Indigenous Africans in the Diaspora

Indigenous Africans in the Diaspora History and Culture of African and African Descendants We are creating delicious foods that have been passed down for generations.

Foods created from culinary practices and methods of preparing food that belongs to my Ancestors from oral receipes collected by African descendants of the diaspora.

It's NOT The Queen of Sheba..It's "The Queen of Saba"(Sheba)"Saba" is The Oldest kingdom/Civilization in "Yemen, Saudi A...
07/02/2025

It's NOT The Queen of Sheba..

It's "The Queen of Saba"(Sheba)

"Saba" is The Oldest kingdom/Civilization in
"Yemen, Saudi Arabia" of Black People ..

"Saba" was there before it's called
"Saudi Petraea"(Saudi Arabia) invented by Romans 200 A.D.

"Saba"(Sheba) is the place it isn't her name..

The Queen of Saba(Sheba) name is "Makeda"🖤👑
1,000 B.C.🖤📚📚📚

She's a real person in African History..

Saudi Arabia is Africa and was civilization of the desert ppl Boudini black desert ppl.. it wasn't called Saudi Arabia lol til 200 A.D. is when caucasians took over.. we know The Black Saba ppl(Sabaeans) was there in 1000 B.C.

Middle East is Africa as well on The African Tectonic Plate 🌍 connected to Africa
(Was connected to Africa til they blew the land up to separate Middle East frm Africa for "Suez Canal System" in 1860 A.D. original middle East was called "North East Africa".. meaning Yeshua Christ was born in Africa.. Sheba/Saba/Makeda was born in Africa and The Israelites was born in Africa as well.. they are ALL black folks

🖤🌍📚📚📚 I'ma Historian ..
I can connect the Bible to real history with dates and civilizations..

They tried NOT to put "the black names & Black Civilizations" in The Roman Christianity Caucasian Holy Bible 😆📚📚📚📚

Caucasians are tryna live amongst Black people.. black ppl don't wanna live amongst barbarian caucasians 😆🌍📚🖤 tryna get in Black History because there is no real Caucasian History or no caucasian civilization..

They never wanted us to find the people in the Bible in History because they aren't caucasian 🖤🌍😆

06/26/2025

Willa Mae Beatrice Brown

Most of you don’t know who she is but she’s important. Her name is Latasha Harlins. In 1991, at the ripe age of 15, Lata...
06/25/2025

Most of you don’t know who she is but she’s important. Her name is Latasha Harlins. In 1991, at the ripe age of 15, Latasha went to her local Korean owned food mart and never made it out. The store owner’s wife, Soon Ja Du, mistook her for trying to steal a bottle of orange juice and a minor struggle ensued. Du grabbed Latasha and ended up getting pushed to the ground. Du then went and got her gun and pointed it at Latasha. Latasha bends down, picks up the orange juice, and places it on the counter. As Latasha had walked away to leave the store, Du shot Latasha in the back of the head at a 3 foot distance, killing her immediately. Du tried to claim self defense, but there were 2 eyewitnesses and the store’s security camera showed otherwise. The jury convicted Du and advised the judge to go with the maximum sentence of 16 years. Du walked away with 400 hours of community service, 5 years probation, and a $500 fine, as the judge said although Mrs. D acted inappropriately, her actions were justified. Judge Joyce Karlin states that Mrs. Du was the victim, Latasha is the criminal and would be standing in front of her for assault on a store clerk had she not died. The slaughter of Latasha Harlins is one of major factors in the initiating of the LA Riots. We only hear about Rodney King but she is the original . Tupac had an affinity for Latasha and has mentioned her name in several songs as well as dedicated the iconic song “Keep Ya Head Up” to Latasha. So today we say Latasha Harlins, you’re a pillar baby girl, whether they realize or not. And today, someone heard ya story❤️

Who Was Frederick McKinley Jones?Inventor Frederick McKinley Jones pioneered portable refrigeration, which earned him th...
06/23/2025

Who Was Frederick McKinley Jones?
Inventor Frederick McKinley Jones pioneered portable refrigeration, which earned him the nickname “King of Cool.” After a challenging childhood, Jones taught himself mechanical and electrical engineering and became one of the most notable Black inventors of the 20th century. He received more than 60 patents during his lifetime for inventing various refrigeration, sound, and automobile devices. The portable refrigeration units he developed helped the United States military transport food, medicine, and blood during World War II. With a business partner, Jones founded a company today known as Thermo King. He died in February 1961 at age 67.

