives on the Science & History of the Healing Arts.” It was for a class I took called “Khematology” (the study of Ancient Egypt, or Khemet) held by Dr. Natalie S. Robinson, one of the greatest courses I ever took. I’m going to be talking about it more in the near future…
“European medicinal science is, for the most part, mundane. Nature and science were (and still are) understood from a physical viewpoint only; the five senses were used as the meter to create diagnosis and treatment. This lack of alignment and understanding of the profoundness of nature has stimulated the creation of “Pseudo-Technologies”, such as radios, X-ray machines, and laser projection devices for healing.” ~ Bryan Ogilvie
It’s pretty cool looking back on your old work – it’s interesting to see where I was at back then, because it’s a lot further on then I usually give myself credit for.
The paper’s from 2006, and I uploaded it raw with all the typos and everything, so take it easy on me. :)
Peace,
+B
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[...] this session, I’d like to build on what we went over in part 1: African Holistic [...]
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