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THE VANISHING EVIDENCE OF CLASSICAL AFRICAN CIVILIZATIONS: |
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Tutankhamen Fraud Alert! |
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Prof. Manu Ampim - 2005 Update |
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CAIRIO SYMPOSIUM (1974)
The question of “What race were the ancient Egyptians?” was emphatically resolved at the historic international Cairo Symposium, held from January 28 – February 3, 1974. The United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) convened 20 of the world’s top Egyptologists to debate the race of the founders of ancient Egyptian civilization.[1]
Armed with a formidable body of
evidence from numerous academic disciplines, Diop presented specific
information to prove the black origins of Kemet (ancient
Prof. Torgny Save-Soderbergh (
Professors El Nadury (
Dr. Diop protested that these
were not positive arguments presenting any evidence, but simply negative
statements against his black African
origins position. In fact Maurice Glélé, the neutral UNESCO representative, interjected on at
least two occasions to state that if classifying people in terms of white,
black, or yellow are so debatable and subjective then a revision should be made
of the entire terminology of world history to avoid misconceptions. It is clear that the participants abandoned
the old Caucasoid and western Asiatic theories and instead retreated to a new
“mixed race” position, without presenting any meaningful evidence to support
this new theory.
Nevertheless, the conclusion of
the official UNESCO report indicates the triumph of Diop and his colleague Obenga. It stated, “Although the preparatory working
paper sent out by UNESCO gave particulars of what was desired, not all
participants had prepared communications comparable with the painstakingly
researched contributions of Professors Cheikh Anta Diop and Obenga. There was consequently a real lack of balance
in the discussions.”[3] In laymen terms, Cheikh Anta Diop and Theophilé Obenga gave out
an important academic spanking on a world stage. Western Egyptologists now unsuccessfully try
and downplay the significance of Diop’s triumph over
their colleagues.
MAGAZINE FANTASIES: NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC & KMT
Since the 1974 Cairo Symposium,
the “Caucasoid origins” theory has been slowly abandoned in academic
writings. However, this fanciful view
has continued to enjoy life in the popular media, such as in TV docu-dramas,
modern paintings, cartoons and comic books, museum displays which focus on the
foreign period of Greco-Roman occupation, and drawings in scholarly and popular
magazines such as National Geographic. For decades, National Geographic Magazine has played a prominent role in misrepresenting ancient Egyptian images, beginning
with its influential October 1941 issue which included 23 paintings by H. M.
Herget, and text by William Hayes from the Metropolitan Museum of Art in
Unfortunately, these outrageous National Geographic images are still
used today by Euro-American scholars as illustrations in publications, and in
television documentaries to supplement their “academic” writings. National
Geographic continues to be an important leader in promoting imaginary
Caucasian images of ancient Egyptians. This publication has set a precedent with its October 1941 issue, which
it and other publications continue to use more than a half century later.
For example KMT Magazine, the over-priced ($8.95) California-based publication,
in its Spring 2005 issue continues to reproduce the image of the Deng, which is most vile and absurd anti-African
painting in this 1941 series.[5] The
editors of KMT -- like National Geographic -- are completely
shameless in their racist representations of African people. This ongoing fraud
and deliberate misrepresentation of ancient images demonstrates a relentless
attempt to steal African heritage and denigrate Black people in the process.
KING TUTANKHAMEN & FACIAL RECONSTRUCTION
Forensic reconstruction has been
used since 1895 with the pioneering work of the German anatomist Wilhelm His. Over the past 100 years, computer technologies
and digital imaging have now redefined the forensic field. Computer tomography (CT) scans, for example, chart
the contours and topography of the skull and obtain detailed data that allow researchers
and artists to create a three-dimensional likeness of the deceased person. Forensic reconstruction and illustrative art
are used to help identify crime victims, and are used in archeology to create a
likeness of a deceased person from the distant past. Forensic reconstruction, then, is “any art
that aids in the identification of unknown deceased persons.”
However, although this forensic
technique has significantly developed over the past century it still remains an art, not an exact science. In constructing an image, forensic artists
have to give a “guesstimate” of the person’s nose, lips, ears, hair, ethnicity and
skin color. These gaps are filled in by
the overall working assumptions that the artists are using. These data are often supplied by
anthropologists or archeologists who are also working on the case. Thus, it is important that the data inputted
is accurate, because the wrong data will always lead to wrong conclusions. In other words, “garbage
in, means garbage out.”