"A woman's place is in the struggle"- Kathleen Cleaver of the Black Panthers, 1969 who became a professor of law and Sen...
06/23/2025

"A woman's place is in the struggle"

- Kathleen Cleaver of the Black Panthers, 1969 who became a professor of law and Senior Lecturer in the African American Studies department at Yale University.

Kathleen Neal Cleaver emerged in the late 1960s as one of the most influential leaders of the Black Panther Party (BPP). Neal was born in Memphis, Texas on May 13, 1945. Her father Ernest Neal was a sociology professor at Wiley College. Her mother, Juette (Johnson) Neal, earned a master’s degree in mathematics. When Neal was a child, her father accepted a job as the Director of the Rural Life Council at Tuskegee University in Alabama. Six years later, her father joined the Foreign Service and the Neal family moved overseas. They lived in India, the Philippines, Liberia, and Sierra Leone. The family returned to the United States after the death of Neal’s brother from leukemia. Neal relocated to Pennsylvania, and graduated with honors in 1963 from the George School, near Philadelphia.

Neal then attended Oberlin College, and later Barnard College. She left Barnard in 1966 to relocate to New York and work with the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC). Neal organized a student conference at Fisk University in 1967. There she met Eldridge Cleaver, Minister of Information for the Black Panther Party. The two quickly fell in love. In November of 1967, Neal moved to San Francisco, California to become the Communications Secretary for the Panthers. Neal and Cleaver were married on December 26, 1967.

The Cleavers were under constant scrutiny because of their membership in the Black Panther Party and were often targets for police intimidation. In 1968, after their home was raided, Eldridge Cleaver organized an ambush in which two Oakland police officers were injured and Panther member Bobby Hutton was killed.

Eldridge was charged with attempted murder. He made bail and left the country, first heading to Cuba, and then on to Algeria. Kathleen Cleaver reunited with her husband in Algeria, and in a few months later gave birth to their son Maceo. While on a visit to North Korea, Kathleen Cleaver gave birth to daughter, Joju Younghi.

Alice Coachman was the first Black woman from any country to win an Olympic gold medal. Growing up in the segregated Sou...
06/21/2025

Alice Coachman was the first Black woman from any country to win an Olympic gold medal. Growing up in the segregated South, she overcame discrimination and unequal access to inspire generations of other black athletes to reach for their athletic goals.

Alice Coachman was born on November 9, 1923 in Albany, Georgia. She was the fifth of ten children born to Fred, a plasterer, and Evelyn Coachman. The family worked hard, and a young Coachman helped. Her daily routine included going to school and supplementing the family income by picking cotton, supplying corn to local mills, or picking plums and pecans to sell. Beyond these tasks, the young Coachman was also very athletic.

When Coachman was a child, it was questionable for women to compete in sports. More “ladylike” sports included tennis or swimming, but many thought women should not compete in sports at all. Coachman’s father subscribed to these ideas and discouraged Coachman from playing sports. He sometimes whipped her for pursuing athletics, preferring that she sit on the front porch and look “dainty.” Neither these social expectations nor her father’s discouragement stopped Coachman. Not only did she run, but she played softball and baseball with the boys. Coachman did not think of pursuing athletics as career, and instead thought about becoming a musician or a dancer. It was her fifth-grade teacher at Monroe Street Elementary School, Cora Bailey, and her aunt, Carrie Spry, who encouraged her to continue running. By seventh grade, she was one of the best athletes in Albany, boy or girl. Yet that did not give her equal access to training facilities. Barred from training with white children or using white athletic facilities, young Coachman trained on her own. She ran barefoot on dusty roads to improve her stamina and used sticks and rope to practice the high jump.

