About

About Us

ABOUT OUR MISSION:

“Our mission is to assist native American Indians to do, be, and build your ministry helping others. We aim to foster the health, welfare, and empowerment of Indigenous peoples across the globe through culturally respectful and sustainable educational, developmental, and technological initiatives. We are committed to working collaboratively with indigenous communities, honoring their unique cultural heritage and traditions while providing innovative health and educational services. 

Our approach integrates appropriate technology and sustainable development practices, ensuring that every initiative empowers self-determination and self-governance and enhances the overall well-being of Indigenous populations. We pledge to operate with transparency, accountability, and a deep respect for the environment and cultural diversity of the communities we serve.” Most importantly, we aim to bring awareness to the plethora of natives of America who have been stripped of their heritage, customs, and traditions through revisionist history.

Our/Story, the Washitaw de Dugdamound And The Jamassi/Yamassee are Copper Colored American Autothchonous, aborigine, origine, native, American Indians. In 1993, the United Nations Center for Human Rights recognized the Washitaw de Dugdahmoundyah Muur Empire as the Oldest Indigenous group of people on earth, misnomered as black, negro, and Indian. As a result of this acknowledgment, the registered Project # 215/93 ensued. The Wasitaw were Moundbuilders and the Yamassee/Jamassi were also Moundbuilders from the same tribes/clans and families. While many history books claim the Yamassee tribe is extinct, Yamassee Indians are very much alive. The federal government knows them as Washitaw, Guale, Yuchi, Chechesee, and Tama. Altamaha, Jamassi, Americario, Pocotaligo, Salkehatchie, Hitchiti or Mikisuki), Oconee, Cusabo, Tomatly, Okeete. Around the time of the Civil War, the South Carolina slave code was in high effect and many Yamassee were forced into slavery their classification was changed from Indian to Negro or Mulatto, and they were coined as the “Negro Indians.” This eventually became the handy work of Walter A. Plecker and the Negro Act of 1740.

The United Nations recognizes the Washitaw Muurs Nation within the United States along with the other Indigenous people of America. The Declaration on Rights Of Indigenous People includes the Washitaw Nation, a nation that is made up of “Black” People who have the archaeological and historical evidence to prove that the original inhabitants of North and South America (so-called “Indians”) were Copper-skinned People who were original to this land mass known as Turtle Island.

We have always been indigenous to America—North, South, and Central before the so-called Red Man, the Europeans, and the so-called Bering Strait crossings. The Olmecs, Washitaw, Moors, Yamasee, and Mound Builders planted the seed of civilization in the Americas—”Black” Indians!”
The Washitaw were direct descendants of the Olmecs who mixed in the Malian Moors. The name “Washitaw” comes from the Washita River which flows along Northwest Texas and Oklahoma to the Red River where the Cheyenne Native Americans lived with the Chawasha, meaning “Raccoon People.” The Washo were a Negroid tribe living above the New Orleans Bayou and were of Tunican linguistic stock.

The name “Washitaw” is a derivative of the term “Ouachita” or what is now “Wichita.” The term is a Choctaw term “Big Arbor” representing the Grass thatched homes. The Washitaw were originally from lower Mississippi, Louisiana, and Alabama (named after Nubian-Sudanese Ali Baba). The tribe was officially named “Wichita” by the US Government in the Camp Holmes Treaty of 1835. The Wichita is known as “Paniwassaha” or by the French Panioussa which means “Black Pawnee.” French traders from Illinois called them “Pani Pique” which means Tattooed Pawnee. The Washitaw or Raccoon People were called Raccoons because of their dark faces. When describing the Washitaw, the French describe them as the  “blacks who lived in the large grass houses.” These tribes are the descendants of the Olmecs and Toltecs of Mexico. But leave it to racism and the art of eugenics to creatively retire our existence from this planet. We saw the effects of this across the globe. But what specifically did eugenics accomplish here in the Americas?