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Showing posts with label Inspiration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Inspiration. Show all posts

22 October 2016

Africa Belongs to Africans, Period

By Sicebise Msengana












Cape Town, South Africa: Africa has some of the best beaches on the planet. No wonder non-Africans , especially white people are busy drawing up emotional arguments such as 'Everyone is African or 'Africa is the origin of humanity', in a political bid to loot and take ownership of Africa under the guise of 'Oneness.'

18 October 2016

African men: Loving Your African Women is Revolutionary

By Sicebise Msengana












Every African is my blood brother whether they admit it. As an African brother,  I fully understand the things that my brothers go through. I have experienced the emotions. Many of my brothers were hurt by  their girlfriends, wives or mothers. And this experience scared them for life. As a result, some brothers choose to detach their emotional selves and only show up physically or worse, date, breed or share a bed with non-African woman.

15 October 2016

African Fatherhood On The Brink of Destruction

By Sicebise Msengana














When an African man has fulfilled his duties as a man, he is treated as man and given special privileges reserved for manhood. The first duty of work is  protecting women and children at all costs, even if it means laying down your life. In traditional African societies, manhood was earned on merit, not demanded. So growing a long beard and sleeping around with light-skinned girls doesn’t count. An old African proverb says“Indoda intle ngenkomo zayo.“ Which meant a man was dignified and respected by his wealth. In order for a man to accumulate wealth he had to work hard to earn that wealth.

12 October 2016

Two Ways Africans can Reduce the Spread of HIV/AIDS in Their Communities

By Sicebise Msengana








“ Africa and Africans has succeeded in destroying our culture and traditional by accepting the effect of colonialism on the strong foundation that once held our fathers together...I believe that there is a supreme being and that as long as you believe in him no matter your religious difference or mode of worship things will work out for you, I PRAY GOD HELP AFRICA IN BELIEVING IN THEMSELVES ONE DAY." --Leopard Akande

I think it would be best to preserve some traditional African systems such as African-centred marriage, between an African man and African woman and abstinence. Africans see marriage as a sacred institution to procreate and build a strong family.

10 October 2016

Open Letter to the African woman

By Sicebise Msengana

Pic: Pinterest











If there is a person that I respect in this world, it is an African woman. She is the reason for my existence. For nine months, she carried me in her womb. Between her thighs, she brought me into this world. I suckled her beasts for nourishment. Most people who have unrealistic expectations are more likely to expect a candlelight romance, ‘great’ sex and pampering from their partners. For most people when the relationship fails, they blame everyone except themselves, in the process, they don’t take responsibility for their actions and commit the same mistakes over and over again.  Loving is not an easy thing. Loving the African woman is demanding and a full time job.

08 October 2016

Pound for Pound, An Eye for An Eye

By Sicebise Msengana






"Treat me as a human being or send me  to the cemetery"—Sicebise Msengana 

If society doesn’t recognise that certain people are human beings, then let’s disagree to agree. If we cannot solve contradictions in our society; the only solution is to fight until we come into a consensus where  human society advances to the point where myth of races is eliminated. There will be no more injustices. That will be an era of perpetual peace and co-existence between people of different ethnic groups.

03 October 2016

Face Our Fears Boldly

By Sicebise Msengana






I always see the self-hating attitudes towards Africa as coping mechanisms against the 500 year-old racist anti-African propaganda. People whose ancestors suffered slavery and social degradation developed certain survival traits to cope with their surroundings. The invention of races was one of the darkest moments in human history , W. E. B. Du Bois  makes the following observation: “There came a new doctrine of universal labor: mankind were of two sorts—the superior and the inferior; the inferior toiled for the superior; and the superior were the real men, the inferior half men or less.”

08 September 2016

Freedom or Slavery?

