Carol Beckworth and Angela Fisher wrote a very interesting article on National Geographic in September 1999. It includes how Masai warriors in Kenya and their culture distinguish men or how to distinguish young men in male sex. The Masai warrior is a group of semi-nomads living in the border between Kenya and Tanzania. They are a relatively small group with only about 300,000 people in their culture. They feed their food with their spears and they lived in a small house made of cow dung.
This was on November 2, 1930, the National Geographic Bureau sent a reporter and a photographer and reported on the magnificent event. There are warriors with horns, incense, priests, guns. The story has 14000 words and 83 images. If the black memorial held in 1930 was held in the United States, not in Ethiopia, you can almost guarantee that there is little story. To make matters worse, if Haile Selassie lives in the United States, he is almost certainly denied access to the lecture in Washington, DC, and may not be allowed to become a member of National Geographic. According to National Geographic and World Made of Robert M. Robert made by the writer's house, "African Americans are excluded from membership at least in Washington - until the 1940s.
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