The True History Of
Consul General:

Dr.Malachi Z.York ©TM
Consul General: Dr. Malachi Z. York ©TM has traveled and studied amongst various indigenous people with some of the richest cultures on the planet earth.
He attended the University of Khartoum, Sudan, Africa and the American University Cairo, Egypt, where he did most of his research and discovered those who call themselves African Americans and Native Americans long hidden past, which links the Indigenous People of America, the original mound builders (Georgia, Mississippi and Louisiana) to ancestors of North, South, East, and West Africa.
He is fluent in many different languages and dialects. Consul General: Dr. Malachi Z. York ©TM has spent most of his adult life dedicated to the upliftment of the African American Negro in the United States of America.
Throughout American History the Blacks in America have been remembered by being stolen from their homelands, while the indigenous Americans, having African ancestry, such as the Yamassee Native American Moors of the Creek Nation, have had their lands stolen from them and both of these groups of people have been enslaved, stripped of their natural languages and cultures to this day.
With this being in mind, Consul General: Dr. Malachi Z. York ©TM began in 1967 A.D., with the reconstruction and the renewal of the legacy and the true story of African American Experience across the globe.
He has written over 400 books published by Egipt Publishers of Athens, Georgia for the re-unification and the education of people of color in America.
These publications brought the spirituality and nobility that blacks in America and abroad were lacking in their everyday lives.
Consul General: Dr. Malachi Z. York ©TM purchased 476 acres of land in Eatonton, GA, to the benefit of these displaced peoples in America, to renew their story and give enlightenment to a dark past of slavery in an effort to show these noble people that "their story" far surpasses that of European American History.
On the 476 acres, with the help of those with a common goal in mind, these progressive people reconstructed the cradle of the first civilization on the planet earth beginning with Egypt on the continent of Africa.

By bringing Africa to America, this angered many of the public officials in this country and more intensely those in Georgia.
Thousands of Africans and Indigenous people gathered weekly, monthly and annually on this land to benefit from the teachings and the renewal of their religious and cultural practices, leaving the door open to people of all religions.
After the abolishment of slavery, the first blacks arrived in Monrovia, Liberia in 1822 A.D.
On July 26, 1847 A.D., the newly arriving Americo-Liberians declared the territory an independent republic.
This newly developed country instilled their Constitution, which gave every African-American within the United States the benefit of obtaining Liberian Citizenship.
The efforts of the American Colonization Society eventually faded and Americo-Liberians were overthrown in 1980 A.D. by neighboring rebel groups.
President Charles Taylor was elected into office and sought the redevelopment of a more positive international relationship with other world countries and he also saw the need for more professional people with skills and trades that could aid in the economic development of Liberia thus he sought the aid of Dr. Malachi Z. York ©TM , the founder of the United Nuwaubian Nation of Moors (Free Blacks) and by nationality he is Maku: Chief Black Thunderbird of the Yamassee Native American Moors of the Creek Nation (Indigenous Nubuns of African Descent).

Representatives from the Ministry of Justice from the Republic of Liberia visited Tama-Re, the future Consulate for the Republic of Liberia, during the summer of 1999 A.D. and was very impressed on the professionalism and the extent of development that had been done by this group of people namely, the United Nuwaubian Nation of Moors (Free Blacks) and the Yamassee Native American Moors of the Creek Nation (Indigenous Nubuns of African Descent) who were here before the European Settlement.
Consul General: Dr. Malachi Z. York © TM became a Liberian Citizen on December 15, 1999 A.D. where his tribal roots are linked to the Bassa Tribe of West Africa and the Lemba of the Congo.
At that time, President Charles Taylor appointed Dr. Malachi Z. York ©TM Consul General for the Republic of Liberia to the Atlanta, Georgia Region.
This was done in an effort to bring positive restoration to the Republic of Liberia, which was developed in 1817 A.D. by the American Colonization Society, which was organized to allow freed slaves in America to go back to the Mother land and set up their own country.
During this time, Consul General: Dr. Malachi Z. York’s ©TM work for Liberia began and he developed organizations that would aid in the development of the land and assist the people of the Republic of Liberia.

The Nuwaubian Grand Lodge of Freemasonry Worldwide began formulating Architects, Brick Masons, Contractors, Electricians, Plumbers, Solar Energy Specialists etc., who could restore the buildings and structures of Liberia that were destroyed by the civil war.
Get Informed International, Inc. was established to provide economic development and stimulate commerce in order to strengthen the domestic currency of Liberia and counteract the negative effects of dollarization.
The Medical Association of America was established which would provide much needed medical care, pharmaceuticals and vaccinations by African Americans who are licensed Medical Doctors, Nurse Practitioners, Laboratory Technicians, and Pharmacists etc.
The Amen Institute was developed to offer state of the art education from pre-k to college courses and exchange student programs allowing students to study abroad.
African Americans, who hold PhD’s, Master Degrees in Education, Bachelors Degrees etc, founded The Amen Institute.
The Egiptian Church of ‘Karast’ Christ, Liberia was founded to offer religious teachings and aid in the restoration of villages by donating food, clothing and other necessities that were to scarce because of the ongoing civil wars. This appointment was much needed for the development of Liberia.
A repatriation scheme was then developed to offer these positive influenced professional African-Americans by the culture of Nuwaubu, an opportunity to aid in the economic development of the country of Liberia, West Africa.



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