Jan 14 2010

Organizations collecting funds for Haiti Earthquake victims

 

Khildren of Southhamptom and ASCAC Mid-Atlantic Region
 
Yele Haiti
or text ‘yele’ to 501 501
 
Institute of the Black World 21st Century
 
Haitian American Ministries, (Mawiyah’s organization),14619 Zenith Street, Houston, TX, 77045-6549. 713.433.9518
 
Haitian Congress to Fortify Haiti, Memo Line– Haitian Crisis Relief Fund,1227 Dodge Avenue, Evanston, IL 60202, Attorney Lionel Jean Baptiste. 847.424.0400
http://www.haitiancongress.org
 
The Samuel Dalembert Foundation 
 
Friends of Fokal
 
Abibitumi Kasa
 
Human (Hatian) United for Action

Jan 14 2010

What can we do to help our brothers and sisters in Haiti? – Conrad Worrill

 

Many people have been asking, “What can we do to help our brothers and sisters in Haiti?” As you know, the Black population of Chicago has a special historical relationship to Haiti in as much as the real founder of Chicago, Jean Baptiste Pointe DuSable was of Haitian ancestry. He was among the first settlers of this region and was a leader of great economic enterprises.
 
Secondly, the successful Haitian Revolution that culminated in Haiti becoming an independent nation in 1804. The reason that Napoleon and the French agreed to sell their Louisiana territory in what is historically known as the Louisiana Purchase of 800 million acres of land to the United States because of the impact of the Haitian Revolution.
 
Thirdly, our esteemed elder ancestor, Dr. Jacob H. Carruthers, wrote a profound book on the Haitian Revolution entitled The Irritated Genie that I encourage everyone in the CCICS community to read or re-read as the case may be.
 
It is in this spirit that my organization, the National Black United Front, has learned that our sister in Haiti, Valerie Mawiyah Duperval, is safe. She contacted us early in the morning letting us know that she was safe and has been sleeping on the ground in Tabarre. For the past twenty years, Sister Mawiyah has dedicated her life to the cause of Haiti. At this moment, we are requesting that donations be sent to the following two organizations:
 
Haitian American Ministries, (Mawiyah’s organization),14619 Zenith Street, Houston, TX, 77045-6549. 713.433.9518.
 
Haitian Congress to Fortify Haiti, Memo Line– Haitian Crisis Relief Fund,1227 Dodge Avenue, Evanston, IL 60202, Attorney Lionel Jean Baptiste. 847.424.0400. http://www.haitiancongress.org
 
In the coming weeks we will be prepared to instruct our community on donating non-perishable foods, clothing, and medical supplies. At this moment it would be premature to do this until the Disaster Relief Operation can get a handle on the devastation and set-up a system so that the materials sent can be properly received and dispensed.
 
Finally, we must give special thanks to the 344 Cuban doctors and the expert disaster relief teams from Cuba and Venezuela governments that have already hit the ground running in Haiti and are not receiving any media coverage for their efforts. Many of whom are of African descent.
 
Please allow the spirit of the crisis in Haiti to enter your soul as we give them all of the support we can possibly render at this hour of severe crisis.

Jan 10 2010

Dr. Carr Does Libations at the NYC Burial Ground


Jan 10 2010

Egypt Discovers New Worker’s Tombs New Pyramids

 

Egypt discovers new workers' tombs near pyramids

January 10, 2010 

Blasting thru the Judeo-Christian myth of Slave labor building pyramids and other structures during the Pharoanic Period:
<<…the workers were paid laborers, rather than the slaves of popular imagination.>>

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CAIRO (AP) — Egyptian archaeologists discovered a new set of tombs belonging to the workers who built the great pyramids, shedding light on how the laborers lived and ate more than 4,000 years ago, the antiquities department said Sunday.

The thousands of men who built the last remaining wonder of the ancient world ate meat regularly, worked in three months shifts and were given the honor being buried in mud brick tombs within the shadow of the sacred pyramids they worked on.

The newly discovered tombs date to Egypt 's 4th Dynasty (2575 B.C. to 2467 B.C.) when the great pyramids were built, according to the head of Egypt 's Supreme Council of Antiquities, Zahi Hawass.

 Graves of the pyramid builders were first discovered in the area in 1990, he said, and discoveries such as these show that the workers were paid laborers, rather than the slaves of popular imagination.

"These tombs were built beside the king's pyramid, which indicates that these people were not by any means slaves," said Hawass in the statement. "If they were slaves, they would not have been able to build their tombs beside their king's."

Evidence from the site, Hawass said, indicates that the approximately 10,000 laborers working on the pyramids ate 21 cattle and 23 sheep sent to them daily from farms in northern and southern Egypt .

He added that the workers were rotated every three months and the burial sites were for those who died during the construction.

Discoveries like these reveal other aspects of ancient Egyptian society besides just the stone monuments and temples of priests, rulers and nobles, explained Salima Ikram, a professor of Egyptology at the American University in Cairo.

"It is important to find tombs that belong to lower class people that are not made out of stone and tell you the social origin and wealth of a range of people," she said.

Workers' tombs from the 4th Dynasty were typically made up mud brick and shaped like cones and covered in white plaster, probably echoing the nearby limestone-clad pyramids of the kings.

The most important new tomb discovered, according to Hawass, belonged to a man named Idu and the statement described it as rectangular in structure, with a plaster covered mud brick outside casing.

The tomb also featured burial shafts encased in white limestone.

Further grave sites were found around the main tomb, including burial shafts containing skeletons and clay pots.