Thursday, November 28, 2013

Giving Thanks ! From family destruction to family and friends dinner !

From family destruction to family and friends dinner ! http://daghettotymz.com/rkyvz/articles/thanks/thanks.html

A first legally recognized day of thanksgiving was ordered by the Governor in Massachusetts Bay to celebrate the the victory of Indians. A second day of Thanksgiving was ordered by the church in Standford Connecticut to celebrate the victorious slaughter over the heathen Indians. Numerous days of thanksgiving developed after each slaughter. President George Washington ordered that all these celebrations be celebrated on one day. President Abraham Lincoln made Thanksgiving a national Holiday on the day he order the slaughter of the Sioux Indians. Today we celebrate family and friends and the blessings we have enjoyed. Let us not forget the lives who paved the way for our luxury.
Enjoy the video: The True History of Thanksgiving by Susan Bates: http://youtu.be/C4nQPI0AV7Q 

Enjoy an historic analysis of the tradition of Thanksgiving, documenting the only written document that describes the original feast.: http://youtu.be/QZRI1BIaER4
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 Giving Thanks ! From family destruction to family and friends dinner !
     As we give thanks today, pour a libation for our ancestors whose lives became the fertile soil for today's American celebration.In our festivity we will not forget.
For sacrifices of the Indians stolen and taken to England and enslaved in 1614 we remember you. Ashee ! 
For the Pautuxen Indians murdered English small pox clearing land for Pilgrims, we remember you. Ashee !
For the enslaved yet optimistic Squanto who fought for and brokered peace, we remember you. Ashee !
For the nation who didn't agree to Squanto's peace treaty and were slaughtered, we salute you. Ashee !
Your slaughter became the first legally recognized American Day of Thanksgiving celebration.
The success of the slaughter led to numerous Day of Thanksgivings. We remember you. Ashee !
The people were enslaved and sent to England.
The lands were systematically taken, as the people were systematically diminished.
And Now today America has become a leading Nation neglecting the soil of your blood.
May we never forget, may we not get stuck in the despair of the past.
May we move forward together, being aware and conscious. Ashee

Food for thought:

Umoja Karamu- Giving thanks to Afrikan Culture

The cultural creativity of Afrakan people is ever redemptive. Afrakans in America continue in the ways of their continental ancestors in conceiving ongoing methods of institutionalizing our unique heritage. This is the time of the holiday tradition of Umoja Karamu. This celebration was initiated in 1971 by Brother Edward Simms, Jr. of Philadelphia, Pa. Umoja Karamu is a Swahili term that translates as “unity feast.” As practiced in The Temple of the Black Messiah, Umoja Karamu is held on the fourth Sunday in November.
Its purpose is to instill a sense of unity and appreciation of Afrakan heritage into Afrakan families. This is done through prayers to the traditional deities of Afraka, libations to honor our Afrakan ancestors, historical Afrakan centered readings and Afrakan centered films all of which culminates in a healthy, nutritious feast. In his own words Brother Edward Simms, Jr. states “[Umoja Karamu] injects new meaning and solidarity into the Black Family through ceremony and symbol. It is unique in that it bridges the gap between diverse religious persuasions through a ritual which is easily understood and appreciated by all the participants. Moreover, it draws on the collective Black experience with which most Black Folks are familiar.”
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The Umoja Karamu celebration is based on five major epochs in the lives of Afrakans in America and each represented by a distinct color. The feast should include foods representing the color of each epoch.The prayers, libations, historical readings and films should also center around these events:

1st Epoch – Afrakans prior to the invasions and influence of Europeans and Arabs. The color Black, is used to delineate the unity of the Afrakan people.

2nd Epoch – Captivity of Afrakans during which the Maafa occurs. The color white symbolizes the adversary and their role in the attempted destruction of Afrakan culture.

3rd Epoch – Self Emancipation. The fight against forced labor and captivity in the United States of America through revolts, Civil Rights and the Black Power movements. The color red is used to represent those who lived and died in service of freeing captive Afrakans.

4th Epoch – National Liberation. The fight for decolonization of Afrakan countries the formation of the Organization for Afrakan Unity and the diasporac Afrakan liberation movements. The chosen color is green, symbolic of land and all that comes from it.

5th Epoch – The Future of Afraka and Afrakans. The Afrakan Union, The African Socialist International, The Sankofa Movement. Afrakan centered perspectives for the future. The color gold is chosen for the future is a most valuable asset.

Kwanzaa, Umoja Karamu, Odunde. Afrakans in America – earnestly engaged in the reclamation of their culture and its institutionalization.

Article by Pya Kule
http://daghettotymz.com/rkyvz/articles/thanks/thanks.html

http://daghettotymz.com/rkyvz/articles/thanks/thanks.html
http://daghettotymz.com/rkyvz/articles/thanks/thanks.html

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1 comment:

Unknown said...

This article was awesome. It made me think of something I have read previously