Sicebise Msengana












“We want freedom by any means necessary. We want justice by any means necessary. We want equality by any means necessary” –Malcolm X 

It is very foolish of Africans to want freedom without any sacrifices. Africans have been sold criminal Gandhian philosophies “An eye for an eye only ends up making the whole world blind”, in the name of “nonviolence.” It is

06 September 2016

You Create Your Reality

Litha Mlido Mdunana
Affirmationscoffee.com







Let ME Tell you something you didnt know about you : You create your own reality and no one does it for but you so dont blame others for what you created. Instead take full responsible for that because you dont blame anyone when you are successful in life you take the full credit. Well vice vercer you must also give credit to yourself for your Failures and remember failing is there to push u on a different directions were success is disguised as hard work,sleepless nights.

LOVE & TRUTH

05 September 2016

Teacher


The Ultimate Teacher

July 17, 2016


www.rand.org








The Ultimate Teacher

A person may attend the most prestigious universities filled with professors with impressive credentials and academic achievements—and from a worldly understanding, one would tend to believe that these are the ultimate source of teaching and knowledge. In such worshipping of traditional academia, the concept of a higher teaching source becomes blurred.

No to Criminal Philosophies in The Name of Multiracialism

By Sicebise Msengana
Instagram.com/@Fegorsonphotography












Sex is the principle around which the whole structure of [White Supremacy] . . . is organized.” Gunnar Myrdal

Being a “100% African”, in a sense of I don’t have any foreign,  non-African blood in my veins, makes me want to continue my genetic and cultural lineage intact. It is also a privilege because Southern Africans carry the oldest gene and colour in the world. This year I've discovered something powerful and that is you cannot be against white supremacy/racism and still sleep with it. No cut all ties with those who maintain and support the system, in that way you're can fight white supremacy more effectively. Less noise and confusion.

30 August 2016

Are You Really African as You Claim?

By Sicebise Msengana










How African are you?

*Your parents won’t give you privacy because its their house

*Your mother hits you and hits you harder if you keep on crying

*When you have uncles and aunts younger than you

*You drink tea even when its blazing hot outside

*When your parents yell at you for hurting yourself

20 August 2016

Modern African Traditional Clothing

By Sicebise Msengana










The feelings of so-called civilisation are mixed. What may appear as 'civilisation' might be instincts.

"My  own  impression,  from  having  divided  my  life  between United  States  cities  and  New  Guinea  villages,  is  that  the  so-called  blessings of  civilization  are  mixed.  For  example,  compared  with  hunter-gatherers, citizens  of  modern  industrialized  states  enjoy  better  medical  care,  lower risk  of  death  by  homicide,  and  a  longer  life  span,  but  receive  much  less social  support  from  friendships  and  extended  families.  My  motive  for investigating  these  geographic  differences  in  human  societies

19 August 2016

Religion Has Been a Stumbling Block of Progress


By Sicebise Msengana
www.blacknews.com













" when you do science, you have to put aside religion. You must exclude the divine from your theories about the world. Once you bring in the supernatural, you can explain anything, but none of your explanations can ever be confirmed, since you're using ideas that go beyond human sense"--Steven Weinberg

From its beginning religion has been a stumbling block against scientific developments. The claims made by religious fanatics are fallacious in many ways. Just because religious scientists did or still do scientific work has nothing to do with science. In fact, greatest scientists were and always irreligious and didn't bring science into religion (i.e. Albert Einstein and Charles Darwin).

16 August 2016

Let's Not Cry A River For Africans

By Sicebise Msengana












"Political power grows out of the barrel of a gun." --Mao

I will continue to say that there are no tears for people who fail to protect themselves. Therefore we should not cry for the African whose lands are in European hands because they're of hurting white people's feelings. Similarly, we should not wail and weep for our people in America who continue to march, sing and beg white people for basic human rights,  while being gunned down by predatory vicious cops.

11 August 2016

White people: Join us or Leave us Alone

By Sicebise Msengana







White people say I’m a “hate teacher...racist.” Another white person said I should remove the “human rights activist” description on my online profile because I “hate” white people.  To a certain point, I’m a hate teacher. I hate racism and racists.  I don’t  love a heinous ideology of systematic oppression. An ideology where white people are rewarded  by white supremacy in it’s many forms for simply being white. I always say that white people should prove that they are against racism by their actions, not words. The same measure they put in their own freedoms should be the same measure they  put in ours.

