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The USA - Where Myths Are Taught As History!

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  • The USA - Where Myths Are Taught As History!

    THE USA - WHERE MYTHS ARE TAUGHT AS HISTORY!

    NewsTime
    April 12 2010
    South Africa

    Every country tends to have its history written to its own advantage,
    and school history textbooks are approved by politicians. The recent
    upset about the Turkish official history incorrectly reflecting the
    Armenian genocide as by the Armenians, and not by the Turks, is an
    example of this. For the half- century of Belgium rule of the Congo
    that followed King Leopold's death, school textbooks praised Leopold
    and his works as lavishly as Soviet textbooks praised Lenin. Belgium
    archives for that period were inaccessible when Jules Marchal, the
    retired Belgium diplomat, wrote his history of the Congo exposing
    the myth. In 1944 the victorious General De Gaulle gave a version
    of contemporary history that flattered his fellow citizens, and
    left out the complicity of the Vichy French with the Nazis in the
    extermination of the Jews. The French archives for that period were
    only opened in 1979.

    However the United States of America has taken this to the absurd
    degree of teaching total myths as history, even at university level.

    Here are some of the words of Mary Lefkowitz, American Classical
    Historian, about this mythology as detailed in her book "Not Out
    of Africa":

    "Although I had been completely unaware of it, there was in existence a
    whole literature that denied that the ancient Greeks were the inventors
    of democracy, philosophy, and science. There were books in circulation
    that claimed that Socrates and Cleopatra were of African descent,
    and that Greek philosophy had actually been stolen from Egypt. Not
    only were these books being read and widely distributed; some of these
    ideas were being taught in schools and even in universities..........no
    one seemed to think it was appropriate to ask for evidence......

    ...in February 1993,...Dr. Yosef A. A. ben-Jochannan was invited to
    give Wellesley's Martin Luther King,Jr. memorial lecture. Posters
    described Dr. ben-Jochannan as a 'distinguished Egyptologist'
    and indeed that was how he was introduced by the then president of
    Wellesley College.

    But I knew from my research in Afrocentric literature that he was
    not what scholars would ordinarily describe as an Egyptologist, that
    is a scholar of Egyptian language and civilization. Rather he was
    an extreme Afrocentrist, author of many books describing how Greek
    civilization was stolen from Africa, how Aristotle robbed the library
    of Alexandria, and how the true Jews are Africans like himself.

    After Dr. ben-Jochannan made these same assertions once again
    in his lecture, I asked him during the question time why he said
    that Aristotle had come to Egypt with Alexander, and had stolen his
    philosophy from the library at Alexandria, when that Library had only
    been built after his death. Dr. ben-Jochannan was unable to answer the
    question, and said that he resented the tone of the question. Several
    students came up to me after the lecture and accused me of racism,
    suggesting that I had been brainwashed by white historians....Aristotle
    never went to Egypt, and while the date of the Library of Alexandria is
    not known precisely, it was certainly built some years after the city
    was founded, which was after both Aristotle's and Alexander's deaths.

    A lecture at which serious questions could not be asked, and in fact
    were greeted with hostility - the occasion seemed more like a political
    rally than an academic event. And if that was not disturbing enough
    in itself, there was also the strange silence on the part of many
    of my faculty colleagues. Several of these were well aware that what
    Dr. ben-Johannan was saying was factually wrong...Were they afraid of
    being called racists?...Didn't we as educators owe it to our students,
    all our students, to see that they got the best education they could
    possibly get? And that clearly was what they were not getting in
    a lecture where they were being told myths disguised as history,
    and where discussion and analysis had apparently been forbidden.

    Good as the myths they were hearing may have made these students
    feel....they were being systematically deprived of the most important
    features of a university education. They were not learning how to
    question themselves and others, they were not learning to distinguish
    facts from fiction, nor in fact were they learning how to think for
    themselves. Their instructors had forgotten that children do not come
    to universities to be indoctrinated - at least in a free society.

    I first learned the notion that Socrates was black several years ago,
    from a student in my second-year Greek course on Plato's "Apology",
    his account of Socrates' trial and conviction. Throughout the entire
    semester the student had regarded me with sullen hostility. A year
    or so later she apologized. She explained that she thought I had
    been concealing the truth about Socrates' origins. In a course
    in Afro-American studies she had been told that he was black,
    and my silence about his African ancestry seemed to her to be
    a confirmation of the Eurocentric arrogance her instructor had
    warned her about....Socrates was ethnically no different from other
    Athenians....In Socrates day, they did not allow Greeks from other
    city states to become naturalized Athenian citizens, and they were
    even more careful about the non-Greeks or barbaroi.......If he had
    been a foreigner, one of his enemies, or one of the comic poets,
    would have been sure to point it out...

    The question of race matters only insofar as it is necessary to show
    that no classicists or ancient historians have tried to conceal the
    truth about the origins of the Greek people or the ancestry of certain
    ancient figures.

    Perhaps the most influential Afrocentrist text is "Stolen Legacy", a
    work which has been in wide circulation since its publication in 1954.

    Its author, George G. M. James, writes that "The term Greek philosophy,
    to begin with is a misnomer, for there is no such philosophy in
    existence....(they)...did not possess the native ability essential
    to the development of philosophy"...It is not hard to understand
    why James wishes to give credit for the Greek achievements to the
    Egyptians....Like the other nationalistic myths, the story of the
    "Stolen Legacy" both offers an explanation for past suffering, and
    provides a source of ethnic pride.

    But although the myth may encourage and even perhaps "empower"
    African-Americans, its use has a destructive side, which cannot and
    should not be overlooked. First of all, it offers them a "story"
    instead of history. It also suggests that African-Americans need
    to learn only what they choose to believe about the past. But in so
    doing, the Afrocentric myth seeks to shelter them from learning what
    all other ethnic groups must learn, and indeed, face up to, namely
    the full scope of their history."

    Mary Leifkowitz, in my opinion, seriously understates the problem this
    fake mythical history has caused, not only in the USA, but globally.

    Eleven years after the publication of "Stolen Legacy", this is how
    Pallo Jordan's mother, Phyllis Ntantala, describes the race riots on
    campus in her book "A Life's Mosaic":

    "In 1966 the University of Wisconsin embarked on an all-out campaign
    to recruit blacks....... By 1967 black students in the Northern
    universities were clamouring for Black Studies programmes, complaining
    that what they were being taught was irrelevant to their lives...They
    could find no folk heros or heroines in the characters of Literature,
    History, Art or Music. But for all that the students were not certain
    what they meant by Black Studies....

    The demand for Black studies reached a climax in the late sixties and
    early seventies........in 1969, for five days in a row, the students
    rampaged through the campus and State Street, smashing and destroying
    property. They smashed almost to rubble the all-glass Maths building
    on campus. At a faculty meeting in the midst of this destruction,
    the University of Wisconsin faculty decided to accept the students'
    demand for a Black Studies programme, even though none of them had
    any idea of what it was going to be like....It seemed "blackness"
    was the major qualification, irrespective of the area of expertise..."

    In other words, Black American's did not like History, and demanded
    that it be re-written. And so it was - as Kwanza and African
    Renaissance theories.

    Almost all literature written in the black Diaspora is filled with this
    African Renaissance or Kwanza mythology, and explains, in my opinion,
    some of the ideas of Thabo Mbeki and others educated in exile who
    returned with the ANC. How much damage this myth has done to parts
    of Africa where whites are a minority, not a majority as in the USA,
    is uncalculatable.

    And who knows what damage the myth that "real Jews are black" has
    done to Israeli / Palestinian relations?

    Until the USA can sort this problem out - I side with China on the
    question of historical information being edited on Internet search
    engines.
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