Jean-Philippe Omotunde

Graduate of the Paris School of Advertising

Name of the Work: The African Origins of Europe (PELAGIA).

A wise man in the service of African history with a capital A, who left us too soon on November 22, 2022.

Originally from Guadeloupe, he was trained in historiographical analysis by the Diopienne School in Paris. He is co-founder of the website Africamaat.com. Since 2010, in collaboration with the Menaibuc Caraïbes association, he has taught Classical African Caribbean Humanities at the Per Ankh Institute in Martinique (France).

"The Black African origin of Greek knowledge" published by Nénaibuc

Warning! This is undoubtedly a work that risks considerably modifying your history of Africa. Indeed, the Eurocentric approach to the history of humanity, commonly called the "Aryan Model" by some objective researchers, makes Greece the epicenter of scientific and philosophical thought in Antiquity. However, the testimony of the ancients reveals that originally, the Greeks had no records relating to the observation of historical, scientific, or astrological facts. Yet, the collection of diverse data was the essential condition for the emergence of the great Egyptian or Mesopotamian civilizations. What happened to Greece? The examination of Greek sources does not allow us to validate the "Eurocentric" thesis defended by the "Aryan Model." Worse still, by designating the Black African world as the true source of their knowledge and their initiation on the paths of civilization, the greatest Greek scholars (Thales, Pythagoras, Herodotus, Aristode, Plato, Diodorus of Sicily) appear as the true first "Afrocentrists" in the history of humanity. How can we explain the presence of 25,% African words in the Greek vocabulary? How can we explain the perfect similarities between Greek texts and the scientific papyri of ancient Egypt?

Part 1. Audio.



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