Ages of Gold and Silver and Other Short Sketches of Human History
From the forward by Madalyn Murray O'Hair:
"Here again [John G. Jackson] presents to a world unwilling to listen his thesis that civilization has African roots—not Indian, not Chinese, but African; that the original race of humankind was Black; and that magnificent cultures preceded the European. He again demands a hearing for the facts which, slowly now accumulating, support his thesis. What is more, he pinpoints the bias of the white Christian culture which would hold in contempt any but its own manufactured greatness and exclusivity."
From the forward by Madalyn Murray O'Hair:
"Here again [John G. Jackson] presents to a world unwilling to listen his thesis that civilization has African roots—not Indian, not Chinese, but African; that the original race of humankind was Black; and that magnificent cultures preceded the European. He again demands a hearing for the facts which, slowly now accumulating, support his thesis. What is more, he pinpoints the bias of the white Christian culture which would hold in contempt any but its own manufactured greatness and exclusivity."
From the forward by Madalyn Murray O'Hair:
"Here again [John G. Jackson] presents to a world unwilling to listen his thesis that civilization has African roots—not Indian, not Chinese, but African; that the original race of humankind was Black; and that magnificent cultures preceded the European. He again demands a hearing for the facts which, slowly now accumulating, support his thesis. What is more, he pinpoints the bias of the white Christian culture which would hold in contempt any but its own manufactured greatness and exclusivity."