Why at 79, Joseph Ligon who has been in prison since 16, turned down offer to be released

It was February 20, 1953, when Joseph Ligon, then 15 years, attended a dance and drank wine with four other teens. They then ended up robbing and stabbing eight people in Philadelphia. Two of the victims, Charles Pitts and Jackson Hamm, died.

The Brazilian church that became one of the biggest, yet most problematic in Africa

The Universal Church of the Kingdom of God (UCKG) is under pressure from the Angolan government to close its places of worship in the country after the church was accused of fiscal crimes.

The story of Nat Turner’s Bible, a historic relic that inspired enslaved Blacks to rebel


When Nat Turner was captured after leading a bloody rebellion in August 1831, his Bible was with him, a book that would become an important piece of his complex story. The infamous revolt leader was dubbed “The Prophet”, as religion was a deep tie for him, and he often quoted Bible verses and held sermons.

Idubor, the giant warrior prince of Benin who could uproot palm trees with his bare hands


Idubor came into this world at a time Great Benin was an important state that flourished in southern Nigeria. Also known as Arhuanran (sometimes spelled Aruanran), Idubor would have been the Oba (king) of Benin in the 1500s had his birthright not been taken away from him and given to his younger brother, Esigie, who was born on the same day he was.

How Nigeria came to have its name


Nigeria's Victoria Island is home to many of the country's rich families and individuals. Photo Credit: PinterestNigeria, Africa’s most populous country and where one can find more Black people than in any other country on the planet, has a uniquely complicated colonial history.
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