• Europe forced 12.5 million Africans onto slave ships 1500 - 1866 馃挃Approximately 2 million died during the Middle Passage. Their bodies rest in the Atlantic. The routes are documented. The ships are named. The captains are recorded. This happened."
    Trade Database documents 36,000 slave voyages. Names of 91,491 enslaved Africans have been recovered. 12 million more remain unnamed." #facts
    Europe forced 12.5 million Africans onto slave ships 1500 - 1866 馃挃Approximately 2 million died during the Middle Passage. Their bodies rest in the Atlantic. The routes are documented. The ships are named. The captains are recorded. This happened." Trade Database documents 36,000 slave voyages. Names of 91,491 enslaved Africans have been recovered. 12 million more remain unnamed." #facts
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  • A dramatic video capturing a self-proclaimed prophet attempting to replicate the biblical parting of the Red Sea has ended up drawing widespread mockery and renewed debate over extreme religious stunts. The footage depicts an unidentified man marching boldly into crashing ocean waves in front of his gathered congregation. As he enters the water making dramatic hand gestures to divide the sea, an assistant stands nearby on the shoreline, aggressively shouting and reciting holy scriptures. The demonstration quickly took a perilous turn when a series of powerful swells completely engulfed the man. Nearly drowning on camera, the preacher abandoned his supernatural claims, fleeing back to dry land in a state of visible panic as the ocean refused to yield. While widely circulated within West African media as a "Nigerian Pastor" incident, local digital outlets note the video mirrors identical, historical miracle failures reported across Central and East Africa. The preacher was explicitly attempting to recreate the Parting of the Red Sea, one of the most famous supernatural events recorded in Abrahamic theology. According to religious texts in the Book of Exodus, the Prophet Moses used a divinely powered staff to split the ocean waters into two towering walls. This created a path of dry ground that allowed the Israelites to escape slavery from the pursuing Egyptian army. #africa #news #religion
    A dramatic video capturing a self-proclaimed prophet attempting to replicate the biblical parting of the Red Sea has ended up drawing widespread mockery and renewed debate over extreme religious stunts. The footage depicts an unidentified man marching boldly into crashing ocean waves in front of his gathered congregation. As he enters the water making dramatic hand gestures to divide the sea, an assistant stands nearby on the shoreline, aggressively shouting and reciting holy scriptures. The demonstration quickly took a perilous turn when a series of powerful swells completely engulfed the man. Nearly drowning on camera, the preacher abandoned his supernatural claims, fleeing back to dry land in a state of visible panic as the ocean refused to yield. While widely circulated within West African media as a "Nigerian Pastor" incident, local digital outlets note the video mirrors identical, historical miracle failures reported across Central and East Africa. The preacher was explicitly attempting to recreate the Parting of the Red Sea, one of the most famous supernatural events recorded in Abrahamic theology. According to religious texts in the Book of Exodus, the Prophet Moses used a divinely powered staff to split the ocean waters into two towering walls. This created a path of dry ground that allowed the Israelites to escape slavery from the pursuing Egyptian army. #africa #news #religion
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  • Amin ruled Uganda from 1971 to 1979, a period marked by political repression, widespread human rights abuses, and the deaths of hundreds of thousands of people. His government became notorious for silencing critics and ruling through fear. Whether viewed as a warning, a threat, or a reflection of the era, the quote remains one of the most chilling statements associated with a modern African leader. Today, it continues to be cited as a reminder that freedom of speech means little if people fear the consequences of speaking openly. #africa
    Amin ruled Uganda from 1971 to 1979, a period marked by political repression, widespread human rights abuses, and the deaths of hundreds of thousands of people. His government became notorious for silencing critics and ruling through fear. Whether viewed as a warning, a threat, or a reflection of the era, the quote remains one of the most chilling statements associated with a modern African leader. Today, it continues to be cited as a reminder that freedom of speech means little if people fear the consequences of speaking openly. #africa
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  • Bana Tribe Ethiopia
    #Ethiopia #africa
    Bana Tribe Ethiopia #Ethiopia #africa
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