...
Post A Reply
my profile
|
directory
login
|
register
|
search
|
faq
|
forum home
»
EgyptSearch Forums
»
Deshret
»
It looks like us "white racists" are the ones winning the race debates!
» Post A Reply
Post A Reply
Login Name:
Password:
Message Icon:
Message:
HTML is not enabled.
UBB Code™ is enabled.
[QUOTE]Originally posted by Brada-Anansi: [QB] Ahh YESSS limpdickmann,rage on son rage on.you and your ancestors are so over come with fear,that even in our most powerless era you sought to mitigate your fears by burning and hanging those who could do you little or no harm.The sight of our splended black manhood makes you feel inadequate,so you look at your white wife and know from the very depths of your shattered soul she would like notthing better than to run-off with he who waits in the dark.you invented laws to keep us poor and a hundred ways to dehumanize us....you arm yourself to the teeth created the most dreaded weapons plunder the globe to amass wealth...but still you are afraid of the dark.The dark masses on your southern boarders,the yellow peril that dominates your class room...The Moor & his wife who sits in the house of the whites...The whites who no longer fears genetic annihilation,for they see themselves as mearly human.so rage on son rage on your end is nigh and you and i know it. :D The “Moor” in these and other texts of similar provenance underscores for Christians not only the Muslims’ religious and cultural otherness but also and more particularly their “foreign,” African origins, their misplaced and thus temporary presence as outsiders without roots in Castile. Having come from another, darker place, “the Moors” surely belonged somewhere else. It was not much of a conceptual leap for Christians of Castile and Leon (and Aragon, Catalonia, Navarre and Galicia) to believe that “Spain” could not find itself as a nation until such racial and religious others vanished or were forced to disappear incrementally, as eventually happened in the late fifteenth through early seventeenth centuries. Because of its potent connotations, “Moor” arguably served as the principal linguistic vehicle for repressing Muslims and suppressing the indigenous nature of the Andalusi Muslim cultural heritage. It enabled Christians in thirteenth-century Castile to dismiss the substantially mixed Andalusi Muslim population and its own Mudejars as foreign and to disregard the extent of social and cultural ties among all Andalusis, including Muslims from Africa. As such, the term Moor signifies Christian longing for a world of religious, cultural, ethnic, and political unity rather than diversity. [/QB][/QUOTE]
Instant Graemlins
Instant UBB Code™
What is UBB Code™?
Options
Disable Graemlins in this post.
*** Click here to review this topic. ***
Contact Us
|
EgyptSearch!
(c) 2015 EgyptSearch.com
Powered by UBB.classic™ 6.7.3