HomeOld_PostsAlexander the so-called Great: Part Two

Alexander the so-called Great: Part Two

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By Simba Jama

AFTER conquering the land of India, Alexander and his army which comprised both Greeks and Persians settled there for a while.
They were making preparations to invade the south-east of India and were taking their rest.
The Greeks, Alexander included, partied excessively and got intoxicated with wine.
Because of the casualties that the Greeks had taken up to that time, some of them had become weary and desired to return to Greece.
While in India, it is reported that Alexander struck one of his Greek companions to death after the man mocked the general for his affiliation with the black Asians.
After this incident there was an attempted mutiny which Alexander ended by stoning the culprits.
He even threatened to continue to the south-east without the Greeks, but with the Asians.
The Greeks argued that Alexander was not following the Greek way by incorporating the Asians in the Greek army.
They hated the fact that they were almost held equal to the Persians who they had since portrayed as enemies.
However, Alexander argued that he had taken Greece further than any of their ancestors had previously achieved and thus was irritated by such sentiments.
In time although the Greeks remained frustrated, they were consoled by the fact that the Persians displayed complete loyalty to Alexander’s army a factor which kept the army together.
They proceeded to the south east of India and there they encountered fierce resistance from the Nagas.
The inhabitants of south east India were the blacks from Ethiopia who were called the Nagas.
They had a mighty army with elephants and they prevailed against the Greeks.
During this battle, Alexander was badly wounded forcing him to retreat.
As soon as Alexander felt better, he told his troops that they would be returning home and the Greeks were particularly excited.
Soon thereafter, they returned to Babylon which had become Alexander’s new home.
Alexander showed deep resentment towards returning to Greece and many assumed it was because he did not want to see his mother again.
She was a sorceress who kept a great many snakes in her home. Though Alexander did not want to see her, she often wrote to him and expressed her desire to come to Babylon to rule with him as Queen.
The thought of his mother joining him often scared Alexander and her letters often unleashed fury in him.
Years passed and Alexander’s black wife Rokshana did not conceive a son to be heir to the Greek throne.
She abhorred Alexander’s gay relationship with Hephaistion. Because of her intense hatred of the gay relationship, Alexander’s wife was accused of having a hand in the murder of Hephaistion who was mysteriously poisoned to death. Alexander had also married two other women (non Greek) and this made Rokshana extremely jealous.
Since his injury in south east India, Alexander had a poor physical condition.
This led to his death at the age of 32 in 323 BC.
Apart from his weakened condition he also suffered from fever and intoxication.
He was so weak that he could not even appoint a successor. Thus he died without sorting out the succession issues. Alexander’s black wife was finally pregnant and had a son, but by the time he was born, Alexander was already dead.
What happened thereafter was chaos.
The Greek officers Alexander had groomed fought each other, first for his corpse and then for his kingdom which had stretched far beyond the imagination of the Greeks.
In the end, Alexander’s kingdom was divided into four.
The inheritors of Alexander’s kingdom were known as the Diadochi.
Ptlotemy I seized Egypt and North Africa because it was developed and had vast natural resources.
Seleucus gained Syria and Mesopotamia.
Antiochus gained West Asia, and then later Lysimachus held Thrace and Asia Minor.
Cassander ruled Macedon (Greece).
The above constituted the known world and it was all under complete Hellenic influence.
The Greeks called themselves Hellenes and practised what is called Hellenism.
Hellene means belonging to hell.
It was an evil doctrine with Aryan influence and was centred on sending all the people on earth to hell because the Hellenes themselves could not escape it.
Cassandra put an end to Alexander’s bloodline by killing his mother Olympius.
Alexander’s black wife Rokshana and his son were poisoned and killed as well.
The atrocities the Greeks committed against the blacks of Asia after the death of Alexander are gruesome and many.
Whitewashing is the deliberate attempt by white people to hide the greatness of blacks in world history.
This is usually done by way of portraying true black historical figures as whites in drawings and paintings.
The result of this deception is attributing world civilisation to the whiteman and this has caused a lot of confusion and distortion of history.
First to be whitewashed was Alexander himself who is presented as being white when in actual fact he was of mixed blood.
The Greeks had been against Alexander’s non racial approach to Persians and blacks in general.
They also hated Alexander’s policy of miscegenation between blacks and whites.
After Alexander died, the Greeks could now change everything as they pleased.
They exploited blacks set out to destroy their culture and religion.
They changed the black sculptures of the Pharaohs and Buddha and tried to make them look more Greek in appearance.
In Egypt they found there complete works of Science and Arts. They translated all the books they found into Greek and burnt the original texts.
After translating the scriptures of the black people of Asia, the Greeks single handedly rewrote the religion now known as Hinduism.
It was specifically designed to twist the history of Asians and suppress the truth about their beliefs.
Through Hinduism, the whites managed to set up a caste system that suppresses and places black people on the lowest social rung.
The Greeks also killed off the monks and distorted the Buddha scriptures.
They made the blacks of India believe they were permanently cursed and till today, the blacks of south India are segregated as outcasts and are referred to as the Untouchables or the Undesirables.
By so doing, the Greeks were Hellenising the blacks and transferring to them a curse that was originally their own; a curse associated with leprosy.
When Europeans colonised and enslaved blacks they wrongly claimed blacks were the Canaanites; i.e. descendants of the cursed son of Ham.
Western Christianity thus becomes a good example of Hellenism.
In Africa and Asia, after acknowledging the spirituality of the blacks, the whites systematically worked to present a false religion to deceive generations of the indigenous populations into believing the Western religion was the way of salvation.

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