A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE MODERN RIGHT TO RETURN CITIZENSHIP MOVEMENT SINCE THE BERLIN CONFERENCE 1884: A PRESENTATION TO THE 8TH PAC PART 1 PREPARATORY MEETING DISCUSSING PATHWAYS TO CITIZENSHIP

Ethiopia, Malcolm X and the Liberation Story They Never Told You Part 2

Ethiopia, Malcolm X and the Liberation Story They Never Told You Part 3

These two one hour lectures combines the information from the articles:

MAY 5TH - THE MOST IMPORTANT DAY IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY AND EVIDENCE THAT THE ANCESTORS OF AFRICAN PEOPLE COMMUNICATE TO THEIR DESCENDANTS ON EARTH AND SHAPE WORLD EVENTS

AFTER BROWN VS. BOARD OF EDUCATION: HAILE SELASSIE, MALCOLM X, MARTIN LUTHER KING, REPATRIATION AND THE OAAU

JUNE 8, 1954: THE MOST IMPORTANT DAY IN 20TH CENTURY AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORY

These are powerful history lessons that explain how the Back-to-Africa movement was subverted by planned integration and the significant role Malcolm X played in the unfinished African Liberation movement and repatriation back to Africa. It also lays the foundation for the proper structuring of African Diaspora citizenship policy in Africa.

Defining the Afro Descendants' Right to Return (RTR) to their Ancestral Homelands on the African Continent

It should be recalled that in 1996 the Economic and Social Council of the United Nations granted consultative status to the Rastafari Movement who were represented by Ras Bongo Spear and Ras Boanerges. [Note: it is unclear which organization received the ngo consultative status. The Jamaican Observer, November 24, 1996 says it was the International Rastafarian Development Society while others say it was the IRGC and still others say it was the Barbados-based Africa Hall ngo.] In 1998, at the United Nations in Geneva, Switzerland, Ras Bongo Spear and Ras Boanerges ask: “What is the responsibility of the nations to Africans in the diaspora with respect to the age-old quest for Repatriation?” Said the Rasses, “Our advice from that committee and from the UN Office of Human Rights . . .. was simple.

The United Nations as an organization of states cannot at this time in any serious way entertain the issue of repatriation without the consent of the African states and the African Governments to which we want to go in Africa. So we were directed to seek the support of African governments with respect to the acquisition of land. And after that, the matter can be brought up again to the United Nations and the issue of [settlement] can take place.”