While competing for her high school track team in Albany, she caught the attention of the Tuskegee Institute in Alabama. The Tuskegee Institute is one of the earliest Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) in the United States and is famous for its connections to Booker T. Washington and the highly decorated Tuskegee Airmen of WWII. A coach at Tuskegee asked her parents if Coachman could train with their high school team during the summer. Coachman ended up transferring to Tuskegee in her sophomore year to complete high school. Coachman said that “track and field was my key to getting a degree and meeting great people and opening a lot of doors in high school and college.” In 1943, Coachman entered the Tuskegee Institute college division to study dressmaking while continuing to compete for the school’s track-and-field and basketball teams. As a member of the track-and-field team, she won four national championships for sprinting and high jumping.

People started pushing Coachman to try out for the Olympics. She was one of the best track-and-field competitors in the country, winning national titles in the 50m, 100m, and 400m relay. High jump was her event, and from 1939 to 1948 she won the American national title annually. Yet for many of those years, the Olympics were out of reach. In 1940 and 1944, the games were canceled due to World War II. When the games were back on 1948, Coachman was still reluctant to try out for the team. She eventually attended the trials and, while competing with a back injury, destroyed the existing US high jump record.

On a rainy afternoon at Wembley Stadium in London in August 1948, Coachman competed for her Olympic gold in the high jump. She became the Gold Medalist when she cleared the 5 feet 6 1/8-inch bar on her first attempt. It was a new Olympic record. King George VI of Great Britain put the medal around her neck. With this medal, Coachman became not only the first Black woman to win Olympic gold, but the only American woman to win a gold medal at the 1948 Olympic Games.

Upon her return to the United States, she was celebrated. Count Basie, the famous jazz musician, threw her a party. President Truman congratulated her. She also got a 175-mile motorcade from Atlanta to Albany and an “Alice Coachman Day” in Georgia to celebrate her accomplishment. Yet these latter celebrations occurred in the segregated South. In the Albany auditorium, where she was honored, whites and African Americans had to sit separately. The white mayor of Albany sat on the stage with Coachman but refused to shake her hand. She had to leave her own celebration by a side door.

After the 1948 Olympics, Coachman’s track career ended at the age of 24. She completed her degree at Albany State College (now University), where she had enrolled in 1947. She graduated with a B.S. in Home Economics and a minor in science in 1949. She then became an elementary and high school teacher and track coach. She married N.F. Davis and had two children, a daughter and a son (Richmond). They divorced and later Coachman married Frank Davis, who died five years before her. In 1952, Coachman became the first Black female athlete to endorse an international consumer brand, Coca Cola.

Coachman was inducted into nine halls of fame including the National Track-and-Field Hall of Fame (1975) and the U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Hall of Fame (2004). In 1994, she started the Alice Coachman Track and Field Foundation to aid young athletes and former competitors in financial need. She was an inspiration to many, reminding them that “when the going gets tough and you feel like throwing your hands in the air, listen to that voice that tell you ‘Keep going. Hang in there.’...Guts and determination will pull you through.” Alice Coachman died on July 14, 2014 at the age of 90.

Mitochondrial Eve the Mother of humanity.... Queen to ALL of Humanity The Science  Mitochondrial Eve is the name given t...
06/14/2025

Mitochondrial Eve the Mother of humanity.... Queen to ALL of Humanity

The Science

Mitochondrial Eve is the name given to the most recent common matrilineal ancestor of all living humans — a woman who lived approximately 200,000 years ago in Africa. She is is unique because her mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), passed exclusively from mothers to their children, has survived unbroken through thousands of generations. This concept is grounded in genetics, not mythology.

