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These migrations would explain the existence of man-made pyramids in China and Japan which were built by Afrikans of the Nile Valley, of which the Chinese have no idea as to how they got there. China's pyramids are located near Siang Fu city in the Shensi province. The Japanese pyramids were built during the time of Mu. They were made of stones not indigenous to Japan and are often mistaken for hills because of their eroded appearances.
Inside the tomb of Imhotep are stone wall carvings of warrior scientists displaying a number of wrestling holds, kicking, throwing, punching and other fighting techniques. Also inscribed in the Tombs of many Kemetic (Egyptian) Governors who lived 4,200 years ago, are diagrams of more than 500 pairs of wrestlers and other warriors demonstrating weapons usage including the lance and short sticks. This diagram shows a section of the wrestling and martial arts moves that were sketched into an ancient Egyptian tomb wall of Governors at Mahez or Beni Hasan, some 2800 years before the birth of Christ, representing the oldest record of a martial arts system of training in ancient Egypt.
This type of wrestling which is still practiced in Nubia and West Afrika today was copied and practiced by the ancient Greeks. These carvings constitute the ancient records that laid the foundation for the world's first martial arts system. Furthermore, these Black Egyptians had developed an understanding of the vital energy of the soul called chi in Chinese, ki in Japanese and ka in the netjer writing of ancient Kemet.
The martial arts practice presently recognized as Chinese started around 500 C.E under the influence of a Black Dravidian and Buddhist Priest from India, named Bodhidharma. Also known as Dharuma in the Japanese archives, Bodhidharma founded Zen Buddhism in China and taught the monks at the Shaolin Temple a set of exercises, movements, and breathing techniques which became known as the Shaolin Ch'uan Fa, Temple Boxing, or the “18 Hands of Lo Han”, which formed the foundation of Chinese Shaolin Kung-Fu and Japanese Karate. Bodhidharma is mostly described as Persian or brahma Indian. This statue stands inside the shaolin temple in china and it represents him as being darker than either a Persian or Indian.
Afrikans on the continent still practice their own ancient martial arts styles, and continued practicing even when enslaved in the Western Hemisphere. This tradition continues to thrive in the Black Brazilian martial arts form called Capoeira. “A Samurai, to be brave, must have a little Black blood".
The Mesakin and Kao Nuba people of Nubia still have a tradition that requires all young men to participate in martial arts training. This Afrikan science of self-defense is called Mon Tu from which the Chinese pronunciation “kung fu” may have originated. In fact, about 4,600 years ago, the Mon Tu was recorded in the 12th century tomb carvings of Prince Amenemhat (Amenyma’at) inside the tombs of Imhotep.
The pharaohs of Ta Meri (Egypt) recorded their interest in athletic activities on the walls of their temples where sports included Mon Tu (martial arts), and consisted of grappling (wrestling holds), stick fighting (weaponry), boxing (punches), acrobatics and other activities. The oldest wrestling scenes dating from 2400 B.C. adorned the tombs of Ptah-hotep and Akhet-hotep.
Black and Chinese people have had centuries of positive interaction, possibly millennia worth.
Zheng He's voyages to Africa and large amounts of intermarriage with women in Madagascar and Kenya.
Intermarriage between black women and Chinese men during the American Civil War and post-antebellum periods, so much so that a large number of black Americans have Chinese DNA.
American soul food has a lot of similarities to regional Chinese food. Etc., etc.