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Kafir!


An Arabic word for non-believer; however, not everyone is shrewd to an extent where they have knowledge and understanding of the correct meaning for the word. There are imbeciles, who believe that this word is a derogatory word that they must use to insult Bantu people. Lack of knowledge and understanding, are the sole reasons why this word eventuated in an utterly tumultuous nor adversarial relationship between Bantu people and the grandchildren of those who came with ships, to Africa. 

In 1948, the racial segregation laws were promulgated by the imbeciles who had the desire to oppress the natives owing to their enormous fear of Bantu people, and the enormous envy they had over the wealthy Bantu people who attained wealth naturally, from their forefathers. They, simply, promulgated these laws to ensure that the natives were deprived of the equal opportunity to compete with the colonizers economically, spiritually, sexually, mentally and in any fair way. The Bantu people, are so deity-like, I’d also envy them if I wasn’t the same race as them; I also understand that it is easier for a person who abhors Bantu people to postulate that I’m being subjective. 

However, I am also aware that it is an utter frivolous activity to deviate your focus and energy from ameliorating yourself to draining it by taking offence, owing to the racist’s imbecilic utterances. “Divide and conquer” has been the colonizers’ favorite weapon to eliminate nor control the natives in their own querencia, in order for them to live comfortably and enjoy the African wealth at the expense of the natives’ labour. 

Psychology, is arguably the most powerful weapon one can possess. Look at the psychology behind colonization. Have we noticed, lately, how colossally hilarious the whole buffoonery, which takes place in Africa, is. The part that’s paradoxically nor contemporaneously hilarious and sad is, how there are African countries which celebrate holidays which are called “Independence day" while they depend solely on foreign markets and funding for things that they even have, let alone not being in control of their own justice system, education system, media, healthcare system, agriculture, reserve bank, and all the requisite resources that a nation needs to augment its wealth. 

Africans, nor Bantu people are the ones who dominate the lower class, in Africa. Let me rephrase, Africans are engulfed by poverty in their own continent, they don’t own anything that belongs to their continent, they cannot make autonomous decisions about profound issues in their own continent, they do not have a powerful economy in their own continent, they do not own even 50% of the land in their own continent, their ancient African ways of medicine and healing are treated with contempt in their own continent under their watch. A preponderance of young Africans, have no knowledge of their true history, Africans were made to abhor their own people, their own communities, their own schools, automatically they are encouraged to move out of their communities to the ones which are not dominated by their fellows, and are also encouraged to take their offspring to schools which are not dominated by their fellows owing to being programmed to treat their own schools and communities with utter contempt, in lieu of providing solutions to ensure that local schools reach the level where they are allowed to provide an advanced education vis-à-vis the schools that are often vaunted. The legendary Malcolm X once said “Only a fool would allow their enemy to teach their children”. By this, I intend not to perpetuate the idea that non-Bantu people are our enemies; however, if one would apply logic, he would ascertain that the people who once were his oppressors can never teach his children about their roots nor the truth about their history. In essence, I mean, no multiracial nor private schools which are not dominated by Bantu people teach the children about King Menelik II, Emperor Hailie Selassie I, Queen Nzinga Mbandi, Bantu Biko or the legendary Samora Machel, and all the other great Africans who once lived on this earth, let alone their ideas. I stand tall in being lambasted nor corrected.

Africans have been called all kinds of names, from savages, to Negros, to kaffirs etc. Not only are they called these names, also their communities and TV screens are engulfed by things that will impel the natives to behave in a way that will prove that they deserve those names. When colonizers came to our beautiful continent, before they destroyed it, abhorred all the kings and queens who resisted colonization; including those who refused to be docile and accept Christianity nor be baptized when missionaries arrested, tortured and assassinated all the natives who refused the foreign religion, which is solely based on a mythical God who exudes jealousy and contempt for African ways. 

Slavery, is not a generational curse, but rather a generational mindset that we choose to maintain for generations, in lieu of rather striving to attain the wealth that was vehemently taken from our ancestors. Many subtle ways are being implemented to maintain and control poverty, mentally oppress the natives, to keep the natives financially and economically disadvantaged; border gates to segregate Africans, chaos in African politics, unemployment of a preponderance of natives and employment opportunities for a selected few in Bantu communities to use a subtle way to impel Bantu people to steal from their own nor kill their own, and also the ones who are financially well are encouraged to treat those who are engulfed by insufficiency, with utter contempt. That, eventually perpetuates envy which may develop into an adversarial relationship where one Bantu person practices witchcraft or hire hitmen, or personally eliminate one of their fellows who show impressive progress. 

We should all, Bantu people nor the natives and the people of African descent, strive to be proud nor devout kaffirs. By kaffirs, I do not mean the kind of kaffir that would be feasibly defined by a racist imbecile, but a kind of kaffir who is a devout non-believer. 

We should strive to be non-believers of hate, treason, illogical, wicked system, drug abuse and all the inequalities nor systems that are designed to overtly make Bantu people to fail. We should strive to be the kind of kaffirs who exude Melanin confidence like the great queen Nzinga Mbandi, the great Bantu Biko, the great Samora Machel, the great Lilian Ngoyi, the great Charlotte Maxeke, the great Tsietsi Mashinini, the great Nomzamo Madikizela-Mandela, the great Gedley’hlekisa Zuma, the great Muammar Gaddafi,  the great king Badu Bonsu II, the great prophet Isaiah Shembe, the great Chief Bhambatha kaMancinza, the great prophet Simon Kimbangu, the great king Shaka Zulu and all the other Africans nor Bantu people who made significant contributions to our beautiful history. 

We shall make it incumbent upon ourselves to educate our own people about the true definition of the word “kaffir". However, that should never be confused with the idea that we allow any non-Bantu person to address us as such; we shall address one another as such, in a way that will change the meaning this word used to comprise. Most importantly, we shall also make it incumbent upon ourselves, as Africans or Bantu people, to eschew the habit of reacting in a way that will be anticipated by our enemies, who believe in using that term to derogate us; but, rather, react in a way that will make the imbecilic and uninformed racists to regret consuming their ancestors’ evil teachings, in the first place.

We are proud kaffirs who do not believe in this evil system of cowards, which seeks to make Bantu men to be economically disadvantaged, and the non-Bantu man to be economically advantaged, then tells both men that anyone who wants to succeed should buy education, anyone who wants to eat should buy food, anyone who wants blessings should pay tithes, anyone who wants shelter should buy a house; and those who cannot afford the previously mentioned objects, should put themselves in a position whereby they have to spend their whole lives working in order to settle the debt of purchasing objects that they can’t afford to pay in cash. 

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Eye See

The objects of fear

The great Bantu Biko , once said that fear is an important determinant in South African politics. In fact, that’s what all governments use to contain the civilians. Fear, is not the power that one attains, but the power that he is given by the ones who fear him.  Allow me, to quote the legendary Biko: “It is a fear so basic in the considered actions of black people as to make it impossible for them to behave like people---let alone free people.” “One must not underestimate the deeply imbedded fear of the black man so prevalent in white society. Whites know only too well what exactly they have been doing to blacks and logically find reason for the black man to be angry. Their state of insecurity however does not outweigh their greed for power and wealth, hence they brace themselves to react against this rage rather than to dispel it with open-mindedness and fair play.” “It sometimes looks obvious here that the great plan is to keep the black people thoroughly intimidated and

Resurrection

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Dark.

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