Rastafarianism and the Covenant of Life: A Caribbean Historical Inheritance from Ethiopia, the Ark of the Covenant, and the Long Struggle for Equal Rights and Justice | ChatGPT5.2 & NotebookLM

Rastafarianism is often misunderstood as a twentieth-century protest movement, cultural subculture, or syncretic religion arising solely from colonial injustice. This white paper advances a different interpretation. It situates Rastafarianism within a long historical lineage of covenantal thought that precedes Israel, is articulated through Israel’s prophets, preserved in Ethiopian Christianity via the Solomonic tradition and Ark consciousness, distorted through imperial Christianity, reclaimed through Pan-Africanism, and re-expressed in the Caribbean as a prophetic way of life.

Using a historically grounded, non-romantic methodology, the paper traces how covenant — understood as a binding commitment to life, dignity, truth, and intergenerational responsibility — repeatedly re-emerges wherever domination, extraction, and false order threaten human worth. Ethiopia is examined not as fantasy or escape, but as historical counter-evidence to colonial narratives of African inferiority and spiritual dependency. Rastafarianism is presented as a modern Caribbean continuation of this covenantal tradition, emphasizing inner authority, embodied truth, resistance to imperial capture, and the non-negotiable demand for equal rights and justice.

The paper aims to restore historical confidence, dignity, and hope among Caribbean students by demonstrating that Rastafarianism is not marginal to history, but part of a durable human inheritance oriented toward life rather than power.

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From Babylon to Zion: Rastafari and the Planetary Homecoming | ChatGPT5 & NotebookLM

Across history, humanity has carried a deep longing for belonging — a dream of homecoming reflected in sacred narratives, prophetic movements, and cultural visions. This article explores the ancient Israelite, Jesus, and Rastafarian movements as nested turns of a holofractal spiral, each responding to systemic exile and domination by reimagining a path toward coherence and liberation.

Through the archetypes of Babylon and Zion, we trace how these movements evolved from covenantal identity to universal belonging, culminating in the Rastafarian insight that Ethiopia symbolizes Zion — the shared ancestral root of humanity. In light of modern genetics, which confirms that all humans descend from Africa, Rastafari’s symbolic return expands into a planetary narrative: a call to remember that we are one root, many branches, one home.

In the face of today’s global crises — ecological collapse, systemic inequality, spiritual alienation — this holofractal narrative offers a regenerative framework for healing fragmentation, restoring interconnection, and envisioning a planetary Zion grounded in life-value coherence.

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From Sacred Texts to Scorched Earth: How Scriptural Misinterpretation Enables Genocide in Gaza | ChatGPT4o

This white paper investigates the role of sacred scripture in enabling or resisting genocidal violence, with a specific focus on the ongoing humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza. Drawing from Jewish, Christian, and Islamic traditions, it critically examines how theological misinterpretations — particularly of covenant, chosenness, conquest, and eschatology — have been weaponized to justify the displacement, dehumanization, and extermination of Palestinians.

The paper argues that the misuse of scripture represents not only a moral failing but a symbolic and epistemological rupture that fractures the coherence between word and world. It proposes a regenerative theology of liberation rooted in prophetic justice, interfaith reconciliation, and symbolic coherence. Through a triality-based hermeneutic — connecting symbol, meaning, and embodiment — the paper outlines a new grammar of sacred interpretation capable of restoring spiritual integrity and supporting planetary healing.

It concludes with actionable recommendations for theological reform, interfaith alliance, and symbolic reorientation, grounded in the belief that the sacred must once again become a source of life, not a justification for death.

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