Kwanzaa Celebrates the Duty Afrikan Souls Have For Themselves

  • By kwende ukaidi
  • 20 Nov, 2021

Celebrating the Wonderful Observance of Kwanzaa

Afrikan souls have deified their guided responsibility to themselves from  the earliest of times. King Djehuti the principle ‘Law Giver’ together with the supporting role of his Queen Maat provided a framework of wisdom guidance for the Afrikan to live a duty-filled life of rightfulness. Throughout the ages Afrikan souls considered it disorderly at best to waste one’s time or to be consumed by laziness. Yet, the thrust of any effort had grounded frame of reference for rightful order and organised ascension to take place. There would be no great civilisations to speak of without this. Afrikan souls built the grandest most long-lived civilisations because of the pragmatic grounding established through the powerful guidance of their own wisdom tradition. The vital importance of this is reflected in the status of deified elevation represented through the union of harmonious complementarity of Djehuti and Maat. The principle laws of Djehuti and the supporting detail in the laws of Maat were a deeply profound and meaningful guiding provision for Afrikan excellence of life to flourish. Indeed, the harmonious and complementary union of King Djehuti and his Queen Maat itself guiding thrust in service of the Ultimate Divine.

According to a popular mainstream platform the word duty is reported to mean:

“a moral or legal obligation; a responsibility”.

The primary people of creation brought into being high standards of morality and law as functional parts of their spiritually and culturally rooted way of life. The responsibility Afrikan souls had for themselves was brought to the fore in their building of their intimate unions, their growth and development of families amplified into grand nationhood. This is dutiful living.

With the interruptions and disruptions of the Maafa of recent centuries the natural norm of Afrikans’ dutiful living to themselves has taken a great toll of damage. Many souls of the Afrikan world community have been severed from their own wisdom tradition holding the morality and laws of and for themselves. Obligations and responsibilities have become skewed or plagued with alien contaminates of ill to stunt ascension of rightful order.

Fortunately, the thrust of self-restoration and recovery to again continually build for themselves and ascend has never left the Afrikan. It is out of this thrust that the wonderful observance of Kwanzaa has victoriously come to be. Here, a number of Afrikans rightfully saw it as their duty to restore cultural fabric and make available to the Afrikan world this powerful cultural observance. In turn, millions upon millions of Afrikan souls throughout the world have restored dutiful living to their lives by engaging the observance and living by its core values.

The mainstream source also defines the word duty to mean:  

“a task or action that one is required to perform as part of one's job”.

Surely, it is the job of the Afrikan to restore Afrikan living and the self-determined norm of ascension.  Only the Afrikan can do this for the self throughout its various levels: the Afrikan person self, the Afrikan self of the harmonious and complementary male-female union, the self of the Afrikan family, the self of the Afrikan community, the self of the Afrikan nation and the self of the Afrikan world community.

In celebrating the wonderful observance of Kwanzaa the bountiful yield of progressive effort made in performing one’s job of culturally-rooted living for ascension holds joyous triumph. This wonderful seven-day period demonstrates that Afrikan dutifulness to self is not only alive but has a powerful vehicle for ever-greater victories to come.  

Kwanzaa is one of the essential cultural observances of life within the Universal Royal Afrikan Nation. The Universal Royal Afrikan Nation (URAN) is an Afrikan-centred spiritual and cultural mission for ascendancy that embodies living spiritually and culturally rooted life. 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. For the video promo for these learning programmes click here.

Also, in the approach to the important cultural observance of Kwanzaa, the text: From Pert-En-Min to Kwanzaa - A Kuumba (Creative) Restoration of Sacred First Fruits by this author is available to purchase online here. This publication provides informative detail on the of the Kwanzaa celebration. You can also visit the institution of Yemanja 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.