Wednesday, June 1, 2016

A True Account of Sambo vs Uncle Tom

Sambo

The Name Uncle Tom is synonymous to a person who has sold out their Ethnic Identity and had accepted their lot in life to be a sub-servient, impotent, docile slave. The character "Stephen" Played by Samuel L. Jackson from the movie "Django" is the epidemy of that depiction. The book: Uncle Tom's Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe, depicted UncleTom as a docile, matronly, sub servant, and agreeable, character. A trustee holding the key to the plantation under a cruel, paternal, white supremacist, colonizer society.




Stowe campaigned for the expansion of married Caucasian women's rights, arguing in 1869 that:
"The position of a married woman ... is, in many respects, precisely similar to that of the negro slave. She can make no contract and hold no property; whatever she inherits or earns becomes at that moment the property of her husband.... Though he acquired a fortune through her, or though she earned a fortune through her talents, he is the sole master of it, and she cannot draw a penny.... In the English common law a married woman is nothing at all. She passes out of legal existence."

Why would the name "Sambo," be demonized and used to create a negative character of any Indigo who was imprisoned on a plantation?Like the book character Uncle Tom, Sambo was still forced to be enslaved on a plantation. Yet, Sambo is also the name of an ancient African King. Sambo was also the name of the young African Prince who was abducted and held as a prisoner, of the Trans Atlantic war, by George Washington. Washington demanded the service of this young prince, and used his boat on the historical voyage on the Potomac River. Another Afrikan child who was also enslaved by Washington named Jacko, was requested by Washington to hold a lantern as a human lighthouse, and watch his horses and carriage, as he ventured the Potomac river. Washington returned from the Potomac voyage to find young prince Jacko frozen to death, still holding a lantern and the reigns of horses. He was inadequately dressed for the freezing cold... Washington memorialized him as an icon which was later misrepresented as a lawn jockey icon, known to this day... Sambo Anderson was set free in Washington's will but, he spent his entire life distracted by the enslavement of his wife and children, working to provide for them, instead of being able to live in freedom, dignity as an equal human being, and autonomy.

Another depiction of Sambo was written by a Scottish author, Helen Bannerman. The Story of Little Black Sambo, in 1899. "Zambo" is also the term of Indigenous Africans of the West Afrikan Foulah tribal Language, who were present in South America, and during the Portuguese Empire Periods. Our Black History is STILL Blacked out. Many books have not been translated into English, and so we are cut off and segmented from our history through colonialism, invasion, and outright book burning (Paper Genocide.) Indigo People would do well to learn to speak, read and write in other languages, besides English, at an early age- This is what I teach at Amen Ankh Akademy.

To Dr. Claud Anderson: Thank you for your dedication and mindfulness to create Books and Documentaries for entrepreneurial pursuit for Afrikan Americans. I have followed you for many years, and I have much respect for you.. Yet, we must be critical thinkers! We must be careful not to replace one miseducation with another false narrative... You are creating a legacy for our next generation and changing the hearts and minds of many of our people, who are asleep. We must challenge EVERYTHING that was written by caucasians... Who was Harriet Beecher Stowe? Where did Stowe get the names of her Characters? How was Stowe able to be empowered to even write and publish her books during a time of severe patriarchy and the struggle for women's rights, as well as the abolition of enslavement of Indigo people? Who was the audience that bought her books during that time? If her book was second in popularity to the Bible in its time, then this book was also a tool to proselytize Africans into European indoctrination African Cultural Genocide, and submission to European religious belief systems... Josiah Henson known as "Uncle Tom" was still a compliant, loyal house negro, who assimilated with European religions, and thereby caucasian beliefs and thought systems, against African Centered values. Uncle Tom was not a rebel who fought back against oppression. There are NO "Good or Bad" Africans within the paradigm of enslavement and imprisonment. To this day, our gifted and talented and our athletes are still groomed, seduced, and motivated to swing toward a Western caucasian value system and leave behind their own culture and families. so any financial gains return to the power structure of the Elite and by de-facto, Caucasian society.


Uncle Tom and Josiah Henson's exploits represents the "Noble Negro Slave complex" that was created as the model Negro that Caucasians could feel safe around. Slow, docile, cheerful, easy going, simple minded, and impotent. He is the ally of Afrika's enemies too, aiding, abetting, and justifying an alien culture, religion, their police, Politics, and environmental destruction.
Many Africans still suffer from What I call Ma'afa Syndrome: the complete identification and compliance with their assailant for the hope of favor and mercy. I emphasize Ma'afa syndrome over what is known as Stockholm Syndrome because Ma'afa Syndrome occurred hundreds of years before Stockholm and Helsinki Syndrome. So now you compare a house negro with an antagonist and snitch, yet they are both still trapped on a colonizer plantation... So, Uncle Tom is not my role model. Harriot Tubman, Denmark Vesey, Marcus Garvey, Malik El Shabazz and Assata Shakur are my role models...

So, the Challenge is the dichotomy of living in a brutal, competitive, capitalistic society, vs. a Black autonomist society. An Assimilationist, who lives to fit into an alien fake fiat hierarchy construct as a neutra-noid bisexual identity- or revolutionaries, families of Fathers, Teachers, Doctors, Farmers, etc., who chose to love, Live with, and build their own world with their own Land, resources, cultural values and humanity. We lost our Black Wallstreets because of Integration into a society who would only regard Indigo people as second class citizens.

So, you have a house Negro and a field Negro- I'm a Free KRST!