MOOR MEANS 'DEAD'


Book Description

MOOR MEANS 'DEAD' Excerpt: The whites and their offspring, after invading Afurakani/Afuraitkaitnit (African) civilizations and losing numerous wars to Afurakanu/Afuraitkaitnut (Africans), decided to work on destroying our Ancestral Religion and Culture. This was a means by which they believed that they could disrupt the society, exploit divisions and ultimately divide and conquer. Part of the process was to demonize Black people. This is why all throughout white pseudo-religion black is defined as evil, of the devil, demonic, etc. Black is associated with death in a negative fashion. This goes directly back to ancient Kamit where Merit (death of the crops, flooding of the land, end of a cycle/season) was associated with Mer (pyramids/shrines for the dead) and mer (the dead, those who arrived in port and were mer-ed or moored and also the class of the dead who were damned) [see the related terms: morose, morbid, mortuary, moron, etc. meaning melancholy, psychologically unhealthy – associated with death, sanctuary of the dead, ignorant – mentally dead, etc. – all of which have the same roots in mr and later moor and are pejoratives]. Yet, the association with a social class (slaves, servants – socially dead/bound/moored/fastened to their labor and service) and a spiritual designation for a certain class of the deceased (the damned) was artificially expanded by the whites as a definition of all Black people. Those Afurakanu/Afuraitkaitnut (Africans~Black People) who have embraced the idiocy of ‘moorish’ culture and identity and refer to themselves as ‘moors’, ‘muurs’, etc. are perpetuating the perverse agenda of the whites and their offspring. They are identifying themselves as ‘dead people’. Mru (Moors) – the dead, the damned Many of these individuals perpetuate as well the false notion that the term Black means ‘death’. They therefore do not call themselves Black nor do they understand the proper etymology of the term Afurakani/Afuraitkaitnit (African). They therefore do not recognize nor embrace the reality that they are Afurakani/Afuraitkaitnit (African). Black does not mean death – Moor means death




Master of the Moor


Book Description

Stephen Whalby loves to walk the moor. He considers it his, although he and his young wife Lyn are merely tenants in a flat nearby. But the senseless and frightening murder of a young woman invades Stephen's sense of privacy and pollutes his beloved moor with suspicion and dread. And then a second murder captures his imagination in an unpredictable and fascinating way . . .










ANIDAHO - Awareness


Book Description

ANIDAHO - Awareness There is a great deal of misinformation being propagated in the Afurakani/Afuraitkaitnit (African~Black) community regarding the etymological origins of the terms ‘nigger’, ‘nigga’, ‘naga’, ‘negus’ and ‘god’. There are individuals in the Afurakani/Afuraitkaitnit (African) community who propagate this information out of ignorance, attempting to conflate the derogatory term ‘nigger’ and its variation ‘nigga’ with ancient terms from Kamit (Egypt), Harrapa (Ancient Black India) and Ethiopia. In this work we give the proper etymologies of the terms 'nigger/negro' (nigga), Negus, Naga as well as the term 'God'. We demonstrate that the phonetic and conceptual roots of these terms are found in the language, culture and cosmology of ancient Kamit. This is the first publication elucidating these facts. We initially published the articles and the appendix in this publication separately. We have combined them here for ease of study and distribution. Anidaho is an Akan term meannig awareness. It literally means the eye (ani) lies upon (da) the self (ho). We must have awareness of who we are, who our enemies are and how they and their agents exploit our ignorance to keep us enslaved. Only then can we reorganize and move against them effectively.




The Cambridge Companion to Sherlock Holmes


Book Description

Accessible exploration of Sherlock Holmes and his relationship to late-Victorian culture as well as his ongoing significance and popularity.