“Mitochondrial Eve.” Unlike nuclear DNA, which is a combination of both parents' genetic material, mtDNA remains relatively unchanged over generations. The mtDNA genome is small, with 16,569 base pairs and 37 genes, all inherited maternally. Mitochondrial Eve provides insight into the genetic ancestry of modern humans and supports the idea of a single origin for all humans.

As people migrated and formed new populations, their mtDNA diverged into lineages known as haplogroups, but all of them can still be traced back to Eve. This discovery further supports anthropology and the “Out of Africa” model of human origins and highlights how all modern humans, regardless of race or location, share a common maternal ancestor deep in the human past.

Thank you to The Brain Maze for posting 🙏🏿

Wyomia Tyus is a retired American sprinter and the first person to win back-to-back Olympic 100m titles. In 1968, she de...
06/11/2025

Wyomia Tyus is a retired American sprinter and the first person to win back-to-back Olympic 100m titles. In 1968, she defended her title in Mexico City, breaking the world record in the final with a time of 11.0 seconds. Tyus also won a gold medal in the 4x100m relay, leading the US team to victory with another world record. During the 1968 Olympics, Tyus wore black shorts instead of the team-issued white uniform to support the Olympic Project for Human Rights

11/06/2024
The knowledge was there....Deep in the Sudanese desert lies the ancient city of Meroë, home to over 200 pyramids constru...
11/06/2024

The knowledge was there....

Deep in the Sudanese desert lies the ancient city of Meroë, home to over 200 pyramids constructed by the Kingdom of Kush. Unlike the larger Egyptian pyramids, these structures are smaller and steeper, arranged in ways that continue to baffle researchers.

Nearby carvings and symbols, some of which seem to align with celestial events, suggest that the Kush*tes may have had advanced knowledge of astronomy. While it is believed that these pyramids primarily served as burial sites, some believe they may have also functioned as markers or ceremonial centers.

Unfortunately, much of the history of Meroë was lost when treasure hunters raided the site in the 19th century, leaving us with more questions than answers. Though they may not be as well-known as their Egyptian counterparts, the over 200 pyramids of Meroë hold fascinating clues about an ancient civilization still waiting to be fully understood.

Marie Van Brittan Brown's 1966 invention is why many of us feel secure at home today. 💡🔒 Her groundbreaking home securit...
11/06/2024

Marie Van Brittan Brown's 1966 invention is why many of us feel secure at home today. 💡🔒 Her groundbreaking home security system had a camera that could move between four peepholes, showing who’s at the door on a TV monitor. She even added a two-way microphone and a panic button to call the police. Inspired by safety concerns in her Queens neighborhood, Marie's patent (U.S. Patent 3,482,037) laid the foundation for modern security systems and CCTV. Her legacy lives on.

You’ll also love this article 👉 https://wonderae.com/people-recreate-their-childhood-memories-by-remaking-old-photographs-of-themselves-as-babies/

Vivien Theodore Thomas (August 29, 1910[1] – November 26, 1985)[2] was an American laboratory supervisor who, in the 194...
11/03/2024

Vivien Theodore Thomas (August 29, 1910[1] – November 26, 1985)[2] was an American laboratory supervisor who, in the 1940s, played a major role in developing a procedure now called the Blalock–Thomas–Taussig shunt used to treat blue baby syndrome (now known as cyanotic heart disease) along with surgeon Alfred Blalock and cardiologist Helen B. Taussig.[3] He was the assistant to Blalock in Blalock's experimental animal laboratory at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee, and later at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland. Thomas was unique in that he did not have any professional education or experience in a research laboratory; however, he served as supervisor of the surgical laboratories at Johns Hopkins for 35 years. In 1976, Johns Hopkins awarded him an honorary doctorate and named him an Instructor of Surgery for the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine.[3] Without any education past high school, Thomas rose above poverty and racism to become a cardiac surgery pioneer and a teacher of operative techniques to many of the country's most prominent surgeons.

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