31 July 2016

Great Freedom Fighters of The 21TH Century Part 2

By Sicebise Msengana








Amílcar  Cabral  ( 12 September 1924 – 20 January 1973),  was born in Bafatá, Guinea. He was born to parents, Juvenal Cabral, a Cape Verdean elementary school teacher and Mrs. Iva Pinhel Évora, a shopkeeper. Guinea-Bissau, the small Portuguese colony suffered from exploitation imposed by the backward and despotic Portuguese colonial regime.  Cabral later wrote:
Faced with the power of the main imperialist nations, one is forced to wonder how it was possible for Portugal, an underdeveloped and backward country, to retain its colonies in spite of the redistribution to which the world was subjected. Portuguese colonialism managed to survive despite the sharing-out of Africa made by the imperialist powers at the end of the 19th century because England supported the ambitions of Portugal which, since the treaty of Metwen in 1703 had become a semi-colony of England. England had every interest in using the Portuguese colonies, not only to exploit their economic resources, but also to occupy them as support bases on the route to the Orient, and thus to maintain absolute domination in the Indian Ocean. To counter the greed of the other colonialist powers and to defend its interests in the Portuguese colonies, England found the best solution: it defended the 'rights' of its semi-colony.
After the death of his godmother, Simoa, his father, Juvenal inherited a few tracts of land and moves in the island of Cape Verde with his family. In the 1940s, a severe drought causes widespread starvation, claiming more than 50,000 Cape Verdeans. Chicken bones describes the details of the boy’s life, “This is the atmosphere in which Amílcar Cabral spends his early childhood and adolescent years. If, on one hand, his father gives the example of public conscience and civic engagement, within the limits permitted by Salazar’s fascism, his mother, Iva Évora, on the other, is for young Amílcar an example of love and affection, of family protection and of dedication to her work. Iva labors all day on a sewing machine to help the family overcome, as well as possible, the many crises they have to face. Later in addition to her activities as a seamstress, she gets a job a in a fish-packing factory. Amílcar’s mother and her capacity for self-sacrifice will serve as an example which he will pass to the young militants of the PAIGC.”
He was educated at Mindelo, Cape Verde, and later at the Instituto Superior de Agronomia , in Lisbon, where he founded student movements promoting the cause of liberation for Portuguese colonies across Africa. Cabral completed his training as an agronomist in 1951 and returned to Africa in 1952. 

Describing his yearning for Guinea, “This was done following a plan, an objective, based on the idea of doing something, of contributing to the betterment of the people, to fight against the Portuguese. That’s what I have done since the day I arrived in Guinea." Between  1953 and 1954, Cabral conducted an agricultural survey or census of the colony. The knowledge from the survey helped him better understand the problems facing his country. He and Aristides Pereira, Julio de Almeida, Elisée Turpin, Fernando Fortes, and Luiz Cabral (Amílcar Cabral's half-brother) founded the PAIGC (Partido Africano da Independência da Guiné e Cabo Verde) or African Party for the Independence of Cape Verde and Guinea (PAIGC). The party was responsible for radical change that swept through the country. In the late 50’s and 60’s, the PAIGC fought in a warfare for liberation. By 1969 the PAIGC had two-thirds of the country under its control. They established schools, medical clinics, and courts, as well as People's stores, in these areas. 

