Religion as civilising mission

September 23: The Afrocentric New Year Rooted in Cosmic Balance

Every January 1, the world erupts in fireworks. Yet this “New Year” is an arbitrary construct, born from Roman emperors, papal decrees, and Europe’s Gregorian calendar. Africans who seek to reclaim their spiritual inheritance ask a deeper question: When does the true year begin according to African wisdom? One rising Afrocentric interpretation answers: September 23, the day […]

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Glass Jaw Diplomacy and Thin Skinned Titans: Politics of the Whine and the Inability to Take a Counterpunch

Diplomatic earthquakes rarely strike without warning. But when they do, the aftershocks ripple across borders, ideologies, and history itself. This week, the U.S. made headlines by expelling South Africa’s ambassador, Ebrahim Rasool, in a blaze of controversy that lays bare a simmering clash of narratives. At the heart of it? A fiery online lecture where

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Holy Empires: The Disruption and Psychological Confusion of African Identities

Religion in Africa has often been intertwined with colonialism, imperialism and economic motives throughout history. Subsequently, it has left an ongoing disorientation and identity crises. Arguably, the progressive and natural evolution of African cultures and civilization has not been organic and to the most part, has been violently disrupted. Colonial powers frequently invoked religious rhetoric

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