Voilaaa - Spies Are Watching Me - feat. Sir Jean
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
RMH
Show & Tell

No title available
dirt enthusiast

Kiana Khansmith
Misplaced Lens Cap

No title available

JVL

Janaina Medeiros
AnasAbdin
i don't do bad sauce passes
ojovivo

#extradirty
YOU ARE THE REASON
h

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
d e v o n

No title available
almost home

seen from Türkiye

seen from United States
seen from Germany

seen from Australia
seen from Portugal

seen from Türkiye
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Hong Kong SAR China

seen from Kazakhstan
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Germany

seen from Indonesia

seen from Türkiye
seen from Türkiye

seen from Türkiye
@rastafaririse
Voilaaa - Spies Are Watching Me - feat. Sir Jean
(via https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9OC7Ga2Ys0U)
RasTafari School, Divinity Class: Is Haile Selassie I Divine? - Webster's Word Study by Ras Iadonis
(via https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iaQOuW32ZMc)
Hebrew Hieroglyphs You Never Knew: JACOB Cartouche?! Ask #RasTafari Rabbi #BlackJews @LOJSociety
(via https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mAMh3MluW9E)
The Rastafari: Is Lion Of Judah Society Too JEWISH?! Ask #RasTafari Rabbi #BlackJews @LOJSociety
Books by Authors of Color and Those With “Diverse Content” Disproportionately Challenged or Banned
(American Library Association) The OIF (American Library Association’s Office for Intellectual Freedom) has been tracking an increasing number of challenges to diverse titles. Authors of color and books with diverse content are disproportionately challenged and banned. The OIF defines books with diverse content as those that include:
Non-white main and/or secondary characters
LGBT main and/or secondary characters
Disabled main and/or secondary characters
Issues about race or racism
LGBT issues
Issues about religion
Issues about disability and/or mental illness
Non-Western settings, in which the West is North America and Europe
Malinda Lo analyzed OIF’s list of the “Top 100 Banned/Challenged Books: 2000–2009” and the “Top Ten Challenged Books” lists for 2010, 2011, 2012, and 2013. Lo discovered that 52% of the books challenged or banned include diverse content. OIF analyzed the 2014 Top Ten Challenged Books and found that eight of the ten titles included diverse content.
Read More at ALA.org
A Time Before Crack by Jamel Shabazz
Best known as Hip Hop’s finest fashion photographer for his blockbuster best-selling monograph, Back in the Days (powerHouse Books, 2001), Shabazz revisited his archive and unearthed an extraordinary collection of never-before-published documentary photographs collected for his third powerHouse Books release, A Time Before Crack, a visual diary of the streets of New York City from the mid-seventies to the mid-eighties, Shabazz’s distinctive photographs reveal the families, the poses, and the players who made this age extraordinary. [BOOK LINK]
Ernie Smith - To Behold Jah
What South Africans had to look at every day for four decades.
family history
Racism = White Supremacy = Irrational fear of extinction. Why irrational? because the other ETHNIC groups are human too!! In the unconcious mind of the people who suffer from this desease, there is only one human race, the “white race“, hence the fear of extinction. There is no such thing as reverse racism, but for sure, there is the hate that hate produce. Be wise, children of Jah Rastafari. Love righteousness over all. Shalom Ras Tafari.
Ancient Art Week!
Amphora: Memnon with Two Youths
Greece, c. 525 B.C.E.
The British Museum/Beasley Archives
Behold The King Messiah! The King Of Israel Revealed! Hidden History Exposed
Hosanna in the name of H.I.M.!
Students at the government school Lycée Kele Kele, Kananga, Congo by Eliot Elisofon 1970
Fake RASTAS Exposed!? Rasta or RasTafari? Give Us The Teaching Of H.I.M!
SIMACHEW MESFIN maintains the Lucy Art Gallery across from the Roha Hotel (the main tourist hotel) in Lalibela, Ethiopia. He paints in watercolor and acrylic on goat skin. The face of Christ in Glory, surrounded by symbols of the four evangelists and by angels.
Who Said Haile Selassie I Is Not A Israelite? Exposing The Liars Who Lie On The Hebrew King Of Kings
Ancient Art Week!
Vase with Scene: Heracles Slaying Busiris
Greek (c. 425 B.C.E.)
Terracotta, 49 cm.
