AbaWanga

mhamishi's avatarThe AbaWanga Kingdom:

The Wanga (AbaWanga) are a nation of the Luhya people and a historical Kingdom within present day Kenya. They mainly occupy Kakamega County, one of the most densely populated counties in Kenya. The Wanga Kingdom was the most highly developed and centralised kingdom in Kenya’s entire history before the advent of British colonialism in the early 1900s. Today the AbaWanga number around 732,000 and retain the Nabongo as their cultural monarch. The current Nabongo is Peter Mumia II

Contents

  • 1 Origins
  • 2 Settlement
  • 3 Family and Traditional Life
  • 4 The Extent of the Wanga Kingdom
  • 5 Economic activities
  • 6 Nabongo Peter Mumia II
  • 7 See also
  • 8 External links
  • 9 Nabongo Cultural Centre
  • 10 The Way Forward
  • 11 Luwanga-English Dictionary

Origins

The Wanga ancestors were part of the migration that settled in the Kampala area and formed the Buganda Kingdom. In their culture, a king’s brother or cousin from the paternal line is eligible…

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Proverbs from the Temple of Amun~Mut~MuNtu

KNOW THY SELF is one of the cardinal concepts in ancient African sacred wisdom which underlie the Proverbs that are inscribed into the walls of Egyptian temples. Of the 6 great temples in that area, the 2 most renowned are the northern sanctuary Karnak (Ipet Isut, meaning “the most select of places”) Luxor (the southern sanctuary: Ipet Resyt), both representing God/dess Amun/Mut‘s Conjoined Mysteries. Ipet Isut and Ipet Resyt are situated on the east bank of Africa’s sacred Nile River at the fourth Upper nome in Uaset (Thebes in Greek). Built during the New Kingdom [c1400BCE], Ipet Resyt was dedicated to the Kemetic Sacred Triad comprised of Father-Amun, Mother-Mut, & MuNtu – their Divine Child promised/Annunciated to Mut by Amun during their Hieros Gamos/Sacred Marriage [Click for video link @ 1:17:20]. MuNtu‘s birth & the related flooding of the sacred Nile River were celebrated annually during the Lion’s Gate season with feasts & jubilant processions along the 1.7-mile sphinx-&-ram-lined Path of God” uniting the 2 great Temples.

Djehuti, God of Wisdom & Holy Writing, notably referred to the Sacred Nile Valley Lands and Complexes as “The Temple of The World” Below are a selection of Proverbs inscribed on Ipet Resyts walls that would instruct BaNtu (‘people of Ntu/God’ – pl. of MuNtu/’person…’) in deeper understandings of their Universe & of the eternal ubuNtu Mystery & Divine Order/Ma’at that exists “As Above, So Below… As Within, So Without…”

heavn w'in

GODHOOD / DISCIPLESHIP

  • Wo/man, know yourself… and you shall know [the] god/dess.
  • A wo/man’s heart is her/his own Neter [God/dess].
  • If the Master teaches what is error, the disciple’s submission is slavery. If he teaches truth, this submission is ennoblement.
  • Not even the greatest Master can go one step for his disciple; in himself he must experience each stage of developing consciousness. Therefore he will know nothing for which he is not ripe.
  • A phenomenon always arises from the interaction of complementarity. If you want something look for the complement that will elicit it. Set causes Heru/Horus. Heru/Horus redeems Set.
  • proverbs 2Altruism is the mark of a superior being.
  • Seek peacefully, you will find.
  • One’s moral qualities are measured by one’s deeds.
  • The kingdom of Heaven is already within you; if you understand yourself you will find it.
  • The body is the house of the God/dess. That is why it is said, “Wo/man know thyself.”

WISDOM / JUDGEMENT / MA’AT

  • Judge by cause, not by effect.
  • You will free yourself when you learn to be neutral and follow the instructions of your heart without letting things perturb you. This is the way of Ma’at.
  • Ma’at, who links universal to terrestrial, the divine with the human is incomprehensible to the cerebral intelligence.
  • Leave him in error who loves his error.heru sirius
  • In every vital activity it is the Path/Free-quency that matters.
  • People bring about their own undoing through their tongues.
  • If you search for the laws of harmony, you will find knowledge.
  • If his heart rules him, his conscience will keep him out of trouble.
  • Every man is rich in excuses to safeguard his prejudices, his instincts, and his opinions.
  • The first concerning the ‘secrets’: all cognition comes from inside; we are therefore initiated only by ourselves, but the Master gives the keys. The second concerning the ‘way’: the seeker has need of a Master to guide him and lift him up when he falls, to lead him back to the right way when he strays.
  • Understanding develops by degrees.
  • As to deserving, know that the gift of Heaven is free; this gift of knowledge is so great that no effort whatever could hope to ‘deserve’ it.
  • An answer is profitable in proportion to the intensity of the quest.
  • Listen to your convictions, even if they seem absurd to your reason.
  • Know the world in yourself. Never look for yourself in the world, for this would be to project your illusion.
  • Each truth you learn will be, for you, as new as if it had never been written.

