The Global Afrikan
Political Time of Day [Part 4]:
The Seven Aspects of
Umoja [P.1]
Ambakisye-Okang
Dukuzumurenyi
[Ph.D., Public Policy Analysis]
2016-07-06
The Itikadi of an
Afrocentric Pan-Afrikanism is then particularly concerned with Umoja as a means
of guaranteeing the Udumishaji of the NIWT/Nu.t.
That being the case an
Afrocentric Pan-Afrikanism carefully delineates the salient aspects of Umoja
which center on seven primary questions.
The questions of primary
focus to the NIWT/Nu.t and of vital importance due to the high level of
apprehensiveness, solicitude and responsibility which surround Umoja as the
means to the survival, thriving and growth of the NIWT/Nu.t are:
1) What
is Umoja in relation to the NIWT/Nu.t?
2) Why is
Umoja of importance with regards of the NIWT/Nu.t?
3) For
whom is Umoja of importance in respect of the NIWT/Nu.t?
4) When
is Umoja of importance in respect of the NIWT/Nu.t?
5) Where
or in what ways is Umoja of importance in relation to the NIWT/Nu.t?
6) What
are the kinds or types of Umoja?
7) How is
Umoja operationalized in the interests of the NIWT/Nu.t?
These are the questions
which give structure to Umoja and provide meaning to the NIWT/Nu.t as a society
of communion.
To the first question dealing with
the qualities of Umoja in connection with the NIWT/Nu.t we see that Umoja is the quintessential relationship
of Ujima ya Kujitegemea [Kiswahili:
Communal Self-reliance].
The
institutions of the NIWT/Nu.t are elucidated by Umoja as an organic
oneness, an Umoja or wholeness in the sense of holistic completeness as
represented by Muumba [Kiswahili: The
Creator] and delineated in the Kushite/Kemet spiritual texts concerning NWT/Nu.t
[Kush/Kemet: The Divine Creatrix] as
an aspect of NTR
‘З/Netcher-aa [Kush/Kemet:
The Great God]:
“NTR
‘З/Netcher-aa is the All, the One without NTR
‘З/Netcher-aa no other exists. NTR
‘З/Netcher-aa is the One, the Creator. NTR
‘З/Netcher-aa is the Spirit, existing within
all, the Spirit of Spirits, the Supreme Spirit of Kemet, the Beatific Spirit.”[1]
In the religious texts of the way
ward religious offsprings of KMT/Kemet, i.e., Judaism and Christianity c. 2941-
4311
KC [c. 1300 BCE – 70 CE], texts which were developed in Kushite KMT/Kemet as
well as being extensively and substantively influenced to a significant degree
by the Kushite KMT/Kemet HRSŠTЗ/Herseshta
[Kush/Kemet: Teachers Adept in the Sacred Wisdom][2] who
were themselves, guardians of the preeminent Afrikan world spiritual system of
the leading civilizations of the day; the point of their influence being held
to be true especially given the length of residence of the founders of Judaism
in Kushite KMT/Kemet purported by the Kushite Hebrew founders of Judaism
themselves to be four hundred and thirty years,[3]
and the direct correspondence between Kushite KMT/Kemet spiritual concepts
dating conservatively to c.
8759 KC [c. 13000 BCE and Christian concepts dating to c. 4311 KC [c. 70
CE],[4]
we find the Kushite KMT/Kemet proposition stated as follows:
“Know therefore this day, and consider it in thine
heart, that the Lord he is God in heaven above, and upon the earth beneath:
there is none else. . .Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God is one Lord.”[5]
The third of the Kushite KMT/Kemet
religious prodigal children- Islam[6]
whose basic chronicles were the work of the Ethiopians, Bilal and Zalbia Harith
c. 4851-4873
KC [c. 610-632 CE] presents the Afrikan idea thusly:
“To Allah belong the east and the west: Whithersoever you
turn there is the presence of Allah. For Allah is all-Pervading all-knowing. .
.To Him belongs all that is in the heavens and on earth. . .To Him is due the
primal origin of the heavens and the earth. . .And your Allah is one Allah:
There is no god but He, Most Gracious, Most Merciful.”[7]
In the writings of Lao Tzu[8],
c. 3641 KC [c. 600 BCE] the Kushite KMT/Kemet conceptualization of Umoja is
explained in the following manner:
“Conceived of as having no name, it [The Dao, The Way] is
the Originator of heaven and earth; conceived of as having a
name, it [The Dao, The Way] is the Mother of all things. [The
Dao, The Way] produces all things and nourishes them. . .”[9]
This organismic wholeness, which is Umoja is
the NIWT/Niu.t expression of sacred
relationship as the fellowship of divinities illustrated in the specifically
Afrikan Mapokeo explanation which states that the NIWT/Niu.t is people who know
how to live well together and not only know but do so as well and are
therefore, Walimwengu [Kiswahili: Human Beings].
The Sacred Uhusiano of Umoja is one which has
the qualities of Umbuji [Kiswahili: Grace, Elegance], Umbuya [Kiswahili: Genuine Friendship], Taratibu za Mahusiano [Kiswahili:
Etiquette, Mapokeo Way of Interacting] and Maasumu [Kiswahili: Blamelessness].
Fostering a sense of sociability, comradeship
and mutual support Umoja is thereby an expression of the companionability,
comprehensiveness and omnipresence of NWT/Nu.t, an amalgamation of the
Mlimwengu microcosm with the NTR ‘З/Netcher-aa macrocosm.
In this sense Umoja is a communion of
agreement within the NIWT/Niu.t, the harmony of collective action throughout
the whole of the social structure, the symmetry of mutual collaboration, the Mapokeo Mamboleo [Kush/Kemet: Neo-Traditional] coordination of communal cooperation
engendering a sense of understanding and consonance of consensus on NIWT/Niu.t
needs and the psychical solidarity that grows from the seamless synthesis of
complementary reciprocal behaviors.
[1] From: ‘Kheperu: The Creative Utterance of Nu.t’
[Pre-Dynastic Kemet/Early Dynastic Kush, 8000-4241 KC/BCE] Trans.,
Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi, Arkhet Nti Rekh: Books of Knowing Vol. I
(Iringa, Tanzania.: A. Dukuzumurenyi, 2013)
[2]
Gary Greenberg, 101 Myths of the Bible: How Ancient Scribes Invented
Biblical History (Naperville, Illinois: Sourcebooks, Inc., 2000)
[3]“Now the
sojourning of the children of Israel, who dwelt in Egypt, was four hundred and
thirty years. And it came to pass at the end of the four hundred and thirty
years, even the selfsame day it came to pass, that all the hosts of the LORD went
out from the land of Egypt.” From: “Book of Exodus 12: 40-41 The Bible King James Version
Complete 4341-5852 KC [100-1611 CE];
Yosef-ben Jochanan, Africa Mother of Western Civilization (New
York: Alkebu-lan Books Associates, 1970); Yosef-ben Jochanan, African
Origins of the Major “Western Religions” (New York: Alkebu-lan Books
Associates, 1970); Yosef-ben Jochanan, Black Man of the Nile (Alkebu-lan
Books Associates, 1970); Yosef-ben
Jochanan, A Chronology of the Bible: A Challenge to the Standard Version
(New York: Alkebu-lan Books Associates, 1973)
[4] Alvin Boyd Kuhn, Who is this King
of Glory? A Critical Study of the Christos-Messiah Tradition (Iringa,
Tanzania: A. Dukuzumurenyi, 2013); Alvin
Boyd Kuhn, Shadow of the Third Century: A Revaluation of Christianity
(Iringa, Tanzania: A. Dukuzumurenyi, 1949/2013); Gerald Massey, Ancient
Egypt: Light of the World Vol. I & II, (London: T. Fisher Unwin, 1907)
[6] "Judaism, Christianity and Islam are innovations on fragments from
the periphery of the African cultural and spiritual system." Lecture: [Mzee James Small]
[7] “The Cow” Sura 2: 115; 2: 116; 2:
117; 2: 163 Holy Quran 4851-
4873 KC [610-632 CE]
[8]
The writings of Lao Tzu 3641 KC [600 BCE] contained in the Dao De Ching
were heavily influenced by the writings of Per-aa Amenemope 2841 KC [1400 BCE].
See: Yosef ben-jochanan, Charles Finch, Modupe Oduyoye, Tsegaye Gabre-Medhin
and Wayne B. Chandler, African Origins of the Major World Religions Ed.
Amon Saba Saakana (London: Karnak House, 1988) pp. xiii-xv
[9] Lao Tzu, “Chapter 1: 2; 10: 3” Dao
De Ching Trans. James Legge (New York:, Dover Publications, 1962)