Bantu Lifestyle is freedom. It is breaking loose from the matrix—no longer working for money, but for purpose, with the deep understanding of why you are here. When that freedom comes, you begin to see salvation not as something personal, but as something collective.
Just as our Bantu Father and Creator declared:
“My People perish for lack of knowledge.”
Take note of “My People.” It is not about you or me as individuals—it is about us as a people.
Elon Musk does not work to be rich or for money. He works tirelessly to ensure the survival of his species. From Microsoft to vaccines to GMO foods, do you really think Bill Gates is working for money? No. His lifestyle and mission are rooted in ensuring survival for his own kind—while exterminating and contaminating the chosen seeds: the melanated beings.
You, as a melanated being, are already rich. Irrespective of the serpents’ inventions, they fall short of one thing: the ability to create melanin. Instead, they design formulas for lotions and creams that can only destroy it. The tragedy is that melanated beings, lacking knowledge, fall for these lies. They labor hard in the matrix, get paid, then use that very money to buy creams that exterminate the depth of riches buried in their skin, to buy wigs from India, and to consume beauty products that destroy their originality—all in the attempt to look like Indians or Westerners.
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Today, the lifestyle of melanated beings is centered on entertainment. But who creates these programs? The serpents. They create first the problems, then the solutions: colonize, enslave, install puppet rulers, loot the wealth of our Great Grandfather Abaram—our progenitor and great ancestor from the Promised Land, Alkhebulan, the richest real estate on Earth. They build educational systems that dull our minds, teaching competition and destroying cooperation. They introduce religions that kill our spirituality, lulling us into slumber, teaching us to have a personal relationship with a god and savior who does not look like us—one we crowned “King of Kings” in a land that was never his to claim. Yet it is written: the devil comes to kill, to steal, and to destroy.
Through healthcare systems, snakes like Bill Gates sting and poison our genetics. And so, the lifestyle of the Bantu is dead. The Bantus have become the prophetic dry bones that Ezekiel spoke of.
What Does It Mean for the Dry Bones to Rise?
It means the complete restoration of the Bantu Original Lifestyle. To rise again, we must rebuild on these pillars:
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Spirituality Before Religion
Our ancestors communed directly with the Creator—no middlemen, no idols, no saviors imposed by foreigners. We must return to pure spirituality, rooted in truth, nature, and divine order. -
Knowledge of Self
Without knowledge of who we are, we perish. A Bantu must know his lineage, his culture, his language, and his divine purpose. Education should awaken, not enslave. -
Polygamy With Purpose
Polygamy was never indulgence; it was structure, expansion, and responsibility. A man with many wives built many households, strengthened his lineage, and preserved wealth across generations. -
Ubuntu Family Structure
I am because we are. In Ubuntu, no one is left behind. Families, clans, and tribes are bound together, raising children collectively, ensuring no soul walks alone. -
Cooperative Economics
We do not compete to destroy one another—we cooperate to rise together. Markets, farms, and trade must return to collective ownership and profit-sharing. -
Respect for Nature and Land
The land is not property—it is inheritance. We must return to organic farming, herbal medicine, and stewardship of rivers, forests, and animals. Our wealth begins in the soil. -
Food as Medicine
The Creator gave us herbs, grains, fruits, and animals for healing. Instead of GMO foods and foreign poisons, we must return to natural diets that nourish the body and spirit. -
Art, Music, and Storytelling
Entertainment must return to its roots: teaching, healing, and transmitting wisdom. Our drums, songs, and stories must build character and preserve identity—not glorify lust, violence, and vanity. -
True Education
Not the colonial classrooms that dull our brilliance, but an education that teaches agriculture, healing, invention, and survival. Knowledge that empowers the people, not enslaves them. -
Community Justice
Our ancestors had councils of elders, guided by wisdom, to settle disputes. Justice was about restoration, not punishment. We must revive that system of accountability and fairness. -
Sacred Roles of Men and Women
Men were protectors and builders, women were nurturers and preservers of life. Both carried divine power. Empowerment is not imitation—it is restoration of sacred balance. -
Cultural Sovereignty
We must reclaim our hairstyles, our clothing, our languages, our names, and our symbols. Every wig, bleaching cream, or foreign idol we buy is a nail in our own coffin. To rise, we must love ourselves again.
⚔️ At the Bantu Rising House, we stand on these twelve pillars. We do not rise as tribes divided by colonial maps. We rise as one people, one spirit, one army of light. And this time, the serpents cannot stop it.
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