Akademisches Kunstmuseum der Universität, Bonn.
The Image of the Black in Western Art Research Project and Photo Archive, W.E.B. Du Bois Institute for African and African American Research, Harvard University
Nicholas de Larmessin I
Portrait of Emperor Yohannes
French (c. 1680s)
216 x 121 mm
Engraving; Print on paper
Portrait of an Ethiopian Emperor: Black man bust-length, turned to the right, wearing crown, pearl necklace and embroidered cape, and holding sceptre in right hand; in oval frame with ribbon tied in the upper part, and coat of arms in the lower part.
“Emperor Yohann” is probably Prester John.
[source] [source]
…wasn’t he fictitious…?
Well, yes and no and it doesn’t matter, in that lovely way that a lot of Medieval history and literature end up sort of overlapping and, well, causing each other. The Prester John letter(s) had a pretty big impact, and starting in the 12th century, a lot of campaigns and exploration groups were sent to try and find the kingdom of Prester John. I know there’s at least one rather dry academic collection of documents and articles on this: Prester John, The Mongols, And The Ten Lost Tribes by Bernard Hamilton and C. F Beckingham. From the description:
This study makes an important contribution to the study of the Prester John legend and will be of interest to a wide range of scholars working in the field of medieval history and literature. The principal sources relating to Prester John are reprinted here for the first time in more than a century, together with a number of key modern articles on this topic. In addition, an international group of scholars has contributed six new studies which examine the legend in the context of Mongol history, Russian literature, the medieval Jewish accounts of the Ten Lost Tribes, the crusading movement, and the Portuguese voyages of exploration.
SFF writer Robert Silverberg wrote something that I’ve gathered is a bit more accessible-The Realm of Prester John. From the description:
Robert Silverberg, whose work is well known to science fiction fans, originally published The Realm of Prester John in 1972. The first modern account of the genesis of a great medieval myth — which was perpetuated for centuries by European Christians who looked to Asia and Africa for a strong ruler out of the east — Silverberg’s romantic and fabulous tale is now available in paperback for the first time.
Prester John had a massive impact and effect on Medieval European society and culture regardless of being fictitious or not, and in the end it actually doesn’t matter much (kind of like King Arthur, who first appeared in Geoffrey of Monmouth’s Historia Regum Britanniae/History of the Kings of Britain).
As the article I originally linked above points out:
In 1177, Pope Alexander III sent his friend Master Philip to find Prester John; he never did. Despite that failed reconnaissance, countless explorations had the goal of reaching and rescuing Prester John’s kingdom that had rivers filled with gold and was the home of the Fountain of Youth (his letters are the first recorded mention of such a fountain). By the fourteenth century, exploration had proved that Prester John’s kingdom did not lie in Asia, so subsequent letters (published as a ten-page manuscript in several languages), wrote that the besieged kingdom was located in Abyssinia (present-day Ethiopia).
When the kingdom moved to Abyssinia after a 1340 edition of the letter, expeditions and voyages began to head to Africa to rescue the kingdom. Portugal sent expeditions to find Prester John throughout the fifteenth century. The legend lived on as cartographers continued to include the kingdom of Prester John on maps through the seventeenth century.
[…]
Though some scholars think that the basis for Prester John came from the great empire of Genghis Khan, others conclude it was merely a fantasy. Either way, Prester John profoundly affected the geographical knowledge of Europe by stimulating interest in foreign lands and sparking expeditions outside of Europe.
Prester John is an integral part of Medieval European history, and the influence continued well into the colonial era. For obvious reasons. And in the end, it really doesn’t matter whether or not anyone thinks he was a real person (which is perfectly likely), or whether he was an invention by someone who had financial interest in selling travel gear to Europeans.
I-thiopia, the land where gods like to be.