Runoko Rashidi

Publications of JA Rogers

The Life And Legacy Of Joel Augustus Rogers: The Man And His Work, Part 2

Publications Rogers’ first publication, From Superman to Man, was published in 1917 and focused on “the stupidity of racism.” The book was so well received that is was recommended for reading in the original Constitution and By-Laws of Garvey’s Universal Negro Improvement Association and African Communities League. Dr. Hubert Henry Harrison (1883-1927), himself a brilliant […]

The Life And Legacy Of Joel Augustus Rogers: The Man And His Work, Part 2 Read More »

JA Rogers

The Life And Legacy Of Joel Augustus Rogers: The Man And His Work, Part 1

The Man And His Work Quote: “Ethiopians, that is, Negroes, gave the world the first idea of right and wrong and thus laid the basis of religion and all true culture and civilization.”–Joel Augustus Rogers Joel Augustus Rogers (1883-1966) was a world traveler, a prolific writer, an accomplished lecturer, and the first Black war correspondent.

The Life And Legacy Of Joel Augustus Rogers: The Man And His Work, Part 1 Read More »

JA Rogers

The Life And Legacy Of Joel Augustus Rogers: Chronicler Of A Glorious African Past

This Work Is Dedicated To Dr. John Henrik Clarke Critical Assessments Of Joel Augustus Rogers Although Joel Augustus Rogers was largely self-trained, some of the most distinguished scholars of the twentieth century have acknowledged our debt to him. Dr. William E.B. DuBois (1868-1963), perhaps the greatest scholar in American history, wrote that, “No man living

The Life And Legacy Of Joel Augustus Rogers: Chronicler Of A Glorious African Past Read More »

African Merchant

The African Presence In India, Part 9: Habshis and Siddis, African Dynasties In India

Habshis and Siddis, African Dynasties In India India also received its share of African bondsmen, of whom the most famous was the celebrated Malik Ambar (1550-1626). Ambar, like a number of Africans in medieval India, elevated himself to a position of great authority. Malik Ambar, whose original name was Shambu, was born around 1550 in

The African Presence In India, Part 9: Habshis and Siddis, African Dynasties In India Read More »

The Buddha, Tapa Shotor monastery in Hadda, Afghanistan

The African Presence In India, Part 8: The Budda And Buddhism In India

The Budda And Buddhism In India Buddhism appeared in India during the sixth century B.C.E. and came in the form of a protest against Hinduism. Buddhism opposed the arrogance of caste, and preached tolerance. It should not be surprising, then, that it developed a large and rapid following in the regions of India where the

The African Presence In India, Part 8: The Budda And Buddhism In India Read More »

Dalit women and child

The African Presence In India, Part 7: The Black Untouchables Of India – The Dalit

The Black Untouchables Of India: The Dalit Possibly the most substantial percentage of Asia’s Blacks can be identified among India’s 160 million “Untouchables” or “Dalits.” Frequently they are called “Outcastes.” Indian nationalist leader and devout Hindu Mohandas K. Gandhi called them “Harijans,” meaning “children of god.” The official name given them in India’s constitution (1951)

The African Presence In India, Part 7: The Black Untouchables Of India – The Dalit Read More »

People regarded as untouchables in Malabar, Kerala (1906 A.D.)

The African Presence In India, Part 6: The Black Untouchables Of India – The World’s Most Oppressed People

The Black Untouchables Of India: The World’s Most Oppressed People The greatest victims of Hinduism have been the Untouchables. Indeed, probably the most substantial percentage of all the Black people of Asia can be identified among India’s 160 million Untouchables. These people are the long-suffering descendants of Aryan-Sudra unions and native Black populations who retreated

The African Presence In India, Part 6: The Black Untouchables Of India – The World’s Most Oppressed People Read More »

Kanikar tribal man in South India

The African Presence In India, Part 5: Apartheid In India

Apartheid In India The White tribes that invaded India and disrupted Black civilization there are known as Aryans. The Aryans were not necessarily superior warriors to the Blacks but they were aggressive, developed sophisticated military technologies and glorified military virtues. After hundreds of years of intense martial conflict the Aryans succeeded in subjugating most of

The African Presence In India, Part 5: Apartheid In India Read More »

Durga temple in Aihole, Karnataka, India

The African Presence In India, Part 4: Dravidian Kingdoms of South India

Dravidian Kingdoms of South India It is safe to say that when we speak of the Dravidians as a people we are speaking of the living descendants of the Harappan people of the ancient Indus Valley who were pushed into South India as the result of the Aryan invasions. This is certainly consistent with Dravidian

The African Presence In India, Part 4: Dravidian Kingdoms of South India Read More »

Great Bath of the excavated ruins of Mohenjo-daro

The African Presence In India, Part 3: India’s Earliest Civilization

India’s Earliest Civilization In Greater India, more than a thousand years before the foundations of Greece and Rome, proud and industrious Black men and women known as Dravidians erected a powerful civilization. We are referring here to the Indus Valley civilization- -India’s earliest high-culture, with major cities spread out along the course of the Indus

The African Presence In India, Part 3: India’s Earliest Civilization Read More »

0
    0
    Your Cart
    Your cart is emptyReturn to Shop
      Calculate Shipping
      Apply Coupon
        Scroll to Top