Daily Dispatches from Kemet - Day 3: The Great Pyramid and the Sphinx
I write this dispatch after a long day of amazing visits to some of the most popular Ancient Kemetic sites. I began the day by presenting an interactive lecture entitled, “African Ancestry Revealed: Who Were the Ancient Egyptians”. The lecture debunks the 4 major arguments in favor of a non-African Kemet. As day 3 marks our first day of touring Kemet’s major archeological sites, it is of critical importance to acknowledge the role that our African ancestors played in giving civilization to the world. The four basic anti-African arguments include:
Historian Jabari Osaze will be posting
daily descriptions of this year's African Genesis Institute trip to Egypt. He's
has been leading tours of historic sites in Egypt for the African Genesis
Institute for over a decade. Follow along to retrace the ancient footsteps of
our African ancestor who gave civilization to the world.
I write this dispatch after a long day of amazing visits to some of the most popular Ancient Kemetic sites. I began the day by presenting an interactive lecture entitled, “African Ancestry Revealed: Who Were the Ancient Egyptians”. The lecture debunks the 4 major arguments in favor of a non-African Kemet. As day 3 marks our first day of touring Kemet’s major archeological sites, it is of critical importance to acknowledge the role that our African ancestors played in giving civilization to the world. The four basic anti-African arguments include:
1) Europeans
(Aryans) from the North came to Kemet to build Ancient Kemet.
2) Focus
on Kemet’s later foreign rulers in order to imply their role is primary.
3) Aliens
or citizens from an unknown lost civilization built Ancient Kemetic
civilization.
4) Ancient
Kemetic was built by the regions current (Arabic or Asiatic) inhabitants.
After our lecture, our group took
a short bus ride to the ancient mortuary city known as Saqqara. The city remained
an important burial site for over 2,000 years.
It features many of the early burial structures known today as mastabas
(or the pr djet, the “house of eternity”, in the Ancient Kemetic language). The early African multi-genius Imhotep develops his
Step Pyramid (mrkhut) by stacking six large pr djets on top of each
other. Our group reveled at the
magnificent Step Mrkhut, which was the world’s first building in stone before
entering the later mrkhut of the 5th Dynasty ruler Teti. Teti’s mrkhuti is unique as it features a
version of the world’s oldest spiritual document, known as the Pyramid Texts
etched from floor to ceiling on its inner walls.
Our group next traveled to the
only remaining of the world’s Seven Wonders of the World, the Great Mrkhut of
King Khufu on the Giza Plateau. Originally standing
at the height of 481 feet, the Great Mrkhut is comprised of
approximately 2.5 million blocks weighing on average 2.5 tons. Each of the
outer blocks were placed with such precision without the use of mortar, that
one cannot fit a much as a sheet of paper in between them. Many have unsuccessfully attempted to
replicate the mrkhut with modern tools, but we still do know exactly how it was
made. Certainly Ancient Kemet should be
considered one of the world’s earliest high-technology civilizations.
In order to get a sense of the interior of
the mrkhut, our group entered the 3rd mrkhut on the Giza Plateau,
which was built by King Khufu’s grandson, Menkaura. While smaller than either his grandfather’s
or his father’s mrkhuti, Menkaura’s mrkhut features 13 courses of red granite
on its lower levels and a much more intricate series of descending passages and
rooms.
Finally our group raced to the
site of the magnificent statue erroneously known as the sphinx today. Most of the sites in Egypt are scheduled to
close around 3 PM due to the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.
Our group discussed the original
name of the sphinx, Heruemakhet, or “Heru on the Horizon”. The name “Sphinx”, comes to us from the
Greeks, who viewed the sphinx as a mysterious monster who strangled its
victims. My brief lecture informed the
group of the hidden sacred meanings of the Heruemakhet. The statue is a well-structured model of the
basic tenets of Ancient Kemetic spirituality.
For more on these topics, watch the brief video of my lecture which was
conducted in 2009 entitled Secrets of the Great Sphinx.
We then concluded our day with
trips to a local perfumed oil factory.
Several members of the group stated that the day’s activities were so
amazing that it will take several weeks to truly understand their significance. I believe that the opening lecture and visits
will properly prepare them for our visit to the Egyptian Museum in Cairo. The institution is undoubtedly one of the
world’s most important museums, boasting more antiquities than any other museum
in the world. Perhaps we’ll also find
out more about damage which may have been done to several of the artifacts
during the chaotic days of the the nations revolution.
Until tomorrow … Jabari Osaze
from the Jewel of Africa, Kemet.