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ERASURE

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ONE PEOPLE TWO CONTINENTS ONE WORLD

BLACKMAN WHITE PAPER SERIES

ERASURE

Dear Reader, this is exactly the kind of moment where the BLACKMAN WHITE PAPER Series shines — with sharp, cinematic, historically grounded tone that teaches without attacking, reframes without shaming, and elevates without dividing.

This eBook responds to the “Black vs. Indigenous” debate, the “don’t call yourself Black” rhetoric, and the deeper erasure patterns that are captured in this ERASURE document — without stepping on religious toes and without disrespecting anyone’s identity journey.

This BLACKMAN White Paper edition can help us do that

“THE SEAM IS THE EVIDENCE”

ERASURE: When Power Renames You to Control You

Black vs. Indigenous is not a fight — it’s a symptom. There’s a new argument circulating in our community: “Don’t call yourself Black. Black is a label. We are Indigenous.” Some say it with love. Some say it with anger. Some say it with confusion. But all of it comes from the same wound — erasure. And before we start swinging at each other, we need to understand the architecture behind the argument.

This isn’t about “Black vs. Indigenous.”

This is about what happens when a people are renamed so many times they forget they were the architects of the world.

Their history is a costume stitched from stolen threads. The BLACKMAN WHITE PAPER exists to unravel that costume, thread by thread, and reveal the legacy beneath. This isn’t just correction—it’s resurrection. We’re not lost. We were buried. And now, we rise.

The Truth About the Colonizers’ History

Their version of history is inside out, upside down, backwards, and twisted. They called themselves discoverers while erasing civilizations older than their empires. They claimed to bring light while extinguishing ancestral wisdom. From Turtle Island to Wagadou, the colonizers rewrote origin stories to justify theft, domination, and spiritual replacement. They flipped the script—turning resistance into savagery, turning genocide into progress. Their textbooks are mirrors that distort, not reflect. But the truth remains: we were builders, navigators, philosophers, and healers long before their ships arrived.

That’s the blueprint.

• The Lenape were renamed “Indians.”

• The Taíno were renamed “extinct.”

• Africans were renamed “Black-Color.”

• Portugal was renamed “a cruel relic.”

The First Trick of Power:

Rename the People, Rewrite the Story

“History is written by the winners of the 19th and 20th centuries… To elevate themselves, they had to diminish the First Empires.”

• Indigenous nations were renamed “tribes.”

• African empires were renamed “myths.”

When you rename a people, you don’t just change their identity — you change their origin story.

And once the origin story is gone, the people become whatever the colonizer needs them to be.

I. Black vs. Indigenous: A Manufactured Divide

Here’s the truth nobody wants to say out loud:

Black people are Indigenous to the Americas and Indigenous to Africa.

Not genetically — historically.

Because “Indigenous” doesn’t just mean “first on the land.” It means first in the story.

And the story of the Americas — the real one — begins with:

• African navigators

• Indigenous nations

• Trade routes older than Europe

• Shared technologies

• Shared cosmologies

• Shared survival systems

But when colonizers arrived, they needed a simpler story:

You are Black. You are Indian. You are separate. You are different. You are conquered.

II. The Divide is the Seam

The Seam Is the Evidence

Every edited story leaves fingerprints.

“Cruelty is the ink used to blot out achievement.”

Exactly as.

• Portugal’s brilliance was erased by focusing only on cruelty.

• The Lenape’s diplomacy was erased by focusing only on “savagery.”

• Africa’s empires were erased by focusing only on slavery.

• Black identity was flattened into a color — not a civilization.

The Seam is where the truth leaks through.

When someone says, “Don’t call yourself Black,” they’re reacting to the seam — the feeling that the label was never ours. And they’re right about the wound. But wrong about the cure.

The cure is not to abandon “Black.” The cure is to restore the history behind it. The cure is to reclaim our true Identity.

III. Black Is Not a Color — It’s a

Survivorship

Category

But here’s the twist:

We turned the erasure into an identity. We turned the wound into a banner. We turned the label into a lineage.

Black became:

• a culture

• a rhythm

• a resistance

• global family

• a political force

• a spiritual inheritance

“Black” was never meant to describe a people. Colonizers meant it to describe a position:

1. outside the law

2. outside humanity

3. outside history It was a political category designed to erase African nations, African languages, African sciences, African cosmologies.

Black is not a color. Black is a rebuilt civilization.

IV. Indigenous Is Not a Rival Identity

— It’s a Missing Chapter

When our people say, “We are Indigenous,” they’re reaching for something deeper:

1. a land-based identity

2. a pre-colonial identity

3. a sovereign identity

4. an identity not defined by slavery

They’re not wrong. They’re remembering. But the answer is not to choose between “Black” and “Indigenous.”

The answer is to understand that both words are incomplete without the history that was erased.

V. The Real Fight Is Not Between Us

— It’s Between Us and the Erasure

“We are taught to look at their hands so we do not look at their minds.”

That’s the whole game.

If Black people argue about labels, we never ask the real questions:

• Who erased our nations?

• Who erased our languages?

• Who erased our maps?

• Who erased our cosmologies?

• Who erased our diplomatic systems?

• Who erased our maritime sciences?

The fight is not Black vs. Indigenous. The fight is People vs. Erasure.

VI. Closing in Your Voice

This is the truth:

We are not lost people. We are edited people. And edited people can restore themselves.

Black is not the opposite of Indigenous.

Black is what you call a people after their Indigenous names have been burned. Indigenous is not the opposite of Black. Indigenous is the memory that refuses to die.

We are not choosing between identities. We are choosing to reclaim the story.

And the story begins with this:

We were the First.

We were the Architects.

We were the Navigators.

We were the Grandfathers.

We were the Foundations. And we still are.

WHEN THEY ARRIVED ON OUR SHORES THEY WANTED CONQUEST

OUR SACRED TEMPLES THEY DEFILED WE OFFERED THEM PEACE

LIKE THE HONEY BADGER

TURTLE ISLAND THE SAHIL

BLACK PEOPLE WHO DO YOU THINK YOU ARE

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ERASURE by Frank Porter - Issuu