Category Archives: Rastas

SESOSTRIS THE GREAT, THE EGYPTIAN HERCULES.

By Samuel David Ewing

Pg.225. “Eratosthenes ( ? ) ( From Syncellus ) App.II Fr. 39 King of Thebes 34. The thirty fourth King of Thebes was Sistosichermes, “Valiant Heracles,” ( Sistosis or Sesortosis, “Valiant Hermes or Heracles” ), for 55 years. Anno Mundi 3791.” From Manetho, With An English Translation By W.G. Waddell, published by Harvard University Press , London 1940, 1948.

Sesostris the Great’s name has been translated in various ways from the Greek, Roman, and English translations as Senusret I, Senwosret I, Sistosis, Sesortosis, Sesoothis, and Sen-Wos- Ret I. Sen-Wos-Ret means “son of Wosret.”

Wosret is the goddess who was known as a form of Hathor in Egypt. Wosret ruled over precious metals, wealth, mines, and treasures. The ancient black African ruler, Sen-Wos-Ret I knew Her to be his patron deity during his successful military campaigns, and she was the motivating ideal behind his mission to conquer the entire world.

With that in mind I will now list some of his accomplishments:
1. He used prisoners of war for an extensive building projects throughout Egypt.

2. He was worshiped as a living god during the 12th Dynasty of Egypt.

3. Sen-Wos- Ret I began a series of victorious military expeditions against the Asiatics, Libyans, and various nomads ( Bedouins ) who threatened the people of Egypt. He became ruler of Egypt in 1971 B.C. and ruled until 1928 B.C.

4. He enforced loyalty and discipline in Egypt, giving the governors responsibility for the management of the nomes ( towns ).

5. He was the first Egyptian king to rule over Ethiopia, including lower Nubia, and use its gold mines to add to the empires wealth.

6. Strabo, XVII reports that Sen-Wos-Ret I had built a canal starting from the Nile River to the Red Sea.

7. He ordered the rebuilding of the Temple of Amen at Ipet-sut ( Karnak ) in stone.
8. He erected red granite obelisks to be placed at Heliopolis ( Northern Anu ).

9. He led a great expedition to Punt on the Somali Coast.

10. He had built the largest pyramid in the history of the Middle Kingdom Period of Egypt’s history. The pyramid was 352 ft. tall.

11. He protected Egypt’s borders by winning victories in a succession of military conquests to the South to gain the benefits of the economic mechanisms in Lower Nubia and to continue trading with the nations of West Asia.

12. The ancient Greeks called him “Heracles Kharops” ( Heracles the Flashing-Eyed ), “Kekrops”, and “Sistosichermes Valiant Hercules.” He founded and built Athens, Greece, considered to be the greatest center of culture, academics, art, and the sciences in ancient Greece. This city is credited to being the catalyst for European – based civilization ( the West ) and originated with the black king Sen-Wos- Ret I known as Heracles Kharops.

13. He was the second ruler of the 12th Dynasty, he ruled for 34 years, and built 13 fortresses from Egypt to the Second Cataract. He made use of the harvest from Wadi Hammamat for food supplies.

14. He completed the construction of the Wall Of Princes. He founded colonies in the areas of the Danube River, the Black Sea, Strabo, Book III records that Sen-Wos- Ret I conquered Palestine, Syria, Mesopotamia, Armenia, Iberia, Colchis, and ancient Hindu writings record his invasion of India.

Numerous sources indicate that he was the first man to conquer the entire world centuries before Alexander the Great was born, that this has been a point of controversy among scholars and archaeologist, however evidence is being discovered that verifies the claims of ancient writers.

The Global Indigenous Muurs

DISCLAIMER: This video is not implying or suggesting that slavery never happened or the people mistakenly known as “African American” descend from the islands presented in the video. This video is not intended to cause hate or hard feelings between “Black” Americans and Central/West Africans. It’s intended to show the other side of the world most Black Americans would never research because they were taught they came from Central & W.Africa. The VAST majority of the people mistakenly known as African American did NOT come from Africa, and were living here in the Western Hemisphere (Turtle island) before anyone else. If you’re still in doubt watch Pt.2. & Pt.3. People who say “Black Americans don’t look African because they’re mixed.” Okay well I found pictures of NON-mixed people, so what’s the excuse now? read more

The Smallest Most Inconsequential Thing – A poem by Ras Ahmeer Levy

“The Smallest most inconsequential thing”

The smallest most inconsequential thing
Easily overlooked, blown about by the ferocious and careless wind
Can you imagine nothingness?
So often cast aside as……
The smallest most inconsequential thing
Lost to the eye of the lofty and high browed
Neglected and left to fend for its self, to weather the storm
Swept aside as so much dust at the entrance to the tabernacle
The smallest most inconsequential thing
In the darkest repose, in the dankest of corners where light cannot reach forgotten and cold
The smallest most inconsequential thing
The loneliness, the emptiness, the silence, the blackness, the void
Hidden from the wise and prudent that daily sweep the dust from entrance to the tabernacle, proud of their works and their washed hands
Hidden from hateful eyes and dulled ears, marred by pride and shame, unable to see the beauty in the jewels of the sky nor hear the exclamations of babes and those suckling’s whose words and meditations are an offense to the ears and a rebuke in the mouth of the old and regretful
That smallest most inconsequential thing
A speck, a concealed within the womb of eternity, feeding from the hidden stream, groping in the blackest black
Growing nurtured by the everlasting completeness of the dark, lulled to sleep by the lapping waves, the run and return of that primordial sea
The fullness
The Joy
The spark
The breath
That smallest most inconsequential thing
Now exposed, naked, something from nothing, singing the beautiful song of creation, bursting forth into being
A light emanating from the darkness, a light returning to light
A candle perfect and upright whose flame flickers not in the torrents of the storm
A tree planted standing firm whose roots feed from the everlasting rivers of waters, standing as a sign an eternal impression for those who have eyes to see and ears to hear
Love loves even the smallest and most inconsequential of things. Was not the tree of life once a small and inconsequential seed churned in the dust of the earth? read more