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Kome Caves, Lesotho 🇱🇸
The Kome Caves are a group of cave dwellings made out of mud in the district of Berea, Lesotho 25 km east of Teyateyaneng. The caves are still inhabited by the descendants of the original people who built the caves. The site has been classified as a National Heritage Site.
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Stanley Akenami1 year, 6 months ago
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For most of its history, the Kushite Empire stretched from the beginning of the Hapi (Nile) in Uganda to Aswan. The Kushites are the most influential civilization in history, having invented complex government over large territories, writing, pyramids, stone columns, the arch and the world’s first university. Many of these things we attribute to…Read More
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“When you are praised by the colonizer, it means that you are bad for your people. When they say you are bad, it means that you are good for your people. The day they say I’m good that will mean I betrayed you.”
~ Ahmed Sékou Toure, former president of Guinea.
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Two beautiful (Ethnic) Somali women in their traditional dress from Mogadishu in Somalia. Circa 1936.
The Somali people, also known as Somalis (Somali:
Soomaaliyeed, Arabic: الصوماليون), are an amalgamated clans of ancient nomadic and warrior Cushitic Somali-speaking ethnolinguistic group inhabiting the Horn of Africa popularly known as Somali…Read More -
Princess Joy joined the group
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