@SoloNtsizwa "You're not a Man until the day your father dies". Nothing ever prepares you for such. The deepest part of it all is knowing you'll never fully heal from the loss and you now need the wisdom to be a better him.
UmLahlankosi aka Buffalo thorn. Used to retrieve the spirit of a deceased person from where they passed on.
Today marks a year since I lost my father. This song is for all of us who have lost a parent. For all of us who have inherited a powerful ancestor
https://t.co/8h4xyPkOz6
The state of your heart dictates the level of spiritual growth you can access. If you are heavy hearted, you will be slow to refine your spiritual power.
Learn how to let go of your wounds.
A people who have been humiliated and never healed will always find someone beneath them to humiliate. The British understood this before the Afrikaner did. The concentration camps did not just kill Afrikaner women and children they created a generational wound…
The deepest deception of Southern African history is that apartheid was an Afrikaner invention. It was not. The pass laws were British. The land dispossession was British. The labour control system was British. The Afrikaners who formalized it in 1948 were building with bricks…
Honestly speaking religious people have a damaged prefrontal cortex.
I'm starting to believe religious Africans are self hating Africans. They are a disgrace to the memories of their ancestors............
Piers Morgan: “What happens to a country like Russia, which committed war crimes emerges unpunished for any of this?”
Jeffrey Sachs: “Well, if the US were punished for all its war crimes, the world would be a better place... if Israel was punished for its genocide...”
If these mass protests were for ‘regime change’ in Venezuela, CNN would be having rolling coverage and studio guests to analyse the developments.
Because it is Venezuelans demanding the return of Maduro, these protests do not feature on CNN.
They are not a news network. They are a propaganda network.
There’s really no space for strict patriarchy in Xhosa culture because women play such vital roles too. Just look at how much respect uDadobawo gets esiXhoseni—nothing serious moves forward without her being involved. That kind of balance wasn’t only a Xhosa thing; it’s how a lot of traditional African societies worked before foreign patriarchal ideas were brought in. Men and women both have to exist together for harmony to hold.