Tragically, like all freedom fighters his life came to an end in January 20, 1973, at the hands of Portuguese colonial masters and its puppets. Amílcar is best remembered by his classmates and friends as a person of hard work ethic, a great sense of humour, and ability to make friends.
Writings:

Steve Biko(18 December 1946 – 12 September 1977), is remembered for his role in fighting apartheid. Best known for the “Black Conscious Movement” and slogans like “Black is beautiful.” The boy was born to parents Mzingayi Mathew and Alice 'Mamcete' Biko in Ginsberg Township , in the present-day Eastern Cape province of South Africa. He attended Brownlee Primary School and Charles Morgan Higher Primary School. Later attended the Lovedale High School in 1964, but was soon expelled for his political views. His brother, Khaya said concerning Biko ‘‘Steve was expelled for absolutely no reason at all. But in retrospect I welcome the South African government’s gesture of exposing a really good politician. I had unsuccessfully tried to get Steve interested in politics. The police were able to do in one day what had eluded me for years. This time the great giant was awakened.”

Biko was a bright student and passed with very great grades. He was admitted to Durban Medical School at the University of Natal Non European section (UNNE) in 1966. During that time he helped found the South African Students' Organisation (SASO), which later became the “Black Consciousness Movement.” The BCM aims of the organisation was to install a sense of self- determination through community-upliftment projects.  In 1972, he was expelled for his political activity. The following year he was banned by the apartheid regime. In the following years he met Donald Woods , the editor of Daily Dispatch and became best friends.  In 1975 Steve was arrested and detained for approximately 137 days. However,  he was not charged or put on trial. Around 12 September 1977, Biko was reported dead. According to several accounts, he stripped naked and viciously beaten and sustained serious head injuries. South African History Online: “Lang did not object when police said they were driving Steve to Pretoria, 700km away. This they did, on 11 September, in the back of a van, with Steve still naked, frothing at the mouth, and unable to speak. In Pretoria, a district surgeon examined Steve and tended to him, but it was too late.” 

Writings:

Steve Biko was one of the greatest anti-apartheid activists who was on a mission to liberate both the mind and body of an African. Yet, he ended up dead for simply resisting the Nazikaner government. We might have lost him, but his words and actions are still visible in our lives. After waging a hard and brutal battle. With this, we release Biko to rest. 

References
1. ChickenBones: A Journal. “Amilcar Cabral.” http://www.nathanielturner.com/amilcarcabral.htm (last accessed 20 July 2016). 

2. South African History Online.  “Stephen Biko.”http://www.sahistory.org.za/people/stephen-bantu-biko ( last accessed 25 July 2016). 




Great Freedom Fighters of The 21TH Century Part 2

By Sicebise Msengana








Amílcar  Cabral  ( 12 September 1924 – 20 January 1973),  was born in Bafatá, Guinea. He was born to parents, Juvenal Cabral, a Cape Verdean elementary school teacher and Mrs. Iva Pinhel Évora, a shopkeeper. Guinea-Bissau, the small Portuguese colony suffered from exploitation imposed by the backward and despotic Portuguese colonial regime.  Cabral later wrote:

25 July 2016

Make a Difference

By Sicebise Msengana

javesca.com
















There are eternal optimists who will lie in your face and tell you what you want to hear. Modern humans first appeared around 200,000 years ago.  Much time is spent on discussing ways to ‘help’ the world but no real help is ever sent. Minorities groups like Native Americans, atheists, pygmies, albinos, San, Australian aborigines, homosexuals, women and children ( mostly girls) are still oppressed. Religious and political leaders are given right to preach hate, intolerance and the need to rid the world of non-believers. Why there is no public outrage? Simply because we use different strokes for different people. Nation against nation fighting, each other for dominance—on land, air and sea. Tribe against tribe. Widespread terrorism, mass rape, massacres and wars raging all around the globe. We are the only species that boasts about taking man to the space. Yet we cannot living peace in earth.

02 June 2016

The Mis-Education of The Negro

By Sicebise Msengana



















PREFACE

The author does not support the once popular view that in matters of education Negroes are rightfully subjected to the will of others on the presumption that these poor people are not large taxpayers and must be content with charitable contributions to their uplift. The author takes the position that the consumer pays the tax, and as such every individual of the social order should be given unlimited opportunity to make the most of himself. Such opportunity, too, should not be determined from without by forces set to direct the proscribed element in a way to redound solely to the good of others but should be determined by the make-up of the Negro himself and by what his environment requires of him.