The Life and Times of the American ProphetCompiled by Aummanuel Bey Real-life is filled with such bizarre, absurd, or unlikely events that it can be hard to believe they are not fictional. Truthfully, facts may indeed be more remarkable than an invented story. And yet, without question, truth is quite stranger than fiction. This phrase first appeared in Byron’s “Don Juan” (1823)—“‘Tis strange—but true; for truth is always strange,—stranger than fiction” and has been repeated ever since, often with ironic variations. Mark Twain had it in Pudd’nhead Wilson’s New Calendar (1893), “Truth is stranger than fiction— to some people, but I am measurably familiar with it.” And novelist Margaret Echard wrote, “Truth is not only stranger than fiction but...
Muurish Progeniture Compiled by Aummanuel Bey There is an obvious agenda to obscure the origins of the "Moor;" and more specifically confine "Moors" solely to the worlds "black" continent (Africa), in the region known as "Mauritania." The "Moorish" identity and nationality has been wrongly ostracized, vilified and denounced based upon fictitious narratives. This slanderous campaign of lies has sought to further denationalize "Moors" while painting them as foreign invaders. However, even with the book burnings and confiscation of historical accounts, much has remained to illuminate the birth cradle of the "Moor." We have various mythos passed down, which have yet to be read in their proper context by the masses. There are mythological accounts based on misinterpretation of...
Muurish WorldCompiled by Aummanuel Bey All derivatives and variants of the Moorish Identity in their respective languages found worldwide are etymologically related, and possibly traced back to the Americas. Variations in the likes of “Moor,” “Maur,” “Mauros,” “Mohr,” “Maor,” “Muur,” “Amor,” “Mar,” “Amur,” “Amar,” “Amer,” “Amaru,” “Amaro,” “Meru,” “Meri,” “Moro,” “Maurice,” and even “American;” all share similar linguistic roots as variants of “Mar” or “Mer” is its base derived from the “M-R” which is then traced to the “Mu.” Truly the historical documentation of the word is only but a fraction of its long legacy. Throughout various languages its linguistic root can be witnessed in words such as “Moriya” of Japan, “Merina” of Madagascar, “Maori” of Polynesia,...
Moors ,the ancient ProtogenoiCompiled by Aummanuel Bey Much is written regarding the “Muur,” and yet still there’s even more neglected to be written. The “Muur” has primarily been defined and described as the Muslim inhabitants of the Maghreb, the Iberian Peninsula, Sicily, and Malta during the Middle Ages. But this has only defined the “Moor” of the Eastern hemisphere, what of his brethren of the West; whom they descend down from. There has been much speculation and presumptions concerning the origins of the “Muur,” as history have blurred much of their ancestral roots while falsely giving North Africa as their nativity. The word “Moor” can be traced back to many etymological variants that make reference to “The...
Primordial Negus (The True "Imago Dei") Compiled by Ammanuel Bey The TV series Watchmen’s predominant visual motif: the primordial egg itself. The concept of the cosmic egg is quite expansive and universal, so here's a basic breakdown of Wikipedia's definition: "Typically, the world egg is a beginning of some sort, and the universe or some primordial being comes into existence by "hatching" from the egg, sometimes lain on the primordial waters of the Earth." An important totem for the central focus in expressing occultic ideas such as "Imago Dei," or 'Image of God,' meaning in likeness, or similarity, to God. Ideas such as Orphicism and their orphic god that emerges from the cosmic egg or thoughts of Hermopolitan...