The Widow’s Son: What the Freemasons Never Told You About Africa. - Softcover

Prajnananda, Sam

 
9798263651916: The Widow’s Son: What the Freemasons Never Told You About Africa.

Synopsis

For centuries, Freemasons have whispered the legend of Hiram Abiff—the Widow’s Son—the Master Builder struck down by betrayal, buried in silence, and raised again by secret word and ritual. But what if this allegory was never theirs to begin with? What if the true origin of the mystery lies not in European lodges, but in the heart of Africa?

In this groundbreaking book, Sam Prajnananda unveils the hidden connection between Masonic legend and Africa’s stolen memory. Drawing from history, symbolism, and Pan-African wisdom, The Widow’s Son reclaims the story of Hiram as Africa’s own:

  • Africa, the Mother of Humanity — the widow whose sovereignty was struck down by slavery, colonialism, and neocolonialism.

  • The Children of the Widow — Africans on the continent and in the diaspora, scattered yet carrying fragments of the lost Word in songs, proverbs, and spiritual traditions.

  • The Temple of Memory — Africa’s knowledge systems in Kemet, Nubia, Timbuktu, and beyond, stolen and buried under Western narratives.

  • The Obelisks in Exile — sacred African pillars uprooted and displayed in Rome, Paris, London, New York, and Washington, silent witnesses to stolen glory.

  • The Rising Builders — Pan-African visionaries, thinkers, and youth who are reclaiming identity, justice, and truth to rebuild the Temple.

Through powerful storytelling, historical analysis, and spiritual reflection, The Widow’s Son takes readers on a journey from betrayal to resurrection, from buried memory to living truth. It shows how Africa’s wisdom—Ubuntu, Maat, harmony with nature, and resilience through struggle—offers not just a pathway to African restoration but a blueprint for humanity’s survival.

This is more than a book. It is a Liberation Briefing.
It is a call to Africa’s children—and to the world—to reclaim the Word, rebuild the Temple, and recognize Africa as the cornerstone of human civilization.

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