Egyptians take their supposed history very seriously.
They don’t take kindly to black folks who be claiming that they was being kangs and shit.
US comedian Kevin Hart’s debut show in Egypt has been cancelled, following an outpouring of anger in the country over his past comments in support of Afrocentrism.
R Productions, the Egyptian event management company behind Hart’s tour, cited “local logistical issues” in a Facebook post on Monday which announced the cancellