Build Where You Stand – Remember

  • By kwende ukaidi
  • 19 Feb, 2024

Remembering a Great Hero

Afrikan people build. This is an indelible truism etched throughout their powerfully endowed continuum from the earliest of times. This primary people not only build, but build in superlative fashion. From age to age their pioneering thrust of excellence established the greatest and most enduring civilisations ever to exist. Certainly, wherever this soul people determined themselves to be their necessary and empowering constructions were realised in brilliancy for their fullest flourishing. As such, this people vitally remembered themselves and the duty and responsibility they naturally hold for themselves to construct for their own security and ascension.

According to a contemporary mainstream source the word remember can mean to:

“Do something that one has undertaken to do or that is necessary or advisable”.

Here, to be Afrikan is to build in pragmatic and self-determined ways in continuance of their betterment.  In the context of their natural norm of self-governance, this is inherently energised from their spiritual-cultural core. Yet, in a state of interruption and disruption where Afrikan souls can be set upon in acutely destructive ways by others that mean the Afrikan ill, the need for their life constructions not only remains vital it can also be amplified in the realms of securing their lives from utter doom. However, if this soul people succumb to the destructive vices and contaminants of ill pushed and peddled by others (even by proxy) then they may not even remember who and what they are, let alone their natural duty and responsibility to themselves.

Afrikan souls must surely the do for themselves what it takes to remember self and do what is necessary to remember to build for themselves. In this, learning and development is key. This is so, and can be exercised from whatever station, level or status the Afrikan holds. It matters not where the Afrkan is located here, there or elsewhere, the crucial thrust of rightful construction for themselves is vital restoration of their ageless thrust of ascension.

The great hero Omowale Malcolm X illustratively highlights the important thrust of self-determined construction in the following self-knowledgeable way:

“I know Black brick masons from the South who have never been to school a day in their life. The throw more bricks together and you don’t know how they learned how to do it, but they know how to do it”.

Afrikan people can -and surely must – remember, for civilisation is not of happenstance.

The Universal Royal Afrikan Nation (URAN) is an organ that is rooted in spiritual and cultural fabric for the imperative the mission of global Afrikan ascendancy. Throughout its annual observance calendar cycle URAN energises active knowingness in and from the core spirit levels of Afrikan beingness. To find out more about URAN and its spiritual-cultural mission for liberty and nationhood click here. The exquisite URAN pendant can be obtained online by clicking here.

In his capacity as an Afrikan-centred spiritual cultural practitioner this author is available for further learning in this regard and also for the carrying out of ceremonies such as naming and name reclamation. For details please click here.

Afrikan World Studies programmes are an important forms of study in understanding the Afrikan experience. There are a range of subjects covered on these programmes including History, Creative Production, Psychology and Religion. To find out more about these learning programmes please click here.

The important text: From Ajar to Omowale – The Spiritual & Garveyite Journey of Malcolm X by this author is available to purchase online here. The trailer for this important text can be found online here. This publication provides detail on the life and example of this great hero. You can also visit the establishment of Yemanja-O to pick up a copy.

At nominal cost, also consider acquisition of an a4 laminate poster of articulations by this author when visiting the Yemanja institution to enrol, consult, learn, gather or otherwise.

Also, visit www.u-ran.org for links to Afrikan liberation Love radio programme on Universal Royal Afrikan Radio online.