The Dark Side of American History Unchained! ⛓️ The True Story of Black Calhoun Explained. 🎬
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After spending most of my life living on the same lands that my ancestors initially made great, and after all they had achieved, still, I was shamefully unaware of the true extent of their greatness.
Although many of the greatest contributions from our ancestors have been purposely hidden, it's nothing less than a blessing to be able to freely recall some of their iconic names, while also reciting some of the most influential stories of Black Americans of the past.
Our ancestors, who despite all odds, triumphantly persevered for a purpose that was much greater than themselves.
However, at this point, our ancestors have done all they could. They are now restlessly awaiting “US” to do everything in our power to build upon the solid foundation that they worked the entire length of their lives selflessly sacrificing every step of the way.
Remember, they gave while being enslaved, and that was the Ultimate sacrifice. Our ancestors created the impossible from nothing and then they passed opportunity down to their descendants. Unfortunately, opportunity is what many of our ancestors never had.
As a result of their tremendous sacrifices, our ancestors first understood that Official Freedom would one day come for their descendants. Unfortunately, many died hoping for that one day that they could say, “I received pay for my day!”
At least I know that was the idea of my great-grandmother Mary Wright Legree (pictured below), who was born decades after emancipation to two CHEROKEE Indian parents, yet she is still enslaved as a middle-aged woman as a result of the immoral methods of extended slavery by Clemson University.
One of the most honorable ways that we can commemorate the memories of the sacrifices of our ancestors is by acknowledging their expansive history of achievements that exceeded and, in some cases, would later inspire the fight for civil rights in America.
In the past, much of the traditional celebrations for Black History studies have focused on the mortars and the struggle for Civil Rights in America. As a result of our attention being focused on a small period of our very deep history, our most Powerful tales of inspiration that are needed to motivate our youth have been stiffened.
In many ways, our choices of who and what we choose to acknowledge in our studies of Black history have failed to effectively motivate the masses.
Despite the discovery of newfound information and related world events that have opened the door to a closer examination of American history, Black History has gotten stuck in the Civil Rights era. Many of these stories, though they serve as significant importance, have been repeatedly recycled. The discovery of the untold stories of our ancestor’s past holds the power to revive our rich history.
Because Black American history is so complex, due to so many missing pieces, for the most part, we have been unable to trace the origins of our true story; and as a result, our minds have become redirected to focus on the sorrows of our fallen heroes, while ignoring the fact that we have yet to understand how BLACK PEOPLE eventually ended up MISCLASSIFIED and ENSLAVED.
Despite the fabricated tale that American history books are responsible for false scripting, Black people inhabited the lands that are now called America for hundreds of years before European Colonization efforts had ever begun. The existence of the Mississippian Culture and The Hopewell Interaction Sphere in North America proves that.
Although American history has been very unkind to Black people, the treasure hunt is in seeking and, finding the truth. Along that path, there are enough hidden gems, if collected, to make you intellectually wealthy for the rest of your life.
Personally, I could never forget how rewarding history has been to me; since birth, nothing has been so gratifyingly life-changing than the moment that I discovered my ancestor’s true history.
Honestly, if it were not for the discovery of my ancestors' history a few years ago, I would have lived my entire life being unable to successfully unlock the mysteries of my ancestors’ rich past. Looking back now, it scares me to think of what or where I would be if it weren't for the power of history to inspire change in my life.
Shortly after researching my ancestor's history, I successfully uncovered a host of Informative stories that I had begun to become familiar with while also discovering that many of my ancestors’ strengths, interests, and personalities all mirrored my own.
I also found it interesting to discover that many of their perspectives, though suppressively restricted due to their enslavement, were very similar to some of my own personal views.
My ancestor's untold stories are primarily responsible for helping me to verify the internal greatness that I had always felt. However, without knowing my true history, I was unable to connect the unexplained cringings in my soul to an official source of power.
Therefore I had lived the vast majority of my life, as a man without a true identity. Needless to say, a man without an identity is also a man void of an official cause and an intended destination.
