The
recent issues surrounding Egypt
that have dominated the news, and the description of Egypt
as a part of the Middle East, is the continuing assault against the true
place of Egypt
in geography and history as it relates to African people.
We must always
remember that Egypt
is in African and not the Middle East. We must respond
to and correct this white supremacy distortion of history.
Until recently, there had been a scholarly debate among European intellectuals,
as well as some Blacks, on what they referred
to as the peopling of ancient Egypt.
What this question really posed was, “Who were
the ancient Egyptians?” Were they Black, white, mulatto, etc.?
This issue has
been at the core of European history, or better
yet, European historiography (the science of
how history is written) for more than two hundred years. This framework
of European hegemony over the history of the world has had a devastating
impact on African people and the African mind.
It is in this
context that we understand the intellectual devastation of the European
conceptualization of the world order. We should understand this in relation
to our movement for an African-centered education, aimed at helping our
people come out from beneath this European intellectual assault.
Let me use renowned
African deep thinker, scholar, and ancestor, Dr. Jacob H. Carruthers’
paper he wrote titled, “Race of Ancient Egyptians” in helping clarify
this subject. This paper gives us the insights we need to understand in
this regard.
Dr. Carruthers
observed, “The doctrine of white supremacy was launched by philosophers
like David Hume who asserted in 1749 ‘I am apt to suspect the Negroes
to be naturally inferior to the whites.’ This position was expressed in
a different context by Montesquieu about the same time.”
We are guided
by Dr. Carruthers when he explains, “In
the Spirit of the Laws, Montesquieu asserted, ‘it is impossible
for us to suppose these creatures to be men, because allowing them to be men, a suspicion would follow that we ourselves are not Christians.’ Montesquieu
was justifying the enslavement of Africans that was one of the major reasons
for inventing the doctrine of white supremacy.”
Upon further examination, Dr. Carruthers reveals - “Obviously the
emerging doctrine could not gain credibility among those who were familiar
with the traditional wisdom among Europeans that the ancient Africans
of Egypt had achieved a very high level of civilization and had transmitted
to the ancient Greeks many of the major ideas considered a part of Greek
civilization.”
Dr. Carruthers
explains, “Several decades after the founding
of the concept of white supremacy Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel supplied
the solution of this latter difficulty when at the beginning of the 19th
century, he asserted that Africa was ‘not a historical part of the world.’”
Finally, Dr. Carruthers quotes Hegel to demonstrate
the ultimate in European intellectual arrogance, Hegel states, “Historical movement in it
- that is its northern part - belongs to the Asiatic or European world…
Egypt
will be considered in reference to its western phase,
but it does not belong to the African spirit.”
Through this conceptualization
Dr. Carruthers reveals, “Thus Hegel took Egypt
out of Africa and Africans out of Egypt. He also removed Africans from history.”
As an outgrowth
of this kind of thinking by European scholars,
the field of Egyptology began to emerge. Egyptology as a field of study
is the creation of the European mentality that seeks to gather evidence
(artifacts and antiquities) that supports the idea of the European origin
of civilization.
Egyptologists
have literally attempted to remove Egypt
from the geographical confines of Africa and reposited
it within the geographical domain of Asia.
The removal of
Egypt from Africa serves a
twofold purpose. First, it leads to the obvious
idea that Egypt is
not a part of Africa; therefore, its population could not have been Black. Secondly, it serves the purpose of implying that civilization did not begin
with the Black race.
Fortunately, we have always had Black scholars among us, who did not get trapped in the European conception of the world. It
started with men like Hosea Easton, Henry Highland
Garnett, and Martin R. Delany who - “took the
biblical myth of Ham and used it to establish Blacks as the authors of
the great Nile Valley
civilizations.”
Also,
“They… used ancient European works such as Herodotus, Diodorus and whatever modern works they
could find. This tradition has been an honorable endeavor and has taught
us much.” The old scrappers, according to Dr.
Carruthers, “are still
among us slugging it out as per our beloved Professor John G. Jackson.”
Through the work
of Senegalese scholar Dr. Cheikh Anta Diop, Dr. Théophile Obenga, Dr. Yosef ben Jochannan, and Chancellor Williams, the origin of the ancient Egyptians should
never ever be a question for African people. This question has been resolved.
We should be clear that the ancient Egyptians (or more properly called,
Kemetic people) were Black.
Diop points out that Herodotus “after relating his eyewitness
account informing us that the Egyptians were Black, demonstrated, with rare honesty (for a Greek),
that Greece borrowed from Egypt all elements of her civilization even
the cult of gods, and that Egypt was the cradle
of civilization.”
Our scholars, thinkers, and researchers should never again
raise the questions of who the Egyptians were. Clearly,
they were Black people. This question has been resolved!
BlackCommentator.com
Columnist, Conrad
W. Worrill, PhD, is the National Chairman Emeritas of the National Black United Front (NBUF). Click here
to contact Dr. Worrill.
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