Posted on 01/22/2019 10:42:29 AM PST by SeekAndFind
CINCINNATI, OH - In a statement released Sunday to the media, Covington Catholic High School junior Nick Sandmann, who was shown over the weekend standing face-to-face with an indigenous man Friday in Washington, D.C., said the standoff took place after four African-American protesters said hateful things to Sandmann and a group of his classmates.
They called us racists, bigots, white crackers, faggots and incest kids. They also taunted an African-American student from my school by telling him that we would harvest his organs. I have no idea what that insult means, but it was startling to hear, Sandmann wrote.
The remark about harvesting organs may reference Jordan Peele's horror-satire "Get Out," a 2017 movie in which the black boyfriend of a white girl discovers her family is harvesting the organs of blacks.
The four African-American protesters near the Lincoln Memorial have been identified as members of the Black Hebrew Israelites, according to our media partners at the Cincinnati Enquirer.
In its magazine, Intelligence Report, the Southern Poverty Law Center calls the Black Hebrew Israelites a hate group that is becoming more militant.
The Southern Poverty Law Center reports, "Around the country, thousands of men and women have joined black supremacist groups on the extremist fringe of the Hebrew Israelite movement, a black nationalist theology that dates to the 19th century."
The center also reports that black supremacist groups have had success recruiting in the wake of President Donald Trumps election in 2016.
A white supremacist leader, Tom Metzger, once said of extremist Hebrew Israelites, "They're the black counterparts of us," according to the Southern Poverty Law Center. The extremist white theology is known as Christian Identity, which has had some affiliated congregations in Greater Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky.
(Excerpt) Read more at fox19.com ...
Street preachers often wear heavy robes and matching head coverings of white, red and black cloth. The Star of David emblem is sewn into their clothing and worn as medallions on necklaces.
At the national level, growth is taking place in the numbers of both neo-Nazi and black nationalist groups, according to the Southern Poverty Law Center 's Year in Hate and Extremism report released in February 2018.

This is beautiful - an actual SPLC-branded “hate group” was ignored by the media in favor of libeling innocent MAGA hat wearing children as bigots.
9 Things You Should Know About Black Hebrew Israelites
SOURCE: https://www.thegospelcoalition.org/article/9-things-you-should-know-about-black-hebrew-israelites/
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Because of his talent and spiritual lyrics, rapper Kendrick Lamar has become a favorite hip-hop artist among Christian music fans. Lamars 2012 album, Good Kid, M.A.A.D City, has been called deeply theological (Women in Theology) and a work of theological genius that is nothing short of a contemporary [Augustines] Confessions (Christ and Pop Culture). Christian magazine Relevant recently noted that Lamar is the best reviewed artist of the 21st century.
On his new albumwhich recently debuted at #1 on the Billboard 200 chartsLamar includes many references to a relatively unknown religious group called Black Hebrew Israelites. Among the references are a song titled Yah (the term the group uses to refer to Yahweh), a lyric that says, Im an Israelite, dont call me black no more, and voicemail from Lamars cousin, a Black Hebrew Israelite, that says that Lamar will continue to suffer in this world until he recognizes he is an Israelite according to the Bible.
Here is what you should know about the group behind Lamars religious references:
1. Black Hebrew Israelites (also called African Hebrew Israelites, Black Jews, Black Hebrews, Black Israelites, or Hebrew Israelites) is an umbrella term for various religious sects and congregations that believe that people of color, usually African Americans, are descendants of a lost tribe of ancient Israelites.
2. From the 17th to 20th century, African-Americans identification with Judaism was informed, as Edith Bruder and Tudor Parfitt say, by the social and political orientations of black people in the United States and was often embedded in response to discrimination. But in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, certain African Americans began not only to identify spiritually with the ancient Israelites but also to claim they were their direct physical descendants. This led to the creation of several factions of Black Hebrew Israelites (hereafter BHIs) that spread across America, and later to Africa and Israel.
