Showing posts with label Mali. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mali. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 22, 2025

Short Attn Span Theater: Black superiority?

Black Beauty & Hair – UK's No. 1 Black magazine 2017

Warrior Queen of Angola Nzinga vs. Portuguese - George Washington's Black valet Wm. Lee
  • African Mansa Musa (died in 1337), Emperor of Mali, the richest man in history and the richest country, a place of wisdom with books and scholarship to rival any European university: ignored and hidden in colonial history

Friday, December 29, 2023

Right Perception with Ajahn Brahmali

Ajahn Brahmali, Nov. 10, 2023; BSWA; Amber Larson, Dhr. Seven (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly

Right Perception and Buddhism | Ajahn Brahmali | BSWA
(Buddhist Society of Western Australia) Streamed live. Western Theravada Buddhist monk in the Thai Forest Tradition Ajahn Brahmali explains the importance of right perception in our spiritual practice -- as this guide us to become a more moral and kinder person able to experience deep meditation (absorption).

Support the BSWA in making the Buddha's teachings available for free online via Patreon: buddhistsocietywa. Recorded at Dhammaloka Buddhist Centre, Perth, Western Australia. Copyright Buddhist Society of Western Australia bswa.org.

Buddhist Society of Western Australia’s teaching's page: bswa.org/teachings. To find the full playlist visit: buddhistsocietywa or click on "Playlists" in the top menu bar. Featured playlist 396 videos.

Thursday, September 28, 2023

First before Columbus (documentary)


An inglorious Columbus
An Inglorious Columbus
; or, Evidence that [Chinese Buddhist monk] Hwui Shan and a party of Buddhist monks from Afghanistan [the place of the Buddha's origin, Shakya Land or the mahajanapada of the warrior nomads that was not a part of proto-India but on the northwest frontier of the future empire of India brought together by the Buddhist King Ashoka, at that time called Gandhara and later Scythia] discovered America in the fifth century, A.D. by Vining, Edward Payson, 1847-1920

Chinese named their discovery "Fu Sang" (Mexico, California, etc.)

Wednesday, November 23, 2022

History's richest man: Black Emperor Musa

Crystal Q., CC Liu, Sheldon S. (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly Wikipedia edit

Black Emperor (Mansā) Mūsā (circa 1312–1337 [a]) was the ninth [3] emperor (mansa) of the Mali Empire, Africa, which reached its territorial peak during this king's reign.

Emperor Musa is known for his unimaginable wealth and has sometimes been called the wealthiest person in history, far richer than Mexico's Carlos Slim, Warren Buffet, Bill Gates, or Elon Musk.

His riches came from the mining of gold and salt deposits in the Mali Empire, along with the slave and ivory trade [4, 5]. 

At the time of Musa's ascension to the throne, Mali in large part consisted of the territory of the former Ghana Empire, which Mali had conquered.

The Mali Empire consisted of land that is now part of Guinea, Senegal, Mauritania, The Gambia, and the modern state of Mali.

Musa was so rich that when he went on a Muslim pilgrimage (hajj) to Mecca in 1324, traveling with an enormous entourage and a vast supply of gold, he disrupted economies.

En route, he spent time in Cairo, Egypt, where his lavish gift-giving is said to have noticeably affected the value of gold in Egypt and garnered the attention of the wider Muslim world.

Buddhist Nalanda: World's first university?
Emperor Musa expanded the borders of the Mali Empire, in particular incorporating the cities of Gao and Timbuktu (a great ancient center of learning and hope to possibly the oldest residential university in history, even older than the oldest known university, Buddhist Nalanda (regarded by scholars as the world's first residential university), which Buddhist records say came after a kind of university system in Taxila or Takkasila, Indo-Pakistan, where the Buddha as the Bodhisatta went to school in a past life (Jataka Tales)] into its territory. More

Emperor Musa of Mali is renowned for his wealth and generosity. Online articles in the 21st century have claimed that Mansa Musa was the richest person of all time [89].

This claim is often sourced to an article in CelebrityNetWorth [89], which claims that Musa's wealth was the equivalent of US $400 billion [90].

CelebrityNetWorth has been criticized for the unreliability of its estimates [91].

Historians such as Hadrien Collet have argued that Emperor Musa's wealth is impossible to accurately calculate [89, 85].

Contemporary Arabic sources may have been trying to express that Emperor Musa had more gold than they thought possible, rather than trying to give an exact number [92].

Furthermore, it is difficult to meaningfully compare the wealth of historical figures such as Mansa Musa, due to the difficulty of separating the personal wealth of a monarch from the wealth of the state and the difficulty of comparing wealth in highly different societies [93].

Emperor Musa may have brought as much as 18 tons of gold on his pilgrimage to Mecca [94], the center of Islam, equal in value to over US $957 million in 2022 [95].

Emperor Musa himself further promoted the appearance of having vast, inexhaustible wealth by spreading rumors that gold grew like a plant in his kingdom [96].

According to some Arabic writers, Emperor Musa's gift-giving caused a depreciation in the value of gold in Egypt.

Al-Umari said that, before Emperor Musa's arrival, a mithqal of gold was worth 25 silver dirhams, but that it dropped to less than 22 dirhams afterward and did not go above that number for at least 12 years [97].

Though this has been described as having "wrecked" Egypt's economy [85], the historian Warren Schultz has argued that this was well within normal fluctuations in the value of gold in Mamluk Egypt [98]. More

Monday, May 18, 2009

Nagas in the News: Dogon

MALI -- The Dogon people, famous for their early contact with extraterrestrials (as the startling evidence of their cosmology and celebrations indicate in anthropological circles), also have strong views on the origin of human beings. Apparently, we are descended from (or came about through the intervention of) Nagas (reptilians). They live among and honor crocodiles for this.

Most of Asia and Mesoamerica (notably Cambodian and Mayan cultures) echo this view. Nagas are responsible for modern humans in Buddhist, Hindu, and Jain cosmologies. And they are involved in the bloodlines of ruling families to this day. The connection is genetic, and the control exerted is largely through humans.

Whether they are stationed in the earth in a tangible form, visible only through transpersonal journeying in a subtler form, or possessing individuals with the genetic receptivity to accommodate them, nagas are represented by reptiles (snakes, dragons, plumed serpents, dinosaurs, serpentine sea creatures, and other reptiles). And the Dogon honor them as such.

(Reuters) A community in Mali shares a special bond with crocodiles. The residents of Borko town in central Mali have lived alongside crocodiles for years.

The mystical Dogon community believe the animals are positive entities watching over them and regard them as their relatives. A Reuters Africa Journal report (May 16, 2009).