On December 25 (in some places a day earlier and yet in others on
January 6), millions of Christians all over the world celebrate the
birthday of their Lord and Saviour, Jesus the Christ, who is said to
have incarnated some 2000 years ago. It is a very special occasion,
marked with church services, family reunion, music, dance, sumptuous
meals and presents for friends and loved ones, as well as kindness to
all and sundry.
Usually a beautifully adorned Christmas tree stands in a strategic
corner in the living room, with excited kids, scampering all over the
place, anxiously waiting for their gifts. A sweet fragrance of all sorts
of delicacies fills the air. It´s a good season to be merry.
Interestingly, most Christians, especially Black Christians hardly
know the true origin of this December global event. It must be
remembered that until 350CE , when Pope Julius I moved the date to
December, the Christian Church hierarchy randomly fixed Christmas in
January, March, April, May or September, as if they didn´t know exactly
when Jesus was supposed to have been born.
In Africa, December 25 was an age-old day of celebration, dating back
several millenia- celebrating the birth or if you wish, the re-birth of
the Sun, that had apparently disappeared at the zero hour of December
22, the winter solstice. The winter solstice marks the lowest point of
the Sun, marks the longest night and, accordingly, the shortest day of
the year.
Right after that, daytime slowly but surely gets longer, until it gets
really noticeable on December 25. One could say that the Sun was
literally dead on Dec.22 and was re-born or had resurrected on December
25, after 3 days!
Dying and resurrecting after 3 days is a theme that is quite familiar
to Christians. But the origin of it all lies once gain in Africa. By
the way, “Christ“ is a title meaning the “Anointed One“. The
etymological root word “KARAST“ (KRST) came from the process of
embalming mummies in Ancient Egypt, which entailed “anointing“ by oil
before burial. Osiris was the Christ, thousands of years before the
white world practically usurped that designation.
The tradition of celebrating December 25 as the birthday of the
African God Ra or Osiris or his Son Horus (Father and Son are One!) was
prevalent and so strong at the advent of White Christianity that the
Christian Church fathers had to shift THEIR Christmas to the same date
of the Africans, ostensibly to eclipse the original..
One should not forget that the Romans had the political and the
military might to enforce their agenda. on the Africans. Emperors
Constantine and Theodosius had banned the African religion under penalty
of death, destroyed their temples, killed their priests and consigned
the African religion to the privacy of their homes!
So, when you see a White Madonna and child (Mary and child Jesus)
somewhere, you have to know that the original was Black: Isis and Horus.
The name Jesus is not too far away the old Egyptian (read African)
original : Iu-su: the ever-becoming son. Mary, Maria, Miriam are all
adulterations of the African “Meri“, meaning the “Beloved One“.
The Christmas tree represents the tree in Abydos in Egypt, which
enveloped the coffin of Osiris, who had been killed by his evil brother
God, SET. That tree bore beautiful fruits, the kind of which no one had
seen hitherto. So, when you decorate your Christmas tree, you are
actually re-enacting that African legend. SET is the root of later
religious derivatives like Satan, Sheitan......
Millions of Black people grow up with white images of God, Mary,
Jesus in their heads, thinking white is good, black is bad! What that
does to their psyche and vulnerability can be seen in their 2000 years
of tribulation since they lost power. People, who copied their religion
came back hundreds of years later to brutally enslave, christianize and
islamize them, calling them primitive and barbaric. That´s paradoxically
ironic!
That is why it is pertinent for Black people to re-discover their
true history in order to better appreciate themselves and view the alien
influence in proper perspective.
Christmas is yet another African gift to the world.
by Ramses Osiris
.............Happy To See You Here to Read the Blogs and Please To Be Here Is Not A Must, But As Long As You Are Here Use Your Brain Properly!!!
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