“Zionism is a political philosophy which has brought about the “State of Israel”, the so-called “State of Israel”.
This political philosophy has nothing to do with religion.
On the contrary, it seeks to confuse others and let them think that Zionism and Judaism is one and the same.
I am a conscious African. I know properly my history I know that Africa gave Judaism to the world I know that the first Jews in the world were Africans.
Not only do I know this but I inform everyone who has doubts about it to read a book by Sigmund Freud entitled Moses and Monotheism as a beginning - consequently I know that Judaism and Zionism are not the same.
Zionism had its first organizational expressions in in Bow, Switzerland - in Europe.
Here was a man by the name of Theodor Herzl, H-E-R-Z-L. He was the founder of Zionism. He said that he was going to find the state that God promised the Jews.
Listen to this very carefully. This man, Herzl, was an atheist. He had believed that there was no God. He said God did not exist.
Now, how is it the man who believes that God does not exist is going to find a state that God promised to his chosen people?
I'll tell you, this man is Satan in disguise. Zionism is a satanic movement. It is devil. It is imperialism. It is racist.
It has gone and taken the lands of the Palestinian people and through terrorism has driven them out. And through terrorism, it maintains its power.
And the United States of America with over million homeless sends to Israel billions and billions and billions of dollars every year to bomb Palestinian people while homeless people are here and unemployed are here.
Zionism is going to raise this war and make the people of America become clear to what it is and become anti-Zionist and stop the aid to Israel and use the money to take care of the homeless in this country.
from: https://www.britannica.com/biography/Stokely-Carmichael
Stokely Carmichael (born June 29, 1941, Port of Spain, Trinidad—died November 15, 1998, Conakry, Guinea) was a West-Indian-born civil rights activist, leader of Black nationalism in the United States in the 1960s and originator of its rallying slogan, “Black power.”
Carmichael immigrated to New York City in 1952, attended high school in the Bronx, and enrolled at Howard University in 1960. There he joined the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) and the Nonviolent Action Group. In 1961 Carmichael was one of several Freedom Riders who traveled through the South challenging segregation laws in interstate transportation. For his participation he was arrested and jailed for about 50 days in Jackson, Mississippi.
Martin Luther King, Jr. (center), with other civil rights supporters lock arms on as they lead the way along Constitution Avenue during the March on Washington, Washington, D.C., on August 28, 1963.
Carmichael continued his involvement with the civil rights movement and SNCC after his graduation with honours from Howard University in 1964. That summer he joined SNCC in Lowndes county, Alabama, for an African American voter registration drive and helped to organize the Lowndes County Freedom Organization, an independent political party. A black panther was chosen as the party’s emblem, a powerful image later adopted in homage by the Black Panther Party.
During this period Carmichael and others associated with SNCC supported the nonviolence approach to desegregation espoused by Martin Luther King, Jr., but Carmichael was becoming increasingly frustrated, having witnessed beatings and murders of several civil rights activists. In 1966 he became the chairman of SNCC, and during a march in Mississippi he rallied demonstrators in founding the “Black power” movement, which espoused self-defense tactics, self-determination, political and economic power, and racial pride. This controversial split from King’s ideology of nonviolence and racial integration was seen by moderate Blacks as detrimental to the civil rights cause and was viewed with apprehension by many whites.
Before leaving SNCC in 1968, Carmichael traveled abroad speaking out against political and economic repression and denouncing U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War. Upon his return, Carmichael’s passport was confiscated and held for 10 months. He left the United States in 1969 and moved with his first wife (1968–79), South African singer Miriam Makeba, to Guinea, West Africa. He also changed his name to Kwame Ture in honour of two early proponents of Pan-Africanism, Ghanaian Kwame Nkrumah and Guinean Sékou Touré. Carmichael helped to establish the All-African People’s Revolutionary Party, an international political party dedicated to Pan-Africanism and the plight of Africans worldwide. In 1971 he wrote Stokely Speaks: Black Power Back to Pan-Africanism.
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