This scene contains strong Christian imagery, including some baby baptisms.
While the basket is floating, images of African people are shown as Beyonce talks about the roots of life. However, BLACK IS KING is an overwhelming and confusing experience that clearly blurs the lines between worldviews, luring viewers to let their guards down by plying them with Christian images and icons but then including other occult elements.įor example, the album opens with a basket floating down the river, reminiscent of the story of Moses in Exodus. Overall, the production value is stellar, which will enchant viewers and the cameos by popular Black performers provide an excellent level of engagement for both the eyes and the ears. Beyonce and many of her famous friends, including Jay-Z, Kelly Rowland, Lupita N’yongo, Pharrell Williams, and Donald Glover, sing and dance through the album, displaying incredible talent while incorporating strange sequences. The album somewhat follows a little boy as he grows up to become king. Though the project is not a movie, it runs the length of a feature film and very roughly parallels THE LION KING plot with some quotes and songs from the 2019 movie. Raymond Byaruhanga, a doctor who runs the AIDS Information Centre in Kampala, said that a general climate of repression against homosexuals is among several reasons that HIV rates in Uganda are rising again for the first time in two decades.Beyonce’s visual album BLACK IS KING, on Disney+ is a deeply confusing assault of images that simultaneously promote Christianity and a slew of other false religions, including the Yoruba/Santeria religion and pagan/occult elements. The report warned also against the criminalisation of same-‐sex sexual conduct as a consequence of increasing risks of HIV infection, not just among homosexuals, but in the wider society. It was homophobia, not homosexuality that was introduced with the British invasion. These historical evidences support the theory that homosexuality existed before the colonisation and it is not a foreign phenomenon.
"This was not only an attempt to modify what the colonialists saw as unacceptable behaviour in the 'native' populations, but to stop 'moral infection' of colonialists themselves from the 'native' environment," the report explained.
The research, however, showed that throughout Africa's history homosexuality has been a "consistent and logical feature of African societies and belief systems", and that Uganda's laws criminalising homosexuality originates entirely from legislations introduced by the British colonial administration in 19. The SMUG's report is a response to the anti-gay bill proposal passed in Ugandan parliament in 2009, and is aimed to prove that same sex relationships existed throughout Africa, including the territories that now form Uganda, before the colonisation.Īccording to the report, a commonly cited reason for maintaining, or expanding, criminalisation of homosexuality nowadays, is that homosexuality is "un-African" or, in other words, a foreign phenomenon. Ugandan martyrs were burnt to death between 18 on the orders of Mwanga II, for denying him gay sex when they converted to Christianity. Ugandan King Mwanga II was widely reported to have engaged in sexual relations with his male subjects, according to the report by NGO Sexual Minorities Uganda (SMUG) "Expanded Criminalisation of Homosexuality in Uganda: A Flawed Narrative".