    Ma'at ~ Beloved of Djehuti

    Ma’at ~ Beloved of Djehuti

GOVERNING

  • Envious greed must govern to possess and ambition must possess to govern.
  • A house has the character of the man who lives in it.
  • Organization is impossible unless those who know the laws of harmony lay the foundation.
  • When the governing class isn’t chosen for quality it is chosen for material wealth: this always means decadence, the lowest stage a society can reach.

    was-djed-ankh symbols

    was-djed-ankh symbols

  • Two tendencies govern human choice and effort: the search after quantity and the search after quality. They classify humankind. Some follow Truth, others seek the way of animal instinct.
  • Social good is what brings peace to family and society.

NATURE AS TEACHER

  • The best and shortest road towards knowledge of truth is Nature.
  • If you are searching for a Neter (God/dess), observe Nature!
  • The body is the house of god/dess. That is why it is said, “Wo/man know yourself.”
  • To teach one must know the nature of those whom one is teaching.
  • All is within yourself. Know your most inward self and look for what corresponds with it in nature.
  • The seed cannot sprout upwards without simultaneously sending roots into the ground.
  • The seed includes all the possibilities of the tree…. The seed will develop these possibilities, however, only if it receives proper nourishment and corresponding energies from the sky.medu netr
  • Grain must return to the earth, die, and decompose for new growth to begin.
  • All seeds answer to light, but the color is different.
  • The plant reveals what is in the seed.
  • There grows no wheat where there is no grain.
  • The nut doesn’t reveal the tree it contains.
  • Always watch and follow nature.
  • All organs work together in the functioning of the whole.

KNOWLEDGE / TEACHING / LEARNING / INTELLIGENCE

  • The way of knowledge is narrow.
  • Your body is the temple of knowledge.
  • Knowledge is not necessarily wisdom.
  • Love is one thing, knowledge is another.
  • For knowledge… you should know that peace is an indispensable condition of getting it.
  • The first thing necessary in teaching is a master; the second is a pupil capable of carrying on the tradition.
  • We must not confuse mastery with mimicry, knowledge with superstitious ignorance.proverb
  • Popular beliefs on essential matters must be examined in order to discover the original thought.
  • Physical consciousness is indispensable for the achievement of knowledge.
  • A man can’t be judge of his neighbor’s intelligence. His own vital experience is never his neighbor’s.
  • Knowledge is consciousness of reality. Reality is the sum of the laws that govern nature and of the causes from which they flow.
  • A pupil may show you by his own efforts how much he deserves to learn from you.
  • When the student is ready, the teacher will appear.
  • Images are nearer reality than cold definitions.
  • Men need images. Lacking them they invent idols. Better then to found the images on realities that lead the true seeker to the source.
  • True sages are those who give what they have, without meanness and without secret!
  • eye-of-horusTrue teaching is not an accumulation of knowledge; it is an awakening of consciousness which goes through successive stages.
  • It is better not to know and to know that one does not know, than presumptuously to attribute some random meaning to symbols.
  • What reveals itself to me ceases to be mysterious for me alone. If I unveil it to anyone else, he hears mere words which betray the living sense: profanation, but never revelation.
  • An answer brings no illumination unless the question has matured to a point where it gives rise to this answer which thus becomes its fruit. Therefore learn how to pose a question.
  • To know means to record in one’s memory; but to understand means to blend with the thing and to assimilate it in one’s self.
  • There are two kinds of error: blind credulity and piecemeal criticism. Never believe a word without putting its truth to the test; discernment does not grow in laziness; and this faculty of discernment is indispensable to the Seeker. Sound skepticism is the necessary condition for good discernment; but piecemeal criticism is an error.

VISION / CONSCIOUSNESS / AGENCY

proverbs 1

  • Growth in consciousness doesn’t depend on the will of the intellect or its possibilities but on the intensity of the inner urge.
  • Routine and prejudice distort vision. Each man thinks his own horizon is the limit of the world.
  • By knowing one reaches belief. By doing one gains conviction. When you know, dare.
  • Our senses serve to affirm, not to know.
  • The key to all problems is the problem of consciousness.
  • Peace is the fruit of activity, not of sleep.
  • Exuberance is a good stimulus towards action, but the inner light grows in silence and concentration.
  • Every man must act in the rhythm of his time… such is wisdom.
  • Everyone finds himself in the world where he belongs. The essential thing is to have a fixed point from which to check its reality now and then.
  • Man must learn to increase his sense of responsibility and of the fact that everything he does will have its consequences.
  • If you would build something solid, don’t work with wind: always look for a fixed point, something you know that is stable… yourself.
  • If you would know yourself, take yourself as starting point and go back to its source; your beginning will disclose your end.
  • What you are doing does not matter so much as what you are learning from doing it.
  • The only thing that is humiliating is helplessness.
  • The only active force that arises out of possession is fear of losing the object of possession.
  • If you defy an enemy by doubting his courage you double it.
  • Experience will show you, a Master can only point the way.
Mut~Amun~Montu/Khonsu

Mut~Amun~MuNtu/Khonsu

Selected References:

John Anthony West in the Temple of Luxor – 2015

De Lubicz, Isha Schwaller; Lamy, Lucie (1954). Her-Bak: The Living Face of Ancient Egypt. Hodder and Staughton.

