The season of Het-Heru came in on October 23 and ends November 22. This is the second season in the Royal Afrikan Calendar. It is the fertile season in the feminine energy of fertility, love, joy, music and dance. Het-Heru, (uMvundisikazi). Het-Heru is the deity of many realms: mother to Horus, Goddess of the sky, and the eye of Ra, the sun god; and goddess of beauty (including cosmetics), sensuality, music, dancing, and maternity. She is often depicted wearing a headdress of cow horns with a sun disk between them, or as a cow or lioness.
Het-Heru was often depicted as a cow, symbolizing her maternal and celestial aspect.
Het-Heru is the potent energy that causes seeds in the soil to germinate and for the first rooted to emerge and burrow into the soil before the stem can make its way out of the soil and into the sun where the first leaves can open and begin the process of photosynthesis.
During this season we use this energy to actively grow our projects, businesses and offerings because they are supported. e also use it to nurture positive ideas and focus on the positive constructive aspects of ourselves rather than the negative.
On October 26 Mkhulu Nsingiza delivered an astounding lecture at the University of Kwazulu Natal, hosted by the Institute of Maat at the College of Humanities. Many who were present were left speechless as Mkhulu began by giving evidence that creation began in South Africa. He then outlined the Kemetic creation story as told by our ancestors but incorporated the science of creation, something that many of those in attendance were hearing for the first time. by connecting the dots of time, place and sequence of events in the creation story along with archeological and scientific evidence, Mkhulu Nsingiza recounted a complete narrative of how the Cosmos came into existence in what Westerners call “The Big Bang Theory”.
Mkhulu Nsingiza urged students and professors to look outside their institutions for Afrikan content because the content taught in higher institutions of learning was grounded in Western philosophy which was plagiarized from the only true philosophy that exists: Afrikan Philosophy. He went on to challenge the University to change its name to one that resonated with Afrikans and suggested that even the continent needed a name change to move away from the name given to us by a colonizer. This would be authentic decolonization of education and of Afrikans.