Since 1492, Black American History Month has been very important in recognizing the achievements of African Americans in the United States. However, the celebration of Black History Month is limited to three basic events in black American history. It was the period of slavery, and it was also endured by some of our ancestors in the struggle of slavery and our struggle for freedom and acceptance by the ruled majority.
Therefore, the celebration of black history is limited to the celebration of slavery, the celebration that the "first" black man was allowed to enter a certain aspect of mainstream society, or the celebration that the first black man was deprived of his position for a long time. This may include commending the first black people who became members of Congress during the reconstruction period, or scientists like George W. Carver, or the first black people who became millionaires through hard work, invention, originality and good planning, such as Mrs. CJ Walker, who is the inventor and creator of many black people and other women's beauty products.
Although it is very important to know the history of America and America during the period of slavery and up to now. We were not born under slavery, nor were we born in the Atlantic Ocean without history, culture or heritage. Our history began in Africa tens of thousands of years before the ice age. In fact, it has been found that Africans in Semlik Valley in Congo (Zaire) were already creating complex tools of stones and bones from 0/00,000 BC to 70,000 BC. The first evidence of etching was found on a piece of red ocre about 70,000 to 65,438+000,000 years ago in blombos cave. Jewelry evidence dating back more than 50,000 years was found in the same cave.
During these periods, Africans made some of the most important trips in history by land and sea. Many people sailed to the Middle East, India, Central Asia, Melanesia, Australia, and East Asia. Later, around 30,000 BC, some people arrived in America by Asian and Atlantic routes. The evidence that Africans may arrive in America by boat is based on two facts of ancient African history.
One is the existence of prehistoric marine culture in today's "dry" Sahara, which was "wet" about 30,000 years ago and filled with a huge inland sea. The second fact is that from as early as100,000 BC to as near as 2000 BC, the African/black culture that existed in the Sahara land area full of "wet" lakes migrated to India, America, Southeast Asia, Japan, Melanesia and Australia.
In fact, African-Americans/blacks in Papua, India and Melanesia (see Vrajshekar's Black Dalits in India) have admitted that their ancestors originated in Africa and settled in Asia as the first human beings.
History and civilization of black matter
The earliest black civilization did not begin in Egypt or Nubia, but in Dafour. This area contains some of the earliest evidence of human settlement on the earth, and it is a part of prehistoric Sahara civilization, which is called aquatic civilization. Aquatic civilization is the first civilization on earth to produce all kinds of arts and crafts, papyrus shipbuilding and many cultural features, including mummies, later discovered in Egypt.
With the drying up of the Sahara Desert, some Africans who speak Ding Man's super language began to migrate to Egypt, central and southern Africa, America, India, Mesopotamia, Indian Ocean Islands, China and Australia. These migrations took place in the later period of human history, between 30,000 BC and 2,000 BC, when African culture was established and spread from Africa to other parts of the world.
The civilization produced by the Sahara mother civilization still exists after the Sahara dries up and becomes a desert. This culture is carried forward in the Sahara Crescent, where the plateau is higher and more suitable for cultural prosperity. (See' Sahara Crescent', by Clyde Winters).