Two Types of Scholars in The Global Afrikan Community, Baye Kes Ba Me-Ra

Two Types of Scholars in The Global African Community

two types of scholars

Two Types of Scholars in The Global African Community

“There are two types of fundamental scholars within the world of African people. There are those scholars who have internalized the value system of white supremacy. They, generally, never question any theories, models, perceptions, assumptions or concepts that come from the minds of White males in the world. They then proceed to write and teach rooted in the assumption that white scholars cannot be questioned in their social, cultural, philosophical or theological approaches to the human condition. In general their very merit as approval by the white male developed and controlled institutions of higher learning, and they depend on the validation of the white male as the source of their professionalism and views.

This group of scholars within the global African community can command access to the media, major publishing companies, the university lecture circuit, and even access to other nation of Afrikan people. These scholars, in conjunction with a very dishonest mainstream African media in the U.S. , the Caribbean and on the African continent then engage in reinforcing white supremacy simply because that endorsement pays well, supports the business, provides the individual with economic stability and personal notoriety. Even those who take the position of being progressive, liberal and radical only do so within the context of White male cultural thought. They only reference other Afrikans who reference radical, progressive and liberal whites. Such scholars attempt to control the direction of the conversation of African people. They are more prone to talk in ‘universal’ themes, ‘international’ themes, ‘humanism’ themes and ‘class’ themes which are all inventions of the white male mind in their concept, assumptions, values to serve the purpose of his maintenance of human supremacy. Thus the conversation for them is always ‘how do we transcend race to a common dialogue of humanity’ which is always based on how the white world wants to transcend race. For them the goal is for African people to prove to the white world that Afrikan people are worthy of respect, regard and assistance whether that argument is posed from the conservative right or the radical left of white cultural thought. In essence they spend a life time promoting world white nationalism disguised as ‘modernity, technological advancement and social democracy’ as defined by the white male mind. They have not had an original thought ever and denounce original thought as invalid and unrealistic because it does not allow African people to learn how to live in a white cultural and social reality. Their combined force of conversation then attempts to drown out the second type of scholar, the African-centered, Nationalist and Pan-Africanism scholar.

This type of scholar has struggled for two centuries to be heard by African people yet this scholar has had to contend with the power of white supremacy by way of the first scholar, the media preference of the first scholar and the innate selfl-preservation of white male culture that has created a climate and environment to starve his scholar out. This scholar has learned the theories, models, perceptions, and concepts and assumptions of the same schools of the white male thought as the first group of scholars yet this scholar has not only chosen to challenge their fundamental validity but has moved into the direction of replacing them with sound thinking that comes out of an African way of looking at the human condition rooted in those cultural concepts, theories, models, perceptions and assumptions of a fundamentally Afrikan value system.
This scholar has been a student of Jeffersonian philosophy, Marxism, Christianity, Islam, capitalism, industrialism, and found all of them to be unAfrikan in nature, sensibility and application. This scholar has started from the position that the white male is not above being challenged in ALL of his theories, models, approaches, assumptions and concepts about anything human.

This scholar takes the position that the white male is no more intelligent than any other group of people on the planet. He has merely had the ability to use seduction, coercion and brutal violence to persuade the rest of humanity that he is the ultimate representative of civilization, human achievement and human aspiration. These scholars, however, have generally worked in isolation from one another, without the advantage of financial support that their peers have received continuously. They have had to struggle against a mainstream African American, Caribbean and continental African media that has been convinced of the credibility that anything worth doing must be a copy of the white male model of human intellect and social organization.
These scholars for the most part have not headed any historically Black college departments in America, nor have they been made the heads of such departments in Caribbean and Afrikan universities. Often times these scholars have not only struggled to print their material but to get it advertised inthe mainstream black media.

They have never been featured on mainstream black controlled programming on a regular basis. They have not been offered syndication by the Black media in the U. S. , in the Caribbean or on the Afrikan continent. They have had to pursue an intellectual guerrilla strategy to get exposure in the Black world globally. The power of white male supremacy is such that those Afrikan people on the right of the white male cultural perspective and those on the left of the white male cultural perspective have attacked them with equal venom, and where they have not been attacked, they have been deliberately ridiculed or questioned.

Those who have challenged them have read nothing of Martin R. Delany, Paul Cuffee, Edward Wilmot Blyden, Marcus Garvey, Ida B. Wells, Queen Nzingha, Queen Asantewaa, Cheikh Anta Diop, Denmark Vesey, Nat Turner, etc.. Their books have not been used by the vast majority of Black history courses in the U.S. And of course they have not been approached by most universities in the Caribbean and on the African continent to use their books for courses. Yet this group of scholars has always attempted to put the needs of Afrikan people first, realizing that the other groups on the planet do not need our help, and are generally helping themselves bettter than we are helping ourselves. All of these scholars have started with the assumption that we have enough genius within our ranks to solve our problems if we are willing to think ourside of the Eurocentric cultural box. For them, we need to learn how to think from a position of power; work together to establish a position of power and be able to threaten retaliation from a position of power.”

Baye Kes Ba Me-Ra

CEMOTAP Co-Chair, Dr. James McIntosh and Brother Lucien Pinckney present two awards to Dr. Ben…more

BROTHA JAMES AND DR BEN

CEMOTAP Co-Chair, Dr. James McIntosh and Brother Lucien Pinckney present two awards to Dr. Ben. Ancestors bordering the award on the left include Paul Robeson, Ida Wells Barnett, The Honorable Elijah Muhammad, Queen Yaa Asantewa, The Honorable Marcus Garvey, Queen Tiy, Kwame Nkrumah, Nat Turner, Sourjourner Truth, John Coltrane, Asa Hilliard, John Henrik Clarke, Nina Simone, Malcolm X, Fannie Lou Hamer, Dedan Kimathi, Harriet Tubman and Khallid Muhammad. The wooden Plaque to the right reads. “We came from the beginning of the Nile where (the god) Hapi Dwells at the foothills of the Mountain of the Moon”. It is an inscription from the Papyrus of Hunefer

WHO IS DR. BEN

R BEN2

Dr. Yosef A. A. Ben-Jochannan, affectionately known as “Dr. Ben” was born December 31, 1918, to a Puerto Rican mother and an Ethiopian father in what is known as the “Falasha” Hebrew community in Gondar, Ethiopia.

Dr. Ben’s formal education began in Puerto Rico. His early education continued in The Virgin Islands and in Brazil, where he attended elementary and secondary school. Dr. Ben earned a B.S. degree in Civil Engineering at the university of Puerto Rico, and a Master’s degree in Architectural Engineering from the University of Havana, Cuba. He received doctorial degrees in Cultural Anthropology and Moorish History, from the University of Havana and the University of Barcelona Spain.
Dr. Ben was adjunct professor at Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, for over a decade (19761987). He has written and published over forty-nine books and papers, revealing much of the information unearthed while he was in Egypt. Two of his better known works include, Black Man of the Nile and His Family and Africa: Mother of Major Western Religions.
In 1939, shortly after receiving his undergraduate degree, Dr. Ben’s father sent him to Egypt to study first hand the ancient history of African People. Since 1941, Dr. Ben has been to Egypt at least twice a year. He began leading educational tours to Egypt in 1946. When asked why he began the tours, he replied “because no one knew or cared about Egypt and most believed Egypt was not in Africa.” According to Dr. Ben, Egypt is the place to go to learn the fundamentals of living. Over five decades have passed and Dr. Ben, a preeminent scholar and Egyptologist, remains focused on Nile Valley Civilization.