Jon Ogah

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Jon Ogah

Jon Ogah

@Jonogah

A living sacrifice🔥 A Chosen Generation, a Royal Priesthood 👑 PRE-SAVE my new music “Marvelous Things” on all platforms 👇

To be determined Katılım Ekim 2016
151 Takip Edilen28.4K Takipçiler
Jon Ogah retweetledi
Sycomore
Sycomore@The_Sycomore·
Sycomore tweet mediaSycomore tweet mediaSycomore tweet media
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Black
Black@LilithBlack25·
700,000 ancient books and manuscripts are still intact at Timbuktu University, Mali . They date from the 13th Century to the early 20th Century. It's One of few oldest Universities in the world founded as a seasonal camp by Tuareg nomads. Today's mathematics started here.
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Dr. God Abeg ooo
Dr. God Abeg ooo@josh_uglyasf·
“Holiness is pure motives”. This break down of holiness is one of the reasons I beg people to try and study the etymology of a word so that you can truly understand weight and depths not the vibes and emotions built around it
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Earth Hippy 🌎🕊️💚
Earth Hippy 🌎🕊️💚@hippyygoat·
I don’t know who you are but what I know is you are a wonderful lady!!!
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Typical African
Typical African@Joe__Bassey·
“In Africa, religion is a business in which they sell God.” – Prof. Bayyinah Bello
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Jon Ogah
Jon Ogah@Jonogah·
Also add the “Arab invasion of Africa” which aimed to wipe out Africans, their spirituality and culture from their land (still going on - Sudan). Not just “colonialism and slavery”
Karim Wafa-Al Hussaini@DrKarimWafa

I think a lot about how cultures across the African diaspora preserved West African traditions that were demonised on the continent through colonialism and slavery. They carried them far away from the motherland and allowed them to survive and thrive untouched by colonial hands.

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Eye On Axis
Eye On Axis@eyeonaxis·
Yoruba women in the New York Subway | Kabir Animashaun (kabiruloya)
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oloriAlayiuwa
oloriAlayiuwa@owolanky·
Something just struck me, if our ancestors that were ferried away during the slave trade were able to keep their religious believe even in their captivity and slavery, the Yoruba spirituality must be stronger than Islam and Christianity back then.
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Yorùbáness
Yorùbáness@Yorubaness·
Esu Performance in Brazil 🖤
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Yorùbáness
Yorùbáness@Yorubaness·
Wole Soyinka speaks on how Esu was labelled Satan by European missionaries.
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The Spearhead
The Spearhead@Spearhead_Af·
The Land Belongs to Zimbabweans, Not a Race – President Mnangagwa Zimbabwean President Emmerson Mnangagwa firmly pushed back when American journalist Tucker Carlson suggested that Zimbabwe’s land reform was rooted in race. His response was clear: land is about sovereignty, not skin colour. For over a century, fertile land in Zimbabwe was controlled by a small white minority after it was violently taken during British colonial rule under figures like Cecil Rhodes and his company, the British South Africa Company. The land was not peacefully acquired. It was seized from Indigenous Africans and redistributed to settlers through colonial decree. To frame its reclamation as racist ignores that original theft. Colonial land theft was never legal in moral terms. It was enforced through conquest and racial hierarchy. Correcting that injustice means restoring ownership to Zimbabweans as a people, not targeting anyone based on the colour of their skin. Those who were willing to remain under the same legal framework as Black Zimbabweans were allowed to do so. However, Zimbabwe’s economic collapse cannot be discussed honestly without acknowledging the impact of Western sanctions imposed in the early 2000s after the land seizures. These sanctions restricted financial flows and deepened economic isolation. Economic warfare has long been a geopolitical tool, just as France used it against Haiti in 1804. The West’s pattern has been to punish a nation for asserting sovereignty, then point to the resulting instability as proof of incompetence. African governments are criticised relentlessly for their policy failures, yet the centuries-long atrocities of colonial powers are often treated as distant history. The same global powers that destabilised regions through conquest and extraction now position themselves as referees of governance and morality. So reclaiming stolen land is not racism. It is an assertion that sovereignty belongs to the Indigenous people of a nation.
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Typical African
Typical African@Joe__Bassey·
“To be religious is very dangerous and inconsiderate”.- African lady said
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iNspiritextra
iNspiritextra@iNspiritextra·
Thank you, Apostle Michael Orokpo, for sharing the truth. May God bless you and give you even more wisdom and words to speak.
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