The Life and Times of a Black Prince in America (Book One) by Rabii Robin
Author:Rabii, Robin [Rabii, Robin]
Language: eng
Format: azw3
Published: 2018-04-06T16:00:00+00:00
THE GHEEZ AND DOCUMENTATION
ABOUT THE GHEEZ
Hebrew Holiness Order of Melchisedec
The Queen sought to revive an ancient culture, and proclaimed to her members and other people of color, that this was their rightful heritage. She believed this culture, or way of life, belonged to an ancient people called the Gheez (the name given to ancient Hebrews from Axum), a powerful Kingdom in Ethiopia that flourished in the centuries before and after the time of Jesus, the Christ. Axum, the mystic revealed, was territory belonging to the Sudan until Ethiopia acquired it through conquest of war. The opera Aida, the Queen asserted, was an account of one of the deciding wars between these two countries. She never revealed, at least not to me, the sources of her claims about the Gheez, or how she knew we were their descendants; but I don’t think this was as important as the strong desire of her members to be spiritually affiliated with, or genetically linked to, ancient giants. People believed, and that’s all that mattered.
The greatest one-hundred years of these ancient giants, the Queen declared, was during the 5th century, when the Gheez people stretched across Africa, from the Nile to Nigeria, and then to the Gold Coast where they were transported along with other Africans to the western hemisphere. Our language, culture, and ancestry was lost in this hemisphere, the Queen maintained. Her mission was to resurrect this Gheez Nation and its people through the Order of Melchisedec; to return them to their lost culture, lost traditions, and misplaced spiritual heritage. Melchisedec, as we know, was the King/Priest that Abraham, the biblical patriarch of the Jews, tithed to. The followers of the Melchisedec Order, the Queen taught, worshipped the God of the Sun, and “the principles behind the manifestations of the cosmic rays and beams that act upon the fertility of the earth.” The Order, she claimed, was all about living in harmony with these principles.
Educating the members of The Order about their history, culture, and religion was one of the very first steps the mystic Queen took to resurrect the Gheez Nation in the U.S.A. But she knew the restoration required more than beautiful words, and much more than lecturing the folks who literally sat under her feet every Sabbath Day. The Order needed to reach the next level, and, at some point in time before or immediately after my birth, a decision was made to disclose to the general public information about the Gheez and their mission. The specific circumstances that prompted this decision are unknown to me. However, the records and sponsored events confirmed that information was widely disseminated by the Queen to increase public awareness about the Gheez people, and to help the larger society develop a better understanding of an ancient nation that she single-handedly resurrected.
Throughout the ‘50s and ‘60s, the Queen released a series of private and public proclamations describing the origins of the Gheez, the spiritual purpose of the Gheez Nation, and specific details about her earth mission.
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