@yemaya_oshun: European civilization emerged from an obsession with escaping death — spiritual, physical, and symbolic. In its denial of mortality, it denied the natural order that most of the world accepted as sacred: that death feeds life, that endings sustain beginnings. Across the African continent, death was never an exile from life. The Yorùbá saw Òrun (the realm of spirits) as inseparable from Ayé (the realm of the living). The Dogon of Mali embedded celestial death cycles in their cosmology — the death of stars mirrored the rebirth of souls. Among the Akan, funerals were not tragedies but reunions. Visit me on BuyMeACoffee for my full essay titled The Fear of the End as the Beginning of Empire on this topic. SUPPORT THE WORK YALL!! Donate at www.jorgethevanguard.com @Jorgethevanguard10 @ningthevanguard @terrifiedllama69 #EuropeansNeverUnderstoodDeath #DecolonizeHistory #AncestralWisdom #GlobalTruthTelling #MemoryRebellion
I heard somewhere that people in non-euro-colonial cultures who have auditory hallucinations hear their families and friends voices. Whereas us yt settlers and euro-colonials hear violence.
2025-10-12 21:52:24
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AarontheVanguard :
preach it from there mountain tops
2025-10-13 11:39:01
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Lou Wolf :
love these vanguard profiles
2025-10-12 18:09:46
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MagtheVanguard :
Pre-Christian traditions that embraced cyclical life — Celtic Samhain, Nordic ancestor veneration, Greco-Roman mystery rites — were rebranded as “witchcraft” or “devil worship.” Death’s wisdom was hunted, burned, and buried.
2025-10-12 17:37:52
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Delamano :
💯💯
2025-10-12 19:33:12
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9762374 :
💯💯💯💯💯💯
2025-10-12 17:40:08
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