Omowale Malcolm X Energises Effort to Secure Familyhood in Thrust of Liberty and Nationhood

  • By kwende ukaidi
  • 02 Feb, 2022

Remembering the Great Omowale Malcolm X

The Afrikan family from the beginning is an Afrikan self-determined construct that is naturally structured and ordered according to the Afrikan’s own way of life. The thus optimally functional Afrikan family is a natural norm that is amplified into superlative nationhood. Void of Afrikan familyhood the world’s greatest and most long-lived civilisations would not have come to be. With the establishment of the harmonious and complementary union between the Afrikan masculine man and the Afrikan feminine woman the optimally functional family can be realised.

With the interruptions and disruptions such as the Maafa of recent centuries, others that mean the Afrikan ill have set upon optimally functional Afrikan familyhood in dire and destructive ways. For multitudes of Afrikan souls the results have been devastating. Yet, it is Afrikan souls themselves who have exclusive dominion over the restoration of themselves to restore their natural norm of familyhood in the best ways possible.

The great hero Omowale Malcolm X highlights some of the things that Afrikan men can do for their Afrikan familyhood despite alien anti-Afrikan onset:  

“Get off the welfare, get out of that compensation line. Be a man. Earn what you need for your own family. Then your family respects you. They are proud to say, ‘That’s my father!’. She is proud to say, ‘That’s my husband!’. Father means you’re taking care of those children. Just because you made them, that don’t mean you’re a father, anybody can make a baby. But anybody can’t take care of them. Anybody can get a woman. But anybody can’t take care of woman. Husband means you are taking care of your wife. Father means you are taking care of your children. You are accepting the responsibility of manhood”.

This great hero also highlights some of the things that Afrikan women can do in the same regard:

Once your work is finished, don’t watch the television. Once your work is finished, find something constructive to add to your mind. Have an hour for reading, and I don’t mean read comic books. Read something that will make you know what’s happening. So when you get into a conversation you can sound intelligent even if you aren’t. Do you here what I’m saying? Why, what kind of a man today wants a wife who can’t hold a conversation?

Afrikan families missioning for the betterment of themselves and their own people have the much that they can meaningfully and progressively discuss and forge activity around. The great hero Omowale continues:

“One of the reasons you have trouble in your house is that you can’t carry an intelligent adult conversation. When your husband was there you talked trash. That’s all you talked – trash!”.

Trash talking can be a fuel for self-destruction at the family level and otherwise. As this great hero goes on to elaborate as to why such wisdom is necessary:  

“I am telling this so you won’t lose your husband”.

 As Afrikan souls become steeped in self-knowingness and committed to the restoration of their own way of life the Afrikan family in shared ordered fabric of living can again fully flourish and safeguard itself from alien ills.  Omowale Malcolm X affirms the power of self-knowingness and the Afrikan man remembering himself in another utterance to the Afrikan woman:

“He’s serious. You can’t hold some man now, talking some trash about sister so-and-so. I’m telling you, that will drive a man crazy. No, go get a book and read. And then we he comes in the house start talking to him about something that’s going to nourish his mind and nourish your mind. Read your lessons and talk about the lessons”.

With the multitudes of Afrikan-centred community programmes, literature and other mediums now available, there is much by way of lessons that can be learnt and progressively shared, one Afrikan souls to the next. In the context of Afrikan familyhood the great Omowale Malcolm X meaningfully asks of Afrikan women:

“Why don’t you think he can read with you as easy as watch the television with you?”.

Afrikan families must surely remember who and what they are for the optimal Afrikan family to flourish and be safeguarded. If there is no Afrikan family then the Afrikan family cannot be amplified into the imperative of nationhood. Therefore, remembering of self is key as the great hero Omowale Malcolm X reminds Afrikan souls:

“Of all of our studies, history is best qualified to reward all research”.

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. For the video promo for these learning programmes 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 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.