Lessons for Necessary Movement of Rightful Order: What of Learning Mission?
- By kwende ukaidi
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- 29 Jul, 2025
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Celebrating the Great Marcus Garvey and His Movement

Afrikan people have missioned from the beginning to bring forth the greatest and most enduring civilisations ever to exist. Indeed, it is natural self-determined thrust of normality for this primary people of creation to realise their fullest flourishing and security here, there and elsewhere.
According to a contemporary mainstream source, civilisation is:
“the stage of human social and cultural development and organisation that is considered most advanced”.
For Afrikan souls civilisation inherently holds levels of learning that are commensurate with the outcome. Thus, if the norm to mission for optimal civilisation exists, then so too must the mission to learn. Another mainstream source details that:
“A learning mission refers to the core purpose and goals of an educational institution or program. It outlines what the institution aims to achieve through its learning experiences and how it will achieve them. It defines the values, beliefs, and aspirations that guide the educational process, shaping the learning environment and influencing decisions”.
Unfortunately, others that mean the Afrikan ill may attempt to concoct and impose missions intended to exploit and destroy the Afrikan normality of continual self-determined thriving and ascension. In this, both Afrikan civilisation and its necessary thrust of learning can suffer immensely.
Twistedly, others may go so far as to label destructive imposition as a ‘civilising mission’ in order to ‘validate’ their exploits of ill. Yet another mainstream source offers the following detail:
“The concept of a "civilising mission" refers to the idea that a more "advanced" civilisation has a duty to spread its culture, values, and institutions to less "developed" societies. This idea has been used to justify colonisation, imperialism, and other forms of cultural dominance throughout history. It often involves imposing one's own understanding of progress and development on others, sometimes with the belief that it will benefit both the coloniser and the colonised”.
If Afrikan civilisation has its upright mission of learning, then the bogusly labelled ‘civilising mission’ of a destroyer surely carries a mission of miseducation and other forms of anti-Afrikan propaganda.
In the necessary self-determined effort to build themselves into optimality, Afrikan souls can do themselves a great service to include appropriate levels of learning about the perils of imposition in order to safeguard themselves and their rightful efforts of construction. Here, learning can be a great asset for Afrikan souls to avoid becoming agents of self-destruction by proxy. Becoming consumed by ills of disorder and wilfully perpetrating acts of deceitful and deceptive wrongdoing whether in such ways as gossip-mongering, the spreading of falsehoods or otherwise intended to bring harm to souls of rightful ascension is despicable at best.
The great hero Marcus Garvey with his words of wisdom cautions Afrikan souls against wilful acts of deceit and deception set to harm upright souls thus:
“Never fabricate nor falsify, if the thought should ever come to you, count the consequence and the risk”.
Afrikan surely have a duty and responsibility to themselves to recover and realise their learning mission of right and constructiveness here, there and elsewhere. After all, civilisation is not of happenstance.
The observance of Musa Msimu takes place during the month of so-called August and is a wonderful time to celebrate the mighty example of Marcus Garvey and the Movement that he created led in order for future generations of Afrikans to have their guide for complete freedom and nationhood. Musa Msimu is a part of the Afrikan Cultural calendar of the Universal Royal Afrikan Nation (URAN).
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.
The important book entitled: From Musa to Afrikan Fundamentalism – The Afrikan Spiritual Essence of Marcus Garvey is available to purchase online here. The book trailer can be accessed 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 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.
At nominal cost, also consider acquisition of an a4 laminate poster of articulations by this author when visiting the Yemanja-O establishment to enrol, consult, learn, gather or otherwise.