What of Uncultured Existence?
- By kwende ukaidi
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- 05 Nov, 2023
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Celebrating the Harvest of All-Year-Round Cultivated Effort for Upright Ascension

It
would be wholly nonsensical to conceive that, amidst natural circumstance,
Afrikan souls would be uncultured in their existence. This is the people that brought
forth with pioneering brilliancy culture and civilisation in the first place.
So, for them to hold a position whereby their own necessary and vital efforts
of self-cultivation for optimal flourishing were nullified or discarded as some
sort of norm would be nothing short of bogus. Instead, this soul people
naturally embraced their self-determined and – not just cultured – but highly
cultured way of life. The indelible authorship
of the greatest and most enduring civilisations ever to exist stand as grand
testaments to this people’s highly cultured core of life.
Yet, in the modern era, the term uncultured has been evoked in many an arena. According to a mainstream source to be uncultured is to be:
“lacking good taste, manners, upbringing, and education”.
For the sake of clarity, let us now highlight the meanings of each element offered again by mainstream sources:
Good taste = “satisfying generally accepted social or aesthetic standards”.
Manners = “a way in which a thing is done or happens”.
Upbrining = “the treatment and instruction received by a child from its parents throughout its childhood”.
Education = “the process of receiving or giving systematic instruction, especially at a school or university”. Or, = “an enlightening experience”.
Lack then, in these areas tantamount to being uncultured, according to the initial definition, can have far-reaching and dire implication. Yet, for Afrikan souls hurled into a state of interruption and disruption signs of such lacking may become features of existence but may not always be overtly apparent. To illustrate the point let us add the identifying qualifier of ‘Afrikan’ to the intial definition thus:
“lacking good Afrikan taste, Afrikan manners, Afrikan upbringing, and Afrikan education”.
See, subject to ‘norms’ widely pushed and peddled by others, Afrikan souls can remain at a deficit in the ways that best serve their own flourishing - which is what their true norm of self-cultivation brings to into realisation. For example, miseducation masked as ‘education’ is not Afrikan education for soul people’s ascension. To be totally consumed by the contaminants of miseducation would surely be a great boon to those that mean the Afrikan ill.
Despite the challenges, it is Afrikan souls themselves that can restore their upright norms of highly cultured living and apply themselves to their ascension of rightful order accordingly.
It is acutely unnatural for Afrikan souls to be uncultured by their own standards of superlative living. Or, to put it another way, deemed uncivilised by their own naturally high standards. It is by no accident that this people applied themselves to upright cultivation of their lives for results of unparalleled brilliancy. Civilisation is not of happenstance.
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-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.