THE VANISHING EVIDENCE OF CLASSICAL AFRICAN CIVILIZATIONS Part I: - TopicsExpress



          

THE VANISHING EVIDENCE OF CLASSICAL AFRICAN CIVILIZATIONS Part I: The Temple Eviden DESTRUCTION OF THE PHYSICAL EVIDENCE The wall surface of the great Karnak Temple of Egypt is literally being taken apart stone by stone, as “conservation” workers are removing dozens of pounds of rock and wall material every day and discarding them as debris. The rate of defacement and destruction of Karnak and other temples is stunning. I have documented in just over half a year the progressive lost and calculated damage to the temple carvings. In just 15 minutes local Egyptian government workers (most of whom are Arab), in alliance with Western conspirators from Europe and North America, are able to deface sacred African temple carvings from one of the world’s most profound collections of art which have remained in reasonably good condition for nearly 4,000 years. With a few crude strokes, these so -called “restorers” and “conservationists” are altering the facial features of relief images, defacing many temple scenes, and demolishing other scenes until they are almost unrecognizable. A careful examination of the pattern of wall damage at Karnak substantiate these points. It seems evident that this crude, clumsy, and incompetent “conservation” work is aimed at nothing less than the destruction of all the physical evidence which demonstrates that both ancient Egypt and Nubia are classical African civilizations . This concerted effort to destroy the physical evidence of classical African civilizations is evident when one considers the facts. For example, with the construction of the Aswan High Dam in 1960, the whole area of lower Nubia was flooded and is now under Lake Nasser, the largest man -made lake in the world. The ancient Nubian remains/artifacts were effectively destroyed before the nature, quantity, and significance of this material could be determined. Tragically, these artifacts are at the bottom of Lake Nasser and will probably never be recovered. This is a devastating lost in regards to preserving the memory of the classical Nubia. Most of the limited Nubian artifacts that were salvaged before the rising flood waters damaged them were shipped off to museums throughout Europe and America. READ MORE HERE: raceandhistory/manu/vanish1.htm Image: Fragment of a colossal statue of Ramesses II. Like many statues the nose is missing. However, the profile and remaining features are typical of someone from Africa. Fitzwilliams Museum. © Copyright, Terms & Conditions | University of Cambridge. fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/gallery/kemet/05.html
Posted on: Mon, 11 Aug 2014 11:50:00 +0000

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