De Lubicz, Isha Schwaller; Lamy, Lucie (1978). Her-Bak: Egyptian Initiate. Inner Traditions International.

De Lubicz, R.A. Schwaller; Lamy Lucie (1981). The Temple in Man: Sacred Architecture and the Perfect Man. Inner Traditions. (First published 1949)

Malaika Mutere, Ph.D. is author of Towards an Africa-centered and pan-African theory of communication: Ubuntu and the Oral Aesthetic perspective  Communicatio 38 (2) 2012: 147-163

“Reparation of the African Mind” ~ GDOD (guest re-post)

gdod4When the humble among us do great things reflecting a path to the greater good for the collective, those deeds are usually the gifts inspired by the ancestral realm reminding us of their guidance, living in us. Every time we find ourselves in the past attempting to remember stories of our true selves or jump into the future imagining where we can be as a people, we come closer to the possibilities which motivate what we have to do now. Read More

“I AM ~ SOMEBODY!” – Graffiti as Cultural Text

"I Am - Somebody!"“I Am – Somebody!” is a praise poem to African-Americans written in the 1950s by Reverend William H. Borders, Sr., Wheat Street Baptist Church pastor and civil rights activist. The poem is most often associated with the Reverend Jesse Jackson Read More

Emcees ~ Unmasking the Trickster Deity

“With this breath I thee wed, my true nature… my forever… my being. With this breath I say ‘yes,’ and I embrace that which is real within me ~ All that is great within me; all that is beautiful; all that is self-love and gratitude; all that is divine…” (Dion Mial / Michael Bernard Beckwith – lyrics)

In Africa the word is endowed with the generative potential of a seed through the concept of nommo ~ spirit breathing life into the universe through its audible articulation or call. Read More

Master Drummers ~ The Gods Are Awake!

Mother Africa

Mother Africa

“Strummin’ my pain with his fingers, singin’ my life with his words… Killin’ me softly with his song…” (Roberta Flack).  

In Africa it is said that each person has a rhythm to which they alone dance.  Women of certain groups will gather around an expectant mother to pray and meditate until they hear “the song of the child.” Abbreviated in the name that child will be given, this song is chanted in the village to begin their education after they are born. Read More

The Language the Shulamite Cries In ~ “The Song of Songs”

“You can speak another language. You can live in another culture. But to cry over your dead, you always go back to your mother tongue… You know who a person is by the language they cry in.”
Read More

Towards an Africa-centered and pan-African theory of Communication: UbuNtu and the oral-aesthetic perspective

rcsa20-v038-i02-coverABSTRACT ~ This article supports scholarly findings that BaNtu traditions are among the strongest civilizing forces in the United States. Positing pop music as a paradigm of proof, the author argues for a cultural decolonization and corrective understanding of this expression as a manifestation of Africa’s oral traditions and the global agency of the continent’s cultural custodians. Read More

“The Language You Cry In” …oral-aesthetic musings

“Everybody come… Everyone come together… / The grave is restless. The grave is not yet at peace…” (translation)

Dr. Lorenzo Dow Turner, a pioneering African-American linguist, recognized the origin of these lines in a song he recorded in the 1930s on the south-east coast of America, sung in the Gullah dialect.  Read More

Bantu Roadmaps… Random Connections

Desmond Tutu

“Africans believe in something that is difficult to render in English. We call it UBUNTU… It means the essence of being human. You know when it is there and when it is absent. It speaks about humaneness, gentleness, hospitality, putting yourself out on behalf of others, being vulnerable. It embraces compassion and toughness. It recognizes that my humanity is bound up in yours, for we can only be human together.” ~ Desmond Tutu  Read More

Heru/Horus… Hero

Kenyatta2When the missionaries came to Africa, they had the Bible and we had the land. They said, “Let us pray.” We closed our eyes. When we opened them, we had the Bible and they had the land. ~ Kenya’s post-colonial Father: Mzee Jomo Kenyatta, Prime Minister of Kenya (1963-64), President (1964-78), and author of “Facing Mount Kenya.” These words are sometimes attributed to South African Archbishop Desmond Tutu (Winner: Nobel Peace Prize, 1984; Albert Schweitzer Prize for Humanitarianism, 1986; Pacem in Terris Award, 1987; Sydney Peace Prize, 1999; Gandhi Peace Prize, 2005; and Presidential Medal of Freedom, 2009). Read More