3. BHI groups do not align themselves with Judaism. Instead, as Jacob S. Dorman explains, they creatively manipulate traditions and ideas gleaned from a wide range of sources: Holiness/Pentecostal Christianity, the British Anglo-Israelite movement, Freemasonry, Mind Power, Theosophy, Judaism, the occult, and African American Christianitys deep association with the Hebrews of the Old Testament. African-American BHI groups also have no significant history with Ethiopian Jews (aka Beit Yisrael or Falahas) even though, as Dorman notes, New Yorks main body of black Israelites called themselves Ethiopian Jews from the 1930s to 1960s.
4. BHI groups tend to define an Israelite as a descendant of the biblical patriarch Jacob, a Hebrew Israelite as the modern descendants of the ancient Israelites, and a Jew as a person who practices the religion of Judaism. Many BHI groups do not consider Jews to be true descendants of Hebrew Israelites. However, they also do not consider all people of color to be part of the lost tribe either. As one BHI website explains, Israel is just one black nation that exist among many. The Egyptians, Canaanites, Ethiopians, babyloians etc [sic] were black skinned but they were not Israelites. . . . To say all black skinned people are Israelites is like saying all Asians are Chinese, or All Europeans are French. BHIs also believe that the trans-Atlantic slave trade was prophesied in Deuteronomy 28:68 (Lamar makes reference to this belief in his lyric, And Deuteronomy say that we all been cursed), which accounts for why so many Hebrew Israelites are found in America.
5. While there are some common beliefs shared by BHIs, the groups themselves vary widely in their connection to Judaism and Christianity. In a 1973 article for Christianity Today, historian James Tinney suggested the classification of the organizations into three groups:
Black Jews, who maintain a Christological perspective and adopt Jewish rituals.
Black Hebrews, who are more traditional in their practice of Judaism.
Black Israelites, who are most nationalistic and furthest from traditional Judaism.
6. Many BHI organizations around today sprang up in the late 19th century and early part of the 20th century or are offshoots of those original groups. The three largest groups are the International Israelite Board of Rabbis, the Church Of God And Saints Of Christ Temple Beth El, and the African Hebrew Israelites of Jerusalem.
7. Many BHIs who include elements of Christianity affirm the King James Version (1611) of the Bible as their only rule of faith and practice, and the interpretation of it is reserved for their ordained leader, D. A. Horton says. Some groups accept some books of the New Covenant (New Testament) yet, many reject Pauls writings on the idea, they were used often by white masters during the American slavery years, Horton adds.
8. Most, if not all, BHI groups deny the Trinity and the deity of Christ. As one BHI congregation explains, We believe that there is a distinction between God and Jesus of Nazereth. In particular, we believe that God is THE Supreme Being in the universe and that Jesus was merely a human being; a noteworthy prophet (see St. Matthew 21:11), but a human being nonetheless. [emphasis in original]
9. The public interaction with BHI groups usually occurs in large cities, where more radical members often stand on streets and sidewalks, debating and berating passers-by.
Language warning: The video below contains profanity and racist language.
Some of the groups are so extreme theyve been classified as hate groups because of their violent, racist, misogynistic, and anti-Semitic rhetoric. (An example can be found in this video, which contains extremely racist language and profanity.)
Of course, the Black Hebrew Israelites are a hate group. They’re also intimidation/shakedown artists who used to confront and threaten people on the streets of NYC all the time. I used to love to watch when some fearless hasidic guys would confront them in Times Square and they’d be screaming at each other like psychos. Free street theater.
I had a FBI friend back in the 80’s that I had reason to discuss the “Black Hebrews.” He advised me that they were an organized crime group. Once a thug...
“Poooooooo me, Israelites!”
These are NOT Israelis.
They are most likely Palestinian supporters who are trying to split the Christians and our Jewish friends.
They are also HIGHLY dangerous.
You see this constantly when you visit Israel.
Brood of vipers
They are also mentioned in this article:
https://pjmedia.com/trending/the-disgraceful-covington-catholic-pile-on/
Sounds like the Westboro Baptist Church in blackface
NO SH*T really..ya mean a group who calls people “Faggots” screams “White Cracker” and “You are a bunch of school shooters” is a hate group..nah what could have brought people to that conclusion/sarc
If they were wearing MAGA hats the commie media would have called them a hate group

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They look like the Black Village People to me.
Halloween photo?
They look like Sargeant Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band meets Monty Python and the Holy Grail.
I didnt need a report to tell me they were a hate group. I saw it with my own eyes in that video.
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