“Without gaining knowledge of my ancestor's history, I would have never had the opportunity to discover who I truly am. Therefore, a hidden secret that was once a lost treasure to the true story of American history, would have remained buried deep within the rich soils of past pains, oppressively scattered across acres of plantation fields.”
Pictured below my 105-year-old great-grandmother Nancy Washington Legree (CHEROKEE Indian) who was enslaved by Clemson University for over 50 years past emancipation.
Why is the success of this project and the mission to educate All Americans about the hidden truth about the IDENTITIES of Black Americans so important to me?
It is essential to the development and the Understanding of all people that we acknowledge a truth that has caused a tremendous amount of pain and separation, as a result of the miseducation of all American people.
The M.O.C.H.A. Foundation’s Black History production will effectively address the truth through presentations of educational documents, storytelling, and the revealing of motivational memoir that is worthy of your remembrance.
There is no doubt in my mind, with your help the Men Of Color Having Answers Foundation (M.O.C.H.A.) can successfully deliver the untold truth to the public in a thrilling, innovative, and informative style like you have never witnessed before in your life
It is my hope that my organization's Black History production of The Dark Side of American History Unchained: The True Story of Black Calhoun Explained will one day be regarded as the new standard for which all Black History is delivered through informative programming.
The success of The M.O.C.H.A. Foundation’s Black History production is very personal to me, as my direct ancestors’ history was the blueprint for how Black Americans were forced to abandon their Native American culture, in order to remain alive and free in the Southern United States of America, after the Indian Removal Act of 1830.
It is extremely important for all Americans of every race to know and understand this undisclosed history so that millions of Black Americans’ expectations of one day connecting to their ancestors of the past don't continue to fail and come up short.
Many black Americans’ dreams have mercifully drowned out deep somewhere between Africa and the Middle Passage or the Trade Triangle.
Similar to the voyage of Columbus, many of our quests to find our ancestors out on foreign lands, and beyond the Atlantic, will unfortunately never make it back to America. The truth is, though Columbus’ mission never made it to America, however, about 98% of your ancestors had already settled on the land that would later be named the United States.
I've found that two of the greatest travesties in the teachings of early American History are that Columbus discovered America and that the majority of Black people came to the United States chained aboard slave ships.
Until these two misconceptions are rectified, then an uninformed Native Black American Indian population will stay ignorantly conforming to a culture that arrived in America seeking opportunity without any knowledge of survival in the foreign land.
Although most reading this post are obviously all aware that Black people or Native Black American Indians (Your ancestors) built America, however, until this information is understood by Black youth, then, it will be very difficult to help our future generations understand the full potential of their own proven greatness that were already here in America before European colonization.
Honestly, there is no excuse for Black Americans not knowing the truth about their identities in 2023, as there is a universe of easily accessible information that is available for study.
Quite frankly, It is irresponsible for Black Americans to continue to avoid and ignore the damaging effects resulting from the miseducation of Black people, which has nearly led to the destruction of the true Natives of this country.
What did GOD say about those who ignore the truth in Hosea 4:6 ?
My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge. Because you have rejected knowledge, I will reject you from serving as my priest. Since you have forgotten the law of your God, I will also forget your sons.
How and when did Black Americans get MISIDENTIFIED? And by whom?
On May 28, 1830, President Andrew Jackson signed the Indian Removal Act, which harshly removed Native “White” Americans (fair-skinned) Indians from their lands to Indian Territory in the state of Oklahoma. It is important to mention that all designated Indian lands were west of the Mississippi River, and much of the areas had yet to be cultivated.
However, the treatment or fate would not be the same for the majority of Native Black American Indians, as millions had already been murdered during early Colonization efforts by Europeans.
Native Black Americans were also discriminated against during colonization, as United States history does not reflect any negotiations that were made by the U.S. with any of the Native Black tribes in the South, or at least none that were honored.
I found the refusal to fairly negotiate with Native Black American tribal leadership by VP Calhoun and others in governments very telling.
The refusal to negotiate was catastrophic for the Native Black American tribes, especially considering some of these tribes had been in America at minimum, hundreds of years before the arrival of Europeans.
Just as you would expect, American history records several men of European descent and very little, if any Cherokee blood at all, who made illegal deals that were responsible for the selling off of millions of acres of Native Black American lands for pennies per acre.
The reason that there were so few Black Native Americans relocated to Indian Territory during the Trail of Tears or the Indian Removal Act of 1831 is that Native “Black” Americans were enslaved along with the small number of already enslaved Africans who had arrived in America as a result of the transatlantic slave trade.
The former 7th Vice President of The United States of America, John C. Calhoun, who was also the overseer of Indian negotiations, refused to fairly negotiate with Native Black American Indians after his family had been devastated over the years by the response attacks of the Cherokee Indians in Upstate South Carolina.
Although President Andrew Jackson had signed the Indian Removal Act, there is no doubt that it was immorally created and devised by my great-grandfather, John C. Calhoun.
In order for Black Americans to discover who we truly are, it was necessary that we be able to first identify the culprit of our misidentification.
Our next challenge is finding out exactly how this was done and at what point in American history did America use methods to erase our Native Black American Indian culture.
How did the process happen where Native Black Americans lost their lands, lives, and identities all at the same time?
Between the preferential treatment that overwhelmingly favored light-skinned tone Native Americans, and the refusal to negotiate with Native Black tribal leadership by the government, Black Indians (your ancestors) were immorally wronged, disowned, and left to fend on their own by both the United States government and the light-colored Native American tribes in the Eastern United States.
Therefore there was only a very small amount of Native Black American families that were fortunate enough to escape being murdered or enslaved during European Colonization efforts.
It is very important that we understand that if you were Black after the Indian Removal Act or, say, about 1835 and you lived in the South, you were enslaved or killed.
By that time, our light-skinned Native American relatives had compromised and abandoned the Black tribes for their small piece of land out in the Indian Territory of Oklahoma and Arkansas.
Abandoned and betrayed, without any ally or help, the individual power of each Native Black American tribal member in the South had been significantly reduced to the authority of an enslaved person, due to the Indian Removal Act.
Only the children from very prominent (Black/Indian) families were then sent to boarding schools to learn the English language and European Culture while being forbidden to speak their Native tongues or practice their Native culture.
In the image above, you observe a Native American boarding school consisting of all-black students, some with and without their families. However, only a very small percentage of Native Black American families were allowed to go to boarding schools to learn the new European culture during this time.
Oftentimes while envisioning the great length of slavery, many are unaware that slavery didn't end in some areas of the deep south for decades past the emancipation.
Shockingly, my ancestors were enslaved half a century after the emancipation was signed. Therefore, the 4th of July celebrations and the recent observance of Juneteenth are irrelevant to my life.
It is the goal of The M.O.C.H.A. Foundation to make history relevant again for the purposes of educating and inspiring.
I'm not sure how much this valuable truth may be worth to you, but I know that the lie that Black Americans are living today is a very costly one. I'm asking for your help to deliver a message of our true history that is powerful enough to change so many lives, just as it triumphantly changed my own.
A very important, but little-known truth is, that American history has neglected to cover the fact that the majority of all tribes in the Southeast were Black tribes. Therefore, it wasn't difficult to combine Native BLACK American skin tones with the dark African completions of those who arrived in America as a result of the transatlantic slave trade.
My name is Andrew Peppers, the founder of The Men Of Color Having Answers Foundation (M.O.C.H.A.), the only nonprofit organization in America dedicated to discovering solutions to end generational obstacles faced by Black Americans.
I am the 6th generation great-grandson of a formerly enslaved 105-year-old Native Black American Cherokee, Nancy Washington Legree, and the 7th generation great-grandson of her father, the 7th Vice President of the United States of America, John C. Calhoun.
Nothing has a greater feel than learning who you are while also discovering the greatness of your Ancestors in the process.
Please help me to bring the most effective educational production to life starting Black History Month and beyond.
It is my innovative vision to have a portion of this ground-breaking event pre-recorded so that the video footage can be shown during a sector of the event.
Your charitable donations are the only way that our organization can pull off such an enormous feat.
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