Truth behind St. Patrick's Day - covering African genocide
- Brother Trice | Instagram @MajorityReport
- Mar 17, 2017
- 4 min read
Ask a Black person how did St. Patrick's Day (or any other holiday) originate or what it symbolizes and they're incapable of providing a logical answer.
Yet Blacks embrace every other culture’s holidays and traditions before their own. They seem to be ashamed to learn or embrace true Black culture’s traditions.
St. Patrick's Day, originally a Catholic holiday and evolved into a secular holiday now celebrated worldwide on March 17, honors St. Patrick (birth name Maewyn Succat). He was a Christian missionary who supposedly rid Ireland of snakes during the fifth century, but also a Romanian born in Britain and an atheist until 16 years old. According to legend, the patron saint of Ireland chased slithering reptiles into the sea after they began attacking him, in some texts referred to as “snake people”. Patrick was supposedly born 35AD and died March 17th, 461AD.
Contrary to the tales of Patrick driving snakes out of Ireland, snakes were certainly not chased out of Ireland by St. Patrick, who had nothing to do with Ireland's snake-free status. Ireland is one of only a handful of places worldwide—including New Zealand, Iceland, Greenland, and Antarctica—that Indiana Jones and other snake-averse humans can visit without fear.
Nigel Monaghan, the keeper of natural history at the National Museum of Ireland in Dublin, states "At no time has there ever been any suggestion of snakes in Ireland. “There was nothing for St. Patrick to banish," Monaghan said.
Snakes likely couldn't reach Ireland. Most scientists point to the most recent Ice Age, which kept the island too cold for reptiles until it ended 10,000 years ago. After the Ice Age, surrounding seas may have kept snakes from colonizing the Emerald Isle. But snakes have not existed in Ireland for thousands of years. Britain, which had a land bridge to mainland Europe until about 6,500 years ago, was colonized by three snake species: the venomous adder, the grass snake, and the smooth snake.
But Ireland's land link to Britain was cut some 2,000 years earlier by seas swollen by the melting glaciers, Monaghan noted. Animals that reached Ireland before the sea became an impassable barrier included brown bears, wild boars, and lynx—but "snakes never made it," he said. "Snake populations are slow to colonize new areas," Monaghan added.
Mark Ryan, director of the Louisiana Poison Center at the Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center in Shreveport, said in 2008 that the timing wasn't right for the sensitive, cold-blooded reptiles to expand their range. "There are no snakes in Ireland for the simple reason they couldn't get there because the climate wasn't favorable for them to be there," he said. Other reptiles didn't make it either, except for one: the common or viviparous lizard. Ireland's only native reptile, the species must have arrived within the last 10,000 years, according to Monaghan.
Having a history pre-dating the Greco Roman Judeo timeline history of Adam & Eve by more 10,000 years, the Twa people journeyed all over Earth spreading to Northern Ireland, Germany and the rest of Europe, even Asia. Twa were known for their headdress, and their hair, who many grew into locks that looked like snakes. They also wore a fez or head covering that depicted the Kemet symbols known as a Uraeus or cobra raised to strike, which is the same snake image you see worn as a Menes, by the Queens and Kings of ancient Kemet (Egypt). The Snake also represented the Kundalini awakening vortex found in the chakra energy traveling up our spines and the helix of our DNA.
It is important to note, in addition to Twa, some names for melanated Afrikan people are Naga, Nagar, and Negus, which loosely means “serpent people” or “people of the serpent”. The name is synonymous with Pharaohs and Kings. In many Afrikan cultures the serpent is not a symbol of evil but one of eternal life, regeneration, power, protection and wisdom.
“Snake People” was code word for the Batwa/Twa people, known widely for their shorter statures
and more commonly known as pygmy. Twa excelled in knowledge of medical technology. Their knowledge was so effective it was seen as magic. Europeans who witnessed this ‘magic’ also feared it. Resulting to their agenda of “running the twa out of town” code word of inflicting a massacre upon them.
Twa great knowledge of herbs and other wisdom which was considered magic by Europeans, later symbolized by the magic dust of the leprechaun. Yes the origin of leprechauns are for Afrikan Twa.
Have you ever witnessed an Irish person wear Red, Black and Green? No! And you won’t either. When you celebrate St. Patrick’s Day, you're celebrating Afrikan genocide and this holiday is clearly an effort to cover up the genocide of the indigenous people of Ireland. Just like they have in Australia… Just like they have in United States... and just like they have in any Afrikan land they have ever stepped foot on.

So before you drink green beer when you get off work this evening or go get a ‘Shamrock Shake’ just know that those who are aware of the true history behind St. Patrick’s Day, often frown upon and look down on Black people who celebrate the holiday out of ignorance. Blacks will make statements like, “what’s the harm? It’s just fun”, not knowledgeable that they are the ‘joke of the party’.
Blacks must put forth effort in discovering the origins of these holidays and traditions. Blacks must put an end to agenda set against them. Black culture follow these brainwashing traditions because they do not think for themselves and believe anything placed before them. Afrikan People and European Holidays are a mental genocide for Afrikan souls.
sources:
news.nationalgeographic.com
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