Extemporaneous musings, occasionally poetic, about life in its richly varied dimensions, especially as relates to history, theology, law, literature, science, by one who is an attorney, ordained minister, historian, writer, and African American.
Friday, September 8, 2017
INCIPIENT RECLAMATION
INCIPIENT RECLAMATION
Once our ancient African forbears had lost their cosmological liaisons, spiritual linkages, geometric ligaments that were inside of their autochthonously-primordial mathematical mastery, they fell from divine grace. They became benign, later becoming malignant, victims of myriad conquerors', traducers' enslavers' situational physics' along with their emasculating metaphysical anomie.
For Africans, universally, to be able to reclaim what has been lost, anciently, means that they must reclaim that former love for themselves, for God, for nativity, that was symbolically, even hieroglyphically, encoded in their incipient mathematical mastery. That mastery was the true source of all millennial African primacy, power, glory. Such attributes were and are proverbial,as they were and are accurate and precise before the Africans' fateful fall from grace: incipiently, historically, ontologically.