What of Macro-History?

  • By kwende ukaidi
  • 16 Oct, 2023

Celebrating the Great Afrikan History Continuum

Afrikan souls are the primary people of creation. Afrikan souls are the pioneers of culture and civilisation. Afrikan souls established the greatest and most enduring civilisations ever to exist. Afrikan souls built superlatively on their continent of Afrika. Afrikan souls journeyed beyond the Afrikan continent and likewise built. This is a people who undoubtedly have a richly endowed and powerfully expansive history. As such, through the knowingness of their great history and its uniquely wide panorama each generation of this soul people have a grand and ever-expanding repository for their continual empowerment, growth, development and construction of upright order.  

In the contemporary era, the term macro-history has been used to describe – amongst other attributes – the expanse of a historical unfolding. According to a mainstream source the term attracts the following definition:  

“Noun. macrohistory (countable and uncountable, plural macrohistories) A form of large-scale history dealing with large groups of cultures over very long time periods”.

Do Afrikan souls have are large scale history? Yes. Are Afrikan souls a large group of people? Yes. Have Afrikan souls existed for a very long period of time? Yes – indeed for the longest period of humanity. Surely then, the macro-history of this people is of powerful importance for them to know.

Unfortunately, in a state of interruption and disruption, Afrikan souls can be subject to an acute curtailing of knowingness in relation to their history. Rather, than exposure to the grand expanse and truism of their historical unfolding, this primary people can become the recipients of skewed information and information relation only to disrupted fragment of their experience. Rather than knowingness of their macro-history, Afrikan souls may be exclusively confined to a micro-history fashioned to serve the best interests of others.

A mainstream source describes microhistory in the following way:

Microhistory is a genre of history that focuses on small units of research, such as an event, community, individual or a settlement.

Of course, the study of micro-history has its focal merits but if the wider-context of expansive history that it naturally sits within is denied then it can be dislocated and manipulated as a ‘part-truth’ or disused to support outright fallacy. In this, the small units of research and knowing can – for this soul people – be fixed only to times dominated by plantation or colony.

Surely, Afrikan souls have a duty and responsibility to themselves to restore knowingness of their macro-history and - if they deem necessary - hone in on particular areas of focus. This pragmatic people of pinnacle civilisation naturally utilise their magnificently endowed history continuum for their upright constructions. Here, each soul can make a progressive and upright step of recovery in self-knowingness and apply themselves to the imperative of rightful ascension. In so doing, the Afrikan does the self a great service in safeguarding against contaminants of ill, self-destructive wrongdoings and the like.

The Afrikan history continuum powerfully serves its people. It served the building of superlative civilisation in the then and can do so in the now. Civilisation is not of happenstance.  

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 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.

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