I don't see any nowadays warriors coming close to the works of the aforementioned African warriors. They all had different spirituality or religions for less of a better word depending on the local cultural influences of the land or their native tribe and upbringing of the differing times. But they too all have basic concepts which are shared throughout all African spirituality and theology. But that isn't the problem between them and nowadays warriors. Correct if I'm wrong but I don't see many nowadays warriors take force and demand their freedom in such a way. These days we ask for liberation and justice, those days they didn't ask. We fight politically and academically and even economically in pieces here n there but I don't see one collective use any means and include physical warfare to defend what's natively theirs. And when we do, who are we really fighting? The root cause or enemy? Maybe that's not the way to do it in this time. I don't know, many would argue different. I see Africans fighting Africans and Africans amalgamating with their invaders more than the uprising and lick out in the defence of the people. But Jah say forward. It's only a matter of time before Jah people get what is rightfully theirs
Hail up Empress Nyabinghi and the warrior empress tribes of old and of those to come.
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