Maafa Mkubwa of Global Afrikans c. 5741 KC* [c. 1500 CE – Present] Part
1
Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi, Ph.D.
Public Policy Analysis
Demographic analysis of the Afrikan continent
today by the Economists of the World Bank shows that the population of continental
Afrikans c. 6255 KC [c. 2014 CE] in the “semi-liberated” areas of Afrika ya
Magharibi [Kiswahili:
West Afrika], Afrika
ya Kusini [Kiswahili:
Southern Afrika], Afrika
ya Mashariki [Kiswahili: East Afrika] and Afrika ya Kati [Kiswahili: Central Afrika] was estimated to be
approximately 1,100,000,000 souls. Add
to this the CIA World Factbook calculations on the number of Afrikans c. 6252
KC [c. 2011 CE] in the Caribbean, Marekani ya Kaskazini [Kiswahili: North America], Marekani ya Kusini [Kiswahili: South America], Marekani ya Kati [Kiswahili: Central America], and Ulaya [Kiswahili: Europe]: 186,422,178; and the Afrikan populations of the
Dalit and Dravidian populations of India, Nepal and Pakistan: 392,500,000; plus
the Afrikan peoples of Australia: 520,000; the Pacific: 8,000,000; and the Afrikans of occupied Afrika ya
Kaskazini [North Afrika- Morocco, Algeria, Libya, Tunisia and Egypt]:
195,637,341 and
the total Global Afrikan Population is an estimated 1,883,079,519 people out of
a total world population of 6,000,000,000.[1]
Given
the harsh nature of Global Afrikan life in its current occupied and dominated,
neo-colonial contexts which are rife with high infant and mother mortality
rates, malnutrition and other types of hunger, biological warfare such as UKIMWI:
Ukosefu wa Kinga Mwilini [Kiswahili: AIDS] and vaccinations,
economic and Utamaduni [Kiswahili: Culture] warfare these numbers
may seem a testament to the Global Afrikan
3XW/Akhu [Kush/Kemet: Spirit] of
survival, but a conclusion of that sort could only be arrived at by a socially
dislocated, Utamaduni mis-oriented and ahistorical mentality. Generally, the population increase across
Global Afrika in the last fifty to eighty years, is credited to improvements in
food and health systems as a direct result of Eurasian Colonization;
a supposed positive outcome of the Ulaya
[Kiswahili: Europe] ‘Civilizing
Mission’ to the ‘Dark Continent.’ A conclusion of this nature also is devoid of
Afrikan-centered historical grounding, resulting instead, from the Ulaya
Colonization of all socialization agencies including schooling and information
about the world.
Louis-Marie
Maes-Diop [2], a demographic
historian and the late wife of the Senegalese scholar Mhenga [Kiswahili: Ancestor]
Cheikh Anta Diop, after a careful analysis of Afrikan continental demographic
data has determined that c. 6091 KC [c. 1850 CE] the population of the
continent of Afrika stood at 200,000,000 people. According to the c. 6189-6190 KC [c.
1948-1949 CE] Afrikan Census, the population of continental Afrika was counted
at being approximately 125,000,000 people.
From further study of Afrikan population density recorded in European
and Aryan-Arab sources, Dr. Louis-Marie Maes-Diop determined that c. 5741 KC
[c. 1500 CE] the population density of continental Afrika was 40 persons per
square kilometer, which puts total population at approximately 800,000,000
people. Therefore between c. 5741-6091
KC [c. 1500-1850 CE] the population of continental Afrika had decreased
dramatically from 800,000,000 to 200,000,000 people. This precipitous drop in
population was followed by another dramatic decrease in between the years c.
6091-6190 KC [c. 1850-1949 CE] when the population dropped from 200,000,000 to
125,000,000 continental Afrikans. The
entire period is what is referred to as the Maafa Mkubwa [Kiswahili:
Great Suffering] of Afrikan people.
In c. 5741
KC [c. 1500 CE] continental Afrika was a densely populated continent with
self-reliant, Black Afrikan controlled, egalitarian, ethnically plural,
regional empires and kingdoms. The large cities of continental Afrika had
populations ranging from 60,000 to 140,000 people, while towns had populations
of between 1,000 and 10,000 people.
Other areas which were not organized under a centralized regional
government were densely populated with large dispersed settlements organized
around local forms of self-reliant political economic governance. Also, c. 5741 KC [c. 1500 CE] is also the
advent of European expansion into continental Afrika as well as the continued
movement of Aryan-Arabs south coming from the northern part of the Afrikan
continent. The violent penetrations of
Europeans and Aryan-Arabs led to political, economic and social dislocation of Afrika-Nyeusi [Kiswahili: Black Afrika]. The Aryan-Arab penetration was
negligible until c. 5741 KC [c. 1500 CE] when mechanized weaponry provided Europeans
and Aryan-Arabs with a distinct advantage over the offensive and defensive capabilities
of Black Afrikan armed forces. Advanced
military weaponry allowed the Moroccans to invade and splinter the Songhai
Empire in a decade c. 5742-5752 KC [c. 1591-1601 CE].
Aryan-Arab
and European conquest of Afrika in search of natural resources and populations
for enslavement led to the disintegration of continental Black Afrikan Kingdoms
some of which implemented the policy of military raiding of neighbor kingdoms
to procure the forced labour required by the Aryan-Arabs and Europeans, which
would be exchanged in some cases for outmoded mechanized weaponry. The Utamboni
[Kiswahili: State of War] that ensued
led to grassroots migrations, massive population shifts, which further
disrupted food systems, health systems and the overall social systems of
settled and nomadic continental Black Afrikan nations and communities. The breakdown of governments and social structures
created a Hobbesian state of anarchy, where small groups and individuals were
forced to defend themselves against organized, foreign subsidized mercenary
hordes. The state of social
disintegration created a vacuum which was filled by European and Aryan-Arab
political and economic interests and in the new Utamaduni distortion gave birth
to the social parasite which continues to plague Afrika-Nyeusi: the Aryan-Arab
or European culturally-oriented Black Colonialist Political Collaborator class,
who in order to escape the misery which abounded and to procure the
pseudo-luxuries of the perceived new European and Aryan-Arab powers, in selfish
interest, would serve Europeans and Aryan-Arabs, as a political class of
Mercenaries, ‘forced labour’ Brokers, Wards of captive Afrikans in
mini-concentration camps or temporary ‘slave’ pens, organizers and protectors
of Caravans, interpreters for Europeans and Aryan-Arabs and suppliers of
provisions for the European and Aryan-Arab interlopers. The continental Afrikan
Nyeusi population decrease in the period of c. 5741-6190 KC [c. 1500-1949 CE]
from approximately 800,000,000 to 125,000,000 people resulted from the murder
of millions of the Wahenga na Wahenguzi
[Kiswahili: Great Ancestors] at the
hands of Afrikan Comprador Collaborators [3]
in service to European and Aryan-Arab political economic interests.
Notes
*In this article two calendars will be presented as a
guide to recorded events. One is the Julian calendar to which all in the
Eurocentric countries and their former colonies are familiar with. Its
divisions used here are BCE, Before the Common Era and CE, the Common Era. The
second calendar is labeled KC, for Kemet/Kush Calendar. This Kemet/Kush
calendar was based on the Sopdet Year [Sothic Cycle]. The German Egyptologist
Eduard Meyer of the Berlin School of Egyptology developed the Sothic Theory in
1904. See: Eduard Meyer, Ägyptische
Chronologie, (Akademie der Wissenschaften: Berlin, 1904). The Sothic Theory is based on the 1,460 year
cycle of the star Sopdet [Sirius]. The Peret Sopdet, heliacal rising of Sopdet,
is mentioned in many Kemetic documents as occurring in the same observational
position every 1,460 years would occur on the Wep Renpet or Kemetic New Year.
The earliest Sopdet Year as calculated by Eduard Meyer occurred in c. 4241 BCE,
with a second Sopdet Year occurring in c. 1461 KC [c. 2780 BCE] during the 4th
Kemetic Dynasty. Another Sopdet Year is stated to have occurred during the 12th
Dynasty in the seventh year of Per-aa Sesotris III according to the Illahun
Papyrus. The Eberus Medical Papyrus also states that a Sopdet Year occurred in
the ninth year of the 18th Dynasty Per-aa Amenhotep I. By dating
Afrikan history from an Afrikan time-frame the contemporary events discussed
occur in the, conservatively speaking, 62nd century of Afrikan
Global history.
[1] Central Intelligence Agency, The World
Factbook 2013-14 (Washington, DC: Central Intelligence Agency, 2013)
[2] Louise-Marie
Maes-Diop, “Demography and History in Sub-Saharan Africa” ANKH, Journal of
Egyptology and African Civilizations ANKH n°2,
(April 1993), pp. 164 – 199 [http://www.ankhonline.com/revue/diop_lm_history
_evolution_africa_population.htm]; Louise-Marie Maes-Diop, “The question of the
Iron Age in Africa” ANKH, Journal of Egyptology and African Civilizations
ANKH No. 4-5, (1995/1996), pp. 278-303 [http://www.ankhonline.
com/revue/diop_lm_metallurgie_fer_afrique.htm]; Louise-Marie Maes-Diop,
“Contribution of physicochemical dating to the knowledge of the past of Africa”
ANKH, Journal of Egyptology and African Civilizations
ANKH n° 8-9, (1999-2000), pp. 144 - 169
[http://www.ankhonline.com/revue/diop_lm_apport_datations_histoire_afrique.htm];
Louise-Marie Maes-Diop, Afrique noire, démographie, sol et histoire
(Présence Africaine/ Khepera, Dakar-Paris, 1996) [Black Africa , Demographics ,
Land and History , Presence Africaine / Khepera , Dakar, Paris , 1996];
Louise-Marie Maes-Diop, “What slavery did to Africa” Toronto Star (Feb 3, 2008)
[http://www.thestar.com/opinion/ 2008/02/03/what_slavery_did_to_africa.html]
[3] Afrikan
Collaborators generally came from the ruling Aristocracy including Spiritual
Priests and Priestesses, while also including members of the grassroots.