

African Deep Thought: Following the ways of our ancestors
This group is for the exploration of classical and traditional African deep thought (what some refer to... View more
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Kwabena posted an update in the group
African Deep Thought: Following the ways of our ancestors a year ago ·
“The mere imparting of information is not education. Above all things, education must result in making a man think and do for himself.”
-The Great The Honorable
Nana Carter G. Woodson
Keisha, NonMwenSe and 2 others-
In Afrikan education=Black education they fill your head with Eurocentric education and history so that when you graduate your main goal is to work for white people or your main goal is to migrate to Europe or America and to give your knowledge and skills to white people and continue to make the white man’s country stronger and powerful;
Or…
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Kwabena posted an update in the group
African Deep Thought: Following the ways of our ancestors a year ago ·
a year ago (edited)
“The present system under the control of the whites trains the Negro to be white and at the same time convinces him of the impossibility of him becoming white.”
-The Great The Honorable
Nana Carter G. Woodson
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So true.
They will pump all these Eurocentric education into your brain from class 1 kindergarten until your PhD or Doctorate degree.
Once you get your doctorate degree and you move into the white neighborhood, all the white people move out.
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Chasing after YTEEs.
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Kwabena posted an update in the group
African Deep Thought: Following the ways of our ancestors a year ago
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Kwabena posted an update in the group
African Deep Thought: Following the ways of our ancestors a year ago
“The real leader of the people must live among them, think with them, feel for them, and die for them.”
-The Great The Honorable
Nana Carter G. Woodson
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Kwabena posted an update in the group
African Deep Thought: Following the ways of our ancestors a year ago ·
a year ago (edited)
“To handicap a student by teaching him that his blackness is a curse and that his struggle to change his condition is hopeless is worst of than lynching.”
–The Great The Honorable
Nana Carter G. Woodson
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To teach a Black=Afrikan boy that his Blackness is a curse and that he was born to be a slave and a servant to the white man, is worse than the white man lynching him.
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To teach a Black=Afrikan girl that her Blackness is a curse and that she was born to be a slave and a maid servant to the white woman (white man), is worse that the white woman (white man) lynching her.
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