The latest controversial forensic
reconstruction of Tutankhamen is the result of CT scans in January 2005,
carried out by
The CT machine scanned Tutankhamen’s mummy from head to toe and created 1,700 digital x-ray images. The SCA wanted to determine with the scans how King Tut died. This question is still not known, but it is certain that he was not killed from a blow to the head as was speculated by many Egyptologists and historians. However, the CT scans did give Hawass a chance to commission teams of forensic artists to reconstruct Tut’s image as a “North African Caucasoid.” This Caucasoid hypothesis is completely imaginary and not supported by any first-hand evidence. It completely ignores all of the dark-skinned Africoid paintings of Tutankhamen on the walls of his tomb, his brown and black skinned statues, his Africoid thick lips, and his all-black family members. There were three forensic teams (American, Egyptian, and French) that each produced totally different results from the same CT scan produced data. The three teams created their reconstructions separately -- the Americans and French working from a plastic skull, the Egyptians working directly from the CT scans. The French and Egyptians knew they were recreating King Tut, but the Americans were not told where the skull was from. Totally ignoring the actual results, Hawass claims that "The results of the three teams were identical or very similar in the basic shape of the face, the size, shape and setting of the eyes, and the proportion of the skull." Despite the claims of Hawass, any reasonable person can view the forensic results of the three teams and determine that the images are fundamentally different.
It is obvious that all three
versions are significantly different, particularly the treatment of the neck,
chin, lips, and head shape. Hawass
himself even admitted that “the noses of
all three are different.”
Hawass, representing the SCA,
claims that the results of the three teams are identical or very similar in the
shape of the face, the size, shape, and setting of the eyes, and the
proportions of the skull. Further, he
even stretching all credibility and further asserts that “the
shape of the face and skull [of the three results] are remarkably similar to a
famous image of Tutankhamen…where he is shown…rising from a lotus blossom.”
From the three forensic reconstructions, we can conclude the following: 1. The three different teams came up with differing shapes of nose, ears, lips, chin/jaw, and neck; 2. The assignment of the
skin color was completely arbitrary and was based on an assumption of the “average”
color of the modern Egyptian population.
*See Dr. Ahmed Saleh, current member of the SCA, for his opposition to the
position of Zahi Hawass,
the problem with the “false image of Tutankhamen,” and the problem with facial
reconstructions of Egyptians.
Finally, it is of interest to note that nowhere does Zahi Hawass, the Supreme
Council of Antiquities, or National
Geographic show any of the original Tutankhamen images or his actual skull next
to the three modern images for the readers to compare. We are simply given Hawass’
biased personal opinion that all of the images are “identical” or “remarkably
similar.” National Geographic writer A.R. Williams further misleads the
public with his statement that the CT scans provide “precise data for an
accurate reconstruction.”
2002 TUTANKHAMEN RECONSTRUCTIONS
There were two other forensic
versions of King Tutankhamen made in 2002, and again they look totally
different from all of the others. The
process of creating these Tut images was equally unreliable as the 2005
versions, and it involved mere guesswork. To create the modern 2002 Tut
bust, scientists in
1983 TUTANKHAMEN RECONSTRUCTIONS
In 1983 Betty
Pat. Gatliff, who has over 30 years experience
in doing facial reconstructions in clay for police agencies and various
museums, did a facial reconstruction of King Tut. It was pictured in Life Magazine in 1983 and
again in National Geographic World in
1985. Gatliff’s reconstruction is yet another distinct version of Tutankhamen, as she depicts
him with brownish skin (closer to reddish-brown) and a round face. Gatliff’s Tut version
is not very accurate but it is closer to the authentic images than the three 2005
versions, as she depicts him with the brown skin tone that Tutankhamen is
always portrayed with by the ancient African artists (other than Tutankhamen’s
two jet-black ka statues, now in the Cairo Museum).
CONCLUSION Little more needs to be said
about this unreliable forensic art reconstruction process, as every forensic artist for the past
twenty years has produced a unique version of Tutankhamen. Despite this fact, the public is being misled
by the SCA and National Geographic to
believe that the scanned digital images have somehow made the work of modern forensic
artists completely “accurate” and thoroughly “scientific.” I indicated in 2002 that we should be careful
of taking *any* forensic reconstruction serious. There is no reason to
replace authentic and original paintings and sculpture of Tutankhamen (or
anyone else) with modern artistic guesswork and biased interpretations.
Even if the forensic results showed Tutankhamen as a black African, it would be
folly to fall for the game of modern propagandists, who are attempting to move
the public away from the primary sources toward modern interpretations based on
racial illusions and imaginary “North African Caucasoids.”
Back in 2002, there was much debate about whether the King Tut forensic
reconstruction by the
Postscript: Previous Examinations
FOOTNOTES:
[1] UNESCO, The Peopling of Ancient
2. The
symbols that are central to ancient Egyptian culture are exclusively African
symbols such as the ostrich feather representing divine law; leopard-skin
outfit worn by high priests and pharaohs; lotus flower representing spiritual transformation and also
southern Egypt; sledge plant representing
kingship in southern Egypt; ivory and granite used for utensils and
construction respectively; the country name KMT meaning the black land or the land of black people; the southern orientation where the term imnty means both west and right (in the sense of
direction), and i3bty means both east and left. Thus for the ancient
Egyptians, on a map the region of
3. UNESCO, Peopling, p. 91.
4. William
Hayes, “Daily Life in Ancient
5 Omar
Zuhdi, “The African Journeys of Count Harkhuf & the Gift of a Dancing
Dwarf,” KMT Magazine, vol. 16, no. 1
(Spring 2005), pp. 74-80.
August 2005 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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