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Our Own Voices Welcome to Our Own Voices.Where you get to see that America is the greatest Country on earth because (as a result of the Berner Convention).

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28/10/2024

💥Ancient name of Africa

Before the Eur0pean settled for the word Africa, the continent was called many other names. They include Corphye, Ortigia,Libya, and Ethiopia, Alkebulan

Other names such as the land of Ham (Ham means dark skins), mother of mankind, the garden of Eden, Kingdoms in the sky, and the land of cush or kesh (referring to the Cush*tes who were ancient Ethiopian) were used.

No one knows the source of the names for sure. However, the theories below shed some light on how this second largest continent got its new name.

Roman theory

Some scholars believe that the word originated from the Romans. Romans discovered a land opposite the Mediterranean and named it after the Berber tribe residing within the Carnage area, presently referred to as Tunisia. The tribe's name was Afri.

Weather theory

Some believe that the name was coiled from the continent's climate. Deriving from aphrike, a Greek word that means a land free from cold and horror. A variation of the Roman word aprica, which means sunny, or even the Phoenician word afar, which means dust.

Africus Theory

This claims that the continent derived its name from Africus. Africus is a Yemenite chieftain who invaded the northern part in the second millennium BC,It is argued that he settled on his conquered land and named it Afrikyah.

Phoenician Theory

Another school of thought suggests that the name is derived from two Phoenician words friqi and pharika. The words mean corns and fruits when translated. Hypothetically the Phoenician christened the continent as the land of corns and fruits.

Alkebu-lan “mother of mankind” or “garden of Eden”.” Alkebulan is the oldest and the only word of indigenous origin. It was used by the Moors,Nubians, Numidians,Khart-Haddans (Carthagenians) and Ethiopians.

There is little or no certainty on the source or meaning Africa. Several scholars have tried to explain the origin of the word, but none is convincingly correct.

African American History is American History
27/10/2024

African American History is American History

In 1932, Richard B. Spikes received a patent for an automatic car gear shift. Big companies welcomed his inventions. Its patent #1889,814.
By the time he created the automatic safety brake in 1962, Spikes was losing his vision. To complete the device, he first created a drafting machine for blind designers. The machine would soon be used in almost every school bus nationwide.
These are other inventions by Richard B. Spikes:
railroad semaphore (1906)
automatic car washer (1913)
automobile directional signals (1913)
beer keg tap (1910)
self-locking rack for billiard cues (1910)
continuous contact trolley pole (1919)
combination milk bottle opener and cover (1926)
method and apparatus for obtaining average samples and temperature of tank liquids (1931)
automatic gear shift (1932)
transmission and shifting thereof (1933)
automatic shoe shine chair (1939)
multiple barrel machine gun (1940)
horizontally swinging barber chair (1950)
automatic safety brake (1962)

25/10/2024

African ethnicity.

24/10/2024

Study your REAL HISTORY and not the minuscule bs they teach you in public schools‼️✊🏾Kemet (Northeast Africa)3100 B.C. to 332 B.C. (2,700 YEARS)
Kingdom of Kush (West Africa)
1069 BCE - 400 CE (1400 YEARS)
Moroccan Empire (Northwest Africa)
788 -1957 (1169 YEARS)
Aksumite Empire (East Africa)
100 to 940 CE (940 YEARS)
Empire of Ghana (West Africa)
300 - 1235 CE. (935 YEARS)
Moorish Empire (N. Africa & Spain)
711 C.E. - 1492 C.E. (781 YEARS)
Ethiopian Empire (East Africa)
1270 -1974 (700 YEARS)
Benin Kingdom (West Africa)
1200s - 1800s (600 YEARS)
Ancient Carthage (North Africa)
c. 650 BCE - 146 BCE.(504 YEARS)
Mali Empire (West Africa)
1226-1670 (444 YEARS)
Hausaland Empire (West Africa)
1500 - 1800 (300 YEARS)
Kingdom of Zimbabwe (Southeast Africa)
1220-1450 CE (230 YEARS)
AFRICANS HAVE RULED AS KINGS FOR OVER 11,000 COLLECTIVE YEARS!!

23/10/2024

Tuskegee University has made history by launching Alabama's first accredited aviation program at a historically Black college or university (HBCU). This groundbreaking initiative aims to train the next generation of Black pilots and fill the significant gap in the aviation industry. With training at the historic Moton Field, students can earn a bachelor's degree in Aviation Science and become certified pilots.

African American History is American History
23/10/2024

African American History is American History

On this day, October 22nd, in Black History

In 2004, Samuel Lee Gravely, Jr., the first African American in the United States Navy to be commissioned an officer, died.

Gravely was born June 4, 1922 in Richmond, Virginia. He enlisted in the Naval Reserves in 1942 and in 1944 successfully completed midshipman training, becoming the first African American commissioned as an officer from the Naval Reserve Officer Training Corps.

His first assignment was to Camp Robert Smalls, a part of the Great Lakes Naval Training Station set aside for training African American enlisted men. In 1946, Gravely was released from active duty, and he returned to Richmond to earn his bachelor’s degree in history from Virginia Union University in 1948.

In 1949, Gravely was recalled to active duty and he went on to be the first African American to serve aboard a fighting ship as an officer, the first to command a Navy ship, the first fleet commander, and the first to become an admiral. Gravely retired from the Navy in 1980 with decorations including, the Legion of Merit, Bronze Star, Meritorious Service Medal, and Navy Commendation Medal.

The USS Gravely and the Samuel L. Gravely, Jr. Elementary School in Haymarket, Virginia, were posthumously named in his honor. (Today in African American History, 2024)

21/10/2024

I am pleased to announce that I have been endorsed by the Las Vegas Weekly.

African American History is American History
12/10/2024

African American History is American History

In the early 1930s, African American linguist Lorenzo Turner discovered a remarkable linguistic treasure among the Gullah people of coastal South Carolina and Georgia. Turner cataloged over 3,000 names and words of African origin, including a five-line song sung by Amelia Dawley from a remote Georgia fishing village. Although Amelia did not know the language of the song, it was later identified by a Sierra Leonean graduate student as Mende, his native tongue. This song, a West African funeral dirge, had been passed down through generations of Dawley’s family, surviving the brutal history of slavery and the Middle Passage.
In the 1980s, American anthropologist Joseph Opala, while studying Bunce Island in Sierra Leone, found that many African captives from this region were sent to South Carolina and Georgia. Realizing the historical and linguistic connections, Opala, along with ethnomusicologist Cynthia Schmidt, traced Turner’s recording of Dawley’s song. They presented it to a Sierra Leonean music group, which recognized it as a traditional Mende funeral song. This discovery led to a significant cultural reunion in 1989, where the Gullah people from Georgia traveled to Sierra Leone to meet their long-lost relatives, highlighting the enduring cultural ties between the two regions.
Chris Matheka

11/10/2024

Kamilah Bywaters, a candidate for the Clark County School District (CCSD) Board of Trustees, joined 8 News Now’s Daily Voting Guide to discuss her plans and priorities for District E, which covers Summerlin and northwest parts of the Las Vegas Valley.

08/10/2024

Tuskegee University has launched its accredited aviation program, making it the only HBCU in Alabama to offer a path for aspiring Black pilots. Students will train at the historic Moton Field, home of the Tuskegee Airmen, continuing a legacy of excellence in aviation.

African American History is American History
08/10/2024

African American History is American History

On this day, October 7th, in Black Herstory

In 1926, Opal Lee was born. She is a Black retired teacher, counselor, and activist in the movement to make Juneteenth a federally recognized holiday.

She was born in Marshall, Texas, and was the oldest of three children of Mattie (Broadous) and Otis Flake. When she was ten, she and her family moved to Fort Worth, Texas. The Flakes later moved to the 7th Ward of Fort Worth, Texas (Terrell Heights). In 1939, when she was twelve, her parents bought a house in the 900 block of East Annie Street, then a mostly white area. On June 19, 1939, 500 white rioters vandalized and burned down her home. Recalling it years later, she said, "The fact that it happened on June 19 has spurred me to make people understand that Juneteenth is not just a festival."

Opal Flake attended I.M. Terrell High School, Fort Worth's first black high school. She graduated high school in 1943 at the age of 16. She married, and the couple had four children; they divorced after five years. 1952, she graduated from Wiley College in Marshall, Texas, receiving her bachelor's degree in elementary education. She later attended North Texas State University (now the University of North Texas), earning her master's in Counseling and Guidance. After receiving her master's degree, Lee returned to Fort Worth, where she was an educator for the Fort Worth Independent School District (FWISD) for fifteen years and a home school counselor for nine years before retiring in 1977.

In 1967, she married Dale Lee as a teacher at McCoy Elementary School, and he was the principal at Morningside Elementary. She was also a member of the Fort Worth-Tarrant County Community Action Agency (CAA) board, Evans Avenue Business Association board, Tarrant County Habitat for Humanity board, and Citizens Concerned with Human Dignity. After retiring from teaching in 1976, Lee became involved in Fort Worth community causes. Unity Unlimited Inc.'s nonprofit organization has been in operation since 1994.

Lee campaigned for decades to make Juneteenth a federal holiday by leading 2.5 miles (4.0 km) of walks each year. At age 89, she conducted a symbolic walk from Fort Worth to Washington, D.C., leaving in September 2016 and arriving in Washington in January 2017. She has marched in Texas and Fort Smith and Little Rock, Arkansas; Las Vegas, Nevada; Madison and Milwaukee, Wisconsin; Atlanta, Georgia; Selma, Alabama; and the Carolinas. She said, "It will be a national holiday; I do not doubt it.

My point is, let's make it a holiday in my lifetime." In June 2021, at 94, her efforts succeeded as a bill to make Juneteenth a federal holiday was passed by Congress and signed into law by President Joe Biden. She was an honored guest at the bill-signing ceremony. Lee was the 2021 "Texan of the Year" by The Dallas Morning News for her activism for black Texans. She's in the 2021 book Unsung Heroes for operating a food bank, farm, and community garden throughout the COVID-19 pandemic.

Lee is also a founding board member of Transform 1012 N. Main Street, a Fort Worth nonprofit and arts organization coalition working to turn a former Ku Klux Klan auditorium into the Fred Rouse Center and Museum for Arts and Community Healing. Rouse, a black man, was lynched by a Fort Worth mob in 1921. Transform 1012 N. Main Street was formed in 2019, and the acquisition of the building was announced in January 2022. (African American Registry, 2024)

07/10/2024
06/10/2024

Wilts was a physical freak of nature. This man’s strength has never been matched by any nba player ever. He worked out with power lifters in the gym. His max bench press was 200 lbs more than Shaq’s. He had wide receiver speed in both the 40 and 100. His vertical leap was 46”. He is in the volleyball hall of fame, played for the globetrotters, and was a teak star in high jump, long jump, and high hurdles. A true 7 footer has never had these physical skills, actually, no nba player ever has. Actually, I cannot think of any athlete in any sport that has. Anyone lucky enough to have seen him play in the 60’s, truly understands. The true goat played every minute of every game. Never came out to rest. He averaged 8-10 blocked shots per game and not once in his career did he ever foul out. A nba ref once said, Chamberlain was fouled 2-3 times every trip down the floor. You just couldn’t call them or there wouldn’t have been a game.

06/10/2024

A historic moment unfolds as mother-daughter duo Daphne and Edriuna Davis graduate with Juris Doctorate degrees from the Birmingham School of Law. Their shared journey exemplifies courage, determination, and boldness, inspiring others with their remarkable achievement. 🎓

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