Wednesday, December 26, 2018

Kwanzaa is here--its founder allegedly tortured naked women and is bonkers

Toasters pop, are you listenin' 
Iron's hot, yeah it's blisterin'
A naked old sight
The victims a fright
Kwanzaaing a toaster all the day.

Anyway, Christmas has come and now it’s Kwanzaa! Schools don't actually celebrate Christmas, but they sure do Kwanzaa and do other holidays such as Ramadan and Eid, but that's another story for a different day.

So you ask, how did Kwanzaa start? 

Well kids, it all began in 1966 when a mentally ill and radical black nationalist who called himself Maulana Ndabezitha Karenga came up with the idea to create an artificial holiday. 

His real name is Ronald Everett, a native of Maryland and the 14th child of a sharecropping Baptist minister. He is 77-year-old lunatic, and teaches African studies in the ultra liberal state of California, specifically, at California State University.

In 1971 Karenga was convicted of brutally torturing two naked women. The weapons of torture included a soldering iron, a vise and a popup toaster.

The naked women belonged to Karenga's super-radical, paramilitary, black nationalist cult named the US Organization.

“Investigators said the women were held at gunpoint, forced to disrobe and were beaten.”

“Deborah Jones, who once was given the Swahili title of an African queen, said she and Gail Davis were whipped with an electrical cord and beaten with a karate baton after being ordered to remove their clothes,” a Los Angeles Times article reports.

Karenga tortured Jones and Davis with the assistance of other cult members because he believed the women victims were using magic crystals to assassinate him on behalf of his enemies. 

And he is a professor at Cal State.

“The victims said they were living at Karenga’s home when Karenga accused them of trying to kill him by placing ‘crystals’ in his food and water and in various areas of his house.”

The women denied they were using special crystals to murder Karenga, but the denials weren't helpful.

“When they denied it, allegedly they were beaten with an electrical cord and a hot soldering iron was put in Miss Davis’ mouth and against her face,” the contemporaneous 1971 newspaper article says.

Jones also testified “that one of her own big toes was tightened in a vise. Karenga, head of US, also put detergent and running hoses in their mouths.”


“Miss Tamayo reportedly put detergent in their mouths, Smith turned a water hose full force on their faces, and Karenga, holding a gun, threatened to shoot both of them.”

The victims also said they were “were hit on the heads with toasters."

“Vietnamese torture is nothing compared to what I know,” Karenga allegedly said during the lengthy bout of torture.

A psychiatrist who examined Karenga in 1971 concluded he was insane. A sentencing hearing transcript shows that the unidentified psychiatrist believed that the founder of Kwanzaa was “both paranoid and schizophrenic.”

Or, as we say in the business, a paranoid schizophrenic.

Judge Arthur L. Alarcon ordered Karenga to undergo mental testing to determine whether Karenga had “so deteriorated mentally” that he was a threat to society.

And the website Discover the Networks has an interesting piece on Karenga, who it describes in part as a Marxist, racist.

The seven principles of Kwanzaa are: unity, self-determination, collective work, cooperative economics, purpose, creativity and faith in ourselves.

These seven Kwanzaa principles are identical to the seven principles of the infamous Symbionese Liberation Army, the murderous, bank-robbing gang of revolutionary terrorists who kidnapped newspaper heiress Patty Hearst in 1974.

A U.S. Congress document from the House Committee on Internal Security lists the Symbionese Liberation Army’s seven principles as: unity, self-determination, collective work and responsibility, cooperative production, purpose, creativity and faith.

During a 1975 bank robbery, Symbionese Liberation Army members murdered Myrna Opsahl, a bank customer. The 42-year-old mother of four bled to death on the floor of the bank.

Members of Karenga’s US Organization shot and killed two Black Panthers in cold blood in 1969 when the US Organization and the Black Panthers were fighting over which group would control the then-new Afro-American Studies Center at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA).

Karenga spent only four years in prison. He received a sentence of between one and 10 years for felonious assault and false imprisonment in 1971, related to the torture of Deborah Jones and Gail Davis.

A successful campaign by supporters, who wrote letters to state officials, led to a grant of parole in 1975.

Now with the new Trump administration prison reform policy, it's likely that others like Karenga will be back on the streets and creating problems. The recidivism rate is quite high for a large portion of the incarcerated community, as reported in the Bureau of Justice Statistics.

Happy Kwanzaa?

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