Up next

The slave trade Institutionalized for Negroes-A reply_LE(1)

25 Views· 18 Sep 2023
The Renaissance
The Renaissance
5 subscribers
7


The slave trade Institutionalized for Negroes-A reply_FE(1)
This is the Full Edition(FE) of our response video on a comment we received from the slave trade institutionalized for Negroes Part 1 . The comment tried to defend the slave masters propagandist called Dane Calloway being used to replay the slave masters age long game of changing the Negro identity every few years. Recall that the slave master had changed from Ethiopia to Negroes and then black and in 1988 changed to Africans and African Americans and today trying to change their identity again using a mulatto going by the name Dane Calloway and an Indian named Kurimeo Ahau.
Full Videos can also be found on odyssey.com and crystalviews.net
It is also on youtube for Channel members
For those that have supported us, we say thank you
You are welcome to support us at https://www.paypal.me/OurRenaissance https://bit.ly/2OxCtF8
or at https://www.patreon.com/OurRenaissance
For those that have supported us, we say thank you
REFERENCES
Wheatley, P. (1773). Poems on Various Subjects, Religious and Moral.
Swann, A. J. (1910). Fighting slave-hunters in Central Africa: a record of 26 years of travel and adventure round the great lakes and of the overthrow of Tip-Pu-Tib, Rumaliza and other great slave-traders. Cass library of African studies/Missionary researches and travels,
Equiano, O. (1791). Interesting narrative of the life of Olaudah Equiano, or Gustavus Vassa, the African.
Cugoano, O. (1787). Thoughts and Sentiments on the Evil and Wicked Traffic of the Slavery and Commerce of the Human Species.
MacQueen, J. (1840). A geographical survey of Africa: its rivers, lakes, mountains, productions, states, populations, &c. with a map of an entirely new construction, to which is prefixed a letter to Lord John Russell regarding the slave trade and the improvement of Africa.
Johnson, E. A. (1893). A School History of the Negro Race in America from 1619 to 1890: With a Short Introduction as to the Origin of the Race; Also a Short Sketch of Liberia. Sherman & Company, Printers.

Show more

 0 Comments sort   Sort By


Up next