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here is a place to learn and found out Truth on what is going on all around the world truth , peace, love and light

I am a very happy and open minded person with positive energy, I work with the gift of nature. I am a blessed soul working to fulfill my soul contract, ask questions I am always open to answers, you can contact me for any consultant, spiritual Gardinas, or anyone looking for a way to tap into spirituality feel free to ask questions anytime I am for the light 🕯️..

13/02/2025
15/05/2024

Some please tell me the on that is true 🤔

24/04/2024

I think he is praying for Nigeria 🤔 or what could he be praying for ?
Please share your opinion

29/03/2024

Africans 🌍 listen carefully
And learn

13/01/2024

The story of slavery in Badagry is a dark and tragic one. Badagry was one of the major ports of the transatlantic slave trade, where millions of Africans were captured, sold, and shipped to the Americas and Europe. The town was founded around 455 AD by the Awori and Egun people, who later became involved in the slave trade as middlemen for the Europeans. The peak period of the slave trade in Badagry was between 1736 and 1789, and was dominated by Portuguese and Brazilian traders12. Slaves were transported from West Africa through Badagry and by 1787, more than 550,000 African slaves were transported to Europe, South America and the Caribbean3. Many of them died before reaching their destinations, due to the brutal conditions of the journey and the inhumane treatment by their captors.

Badagry has preserved some of the historical sites and artifacts related to the slave trade, such as the Seriki Faremi Williams Abass Slave Museum, which was a warehouse for storing slaves; the Vlekte slave market, where slaves were auctioned off; the memorial of slave chains, which symbolizes the bo***ge and suffering of the enslaved; and the Point of No Return, which was the port where slaves boarded the ships that took them away from their homeland forever2. These places serve as a reminder of the horrors of slavery and the resilience of the African people who survived it. Badagry also celebrates its rich cultural heritage and diversity, and hopes to share its story with the world. 🌍

If you are interested in learning more about the history of slavery in Badagry, you can visit the following websites:
Badagry: A Brief History Of Slave Trade In Nigeria
Badagry, Nigeria’s slave trade history
Badagry - Wikipedia
The dark history of the Nigerian colonial town of Badagry, one of Africa’s first slave ports

Photos from Light's post 09/01/2024

Pata Seca, who was born in Sorocaba, São Paulo, in the first half of the 19th century, became the property of a farmer from São Carlos, São Paulo. Standing at an impressive height of 7’2″, he was deemed a perfect candidate for the role of a breeder. Consequently, Pata Seca was specifically selected to engage in relations with female slaves, aiming to generate a strong labor force with favorable genetic traits.
Pata Seca’s life was controlled by his owner’s desires. He was meticulously checked for diseases, well-fed, and like a livestock, he was put to work as a breeder.
The exact number of women he slept with or the frequency of these encounters remains unknown. However, it is estimated that Pata Seca fathered over 200 children who inherited their father’s enslaved status. Consequently, they too experienced lives of servitude, with some being sold for profit and others compelled to toil on their owners’ plantations.
In addition to his breeding duties, Pata Seca also attended to the horses and was entrusted with the responsibility of transporting correspondence between the farm and the city.
During slavery, slave owners would breed their strongest male slaves with their strongest female slaves to create physically superior offspring
Due to his success in producing a significant number of offspring for his owner, Pata Seca received relatively favorable treatment. He was granted special privileges and even received a plot of land from his master when slavery was abolished in Brazil in 1888.
After gaining his freedom, Pata Seca found love and companionship in a woman named Palmira, whom he married. Together, they were blessed with nine children, forming the foundation of their own family. In the land gifted to him by his former master, Pata Seca dedicated himself to constructing a new life for his loved ones.
Embracing the role of a farmer, Pata Seca owned and operated “Sítio Pata Seca,”his very own farm. Here, he toiled tirelessly in the production and sale of rapadura

01/12/2023

United States of Africa is possible

29/11/2023

I love this song

02/11/2023

Our Africàn history is not just any history, it's a history written with bl00d, it is a history of defèats and victories. Whenever a group of people found themselves defèated they had but one option: to rise up and regain their frèedom by all means.

However, the African history is not just a history about people who want to rise again for frèedom, it is a history about people who strùggle first for their return to the state of human being. That is the result of more than 4○○ years of d£humanization, ali£nation, slav£ry, denial of self-identificàtion and self-knòwledge that Africàns went through.

Alkebùlan will prèvail!

31/10/2023

“She was called Phillis, because that was the name of the ship that brought her, and Wheatley, which was the name of the merchant who bought her. She was born in Senegal 🇸🇳 In Boston, the slave traders put her up for sàle:
-She's 7 years old! She will be a good mare!
She was felt, n.aked, by many hands.

At thirteen, she was already writing poems in a language that was not her own. No one believed that she was the author. At the age of twenty, Phillis was questioned by a court of eighteen enlightened men in robes and wigs.

She had to recite texts from Virgil and Milton and some messages from the Bible, and she also had to swèar that the poems she had written were not plagiarized. From a chair, she gave her long examination, until the court accepted her: she was a woman, she was Black, she was enslaved, but she was a poet. "

Phillis Wheatley, was the first African-American writer to publish a book in the United States.

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