The Meaning of Hotep Quotes
The Meaning of Hotep: A Nubian Study Guide
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The Meaning of Hotep Quotes
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“before God was conceived of in his masculine forms that are known in the world today, God was, primarily a woman.”
― The Meaning of Hotep: A Nubian Study Guide
― The Meaning of Hotep: A Nubian Study Guide
“To begin with, although one of the definitions of the word ‘Hotep’ is peace, it is not merely a universal greeting. It is a word associated with recognizing that there is a Creative Force imminent in all things, most importantly ourselves, and drawing from this force that exists within, as taught by our predecessors, rather than seeking refuge in foreign God concepts that have only served to divide, subdue and pacify us individually and collectively, which ultimately has stagnated our spiritual, cultural and political solidarity.”
― The Meaning of Hotep: A Nubian Study Guide
― The Meaning of Hotep: A Nubian Study Guide
“And it is through their contact with Kemet that the nations of Greece and Rome became civilized. The knowledge of this is what led the academic hypocrites of the western world to advance the claim that the civilization of Kemet was the product of an Asiatic or European foundation. At the time when these lies were growing popular in the 18th and the 19th century, Afrikans the world over were experiencing the dehumanizing effects of the European slave trade. So from the racist Eurocentric point of view that was prevalent during that epoch, it would have been against their conniving capitalist interests to reveal that this great civilization was established by the same people that they reduced in their minds to being subhuman. The rationale that fueled this propaganda was based on the assumption that the Europeans could not successfully enslave the Afrikans and recognize their history at the same time because they would also have to recognize their humanity. As a result of this, the Afrikan contributions to civilization were suppressed and institutional racism was born.”
― The Meaning of Hotep: A Nubian Study Guide
― The Meaning of Hotep: A Nubian Study Guide
“Our Nubian ancestors were the custodians, protectors, preservers and teachers of everything good that has been associated with Kemet. All conquerors and oppressors know that they cannot oppress a culturally and politically conscious people. What’s more important is that you realize it and always strive to uplift the community of self and then your respective family and community at large.”
― The Meaning of Hotep: A Nubian Study Guide
― The Meaning of Hotep: A Nubian Study Guide
“Afrikan people can go to school, be misinformed, and not even realize that they are caught in a trap designed by the evil genius of the European mind.”
― The Meaning of Hotep: A Nubian Study Guide
― The Meaning of Hotep: A Nubian Study Guide
“the word Nubian is rooted in the Metu Neter. Nub is symbolized by the sun on the horizon and means: “gold, gold of the water, gold dug out of a mine, Nubian gold, Golden One (a name of the Sun Neter), to work in gold, to smelt metals.”
― The Meaning of Hotep: A Nubian Study Guide
― The Meaning of Hotep: A Nubian Study Guide
“Queen Elizabeth I of England possessed a slave ship by the name “the good ship Jesus” that she allowed Captain John Hawkins to utilize for the purpose of enslaving Africans.”
― The Meaning of Hotep: A Nubian Study Guide
― The Meaning of Hotep: A Nubian Study Guide
“These traditions were adopted from the people of the Nile Valley by the Hebrews, eventually embraced by the Christians and woven into the Gospels.”
― The Meaning of Hotep: A Nubian Study Guide
― The Meaning of Hotep: A Nubian Study Guide
“March 22nd marks the day when the sun, traversing its apparent path along the ecliptic, “passes over” the celestial equator at the vernal (spring) equinox, and the length of day and night are equal.”
― The Meaning of Hotep: A Nubian Study Guide
― The Meaning of Hotep: A Nubian Study Guide
“If you knew you were here 4,000,000 years ago you would never let a European or an African tell you that the creation of everything in the universe occurred 6,000 years ago.”
― The Meaning of Hotep: A Nubian Study Guide
― The Meaning of Hotep: A Nubian Study Guide
“In their places of worship, most Blacks are confronted every Sunday with early Renaissance portraits of Christ, a white deity, and a form of spirituality which theoretically and historically has little direct relevancy to their unique heritage and original Afrikan belief systems.”
― The Meaning of Hotep: A Nubian Study Guide
― The Meaning of Hotep: A Nubian Study Guide
“When the Europeans rose into power between the 15th and the 19th century, they embarked on a campaign to control the land, labor, resources and information of the world. This is why Afrikan people can go to school, be misinformed, and not even realize that they are caught in a trap designed by the evil genius of the European mind. And any Afrikan who thinks that the former slave master and current oppressor will provide their former slaves with the tools necessary to become independent are just as naive as they were designed to be.”
― The Meaning of Hotep: A Nubian Study Guide
― The Meaning of Hotep: A Nubian Study Guide
“The further back you look the further forward you’ll be able to see.”
― The Meaning of Hotep: A Nubian Study Guide
― The Meaning of Hotep: A Nubian Study Guide
“the true purpose of education is to teach you how to become a proper handler of power. Whenever a person’s education fails to do this it is useless.”
― The Meaning of Hotep: A Nubian Study Guide
― The Meaning of Hotep: A Nubian Study Guide
“Metu Neter language which translates as “the Writings or words of God.” In this day and age, the language is more commonly referred to as “hieroglyphics,” (hiero = holy or sacred) + (glyphs = carvings or writings).”
― The Meaning of Hotep: A Nubian Study Guide
― The Meaning of Hotep: A Nubian Study Guide
“The Psalms of the Bible are said to have been authored by David, but there are portions of it that are virtually identical to portions of Amenhotep IV’s Hymn to Aten.”
― The Meaning of Hotep: A Nubian Study Guide
― The Meaning of Hotep: A Nubian Study Guide
“Dr. John G. Jackson quotes Kenneth R.H. Mackenzie as follows: “From the woolly texture of the hair, I am inclined to assign to the Budda of India, the Fuhi of China, the Sommanoacom of the Siamese, the Xaha of the Japanese, and the Quetzalcoatl of the Mexicans, and the same, and indeed an African, or rather ‘Nubian’ origin.” Most of these black gods were regarded as crucified saviours who died to save mankind by being nailed to a cross, or tied to a tree with arms outstretched as if on a cross, or slain violently in some other manner. Of these crucified saviors, the most prominent were Osiris and Horus of Egypt, Krishna of India, Mithra of Persia, Quetzalcoatl of Mexico, Adonis of Babylonia and Attis of Phrygia. Nearly all of these slain savior-gods have the following stories related about them: They are born of a virgin, on or near December 25th (Christmas); their births are heralded by a star; they are born either in a cave or stable; they are slain, commonly by crucifixion; they descend into hell, and rise from the dead at the beginning of Spring (Easter), and finally ascend into heaven. The parallels between the legendary lives of these pagan messiahs and the life of Jesus Christ as recorded in the BIBLE are so similar that progressive Bible scholars now admit that stories of these heathen have been woven into the life-story of Jesus.”
― The Meaning of Hotep: A Nubian Study Guide
― The Meaning of Hotep: A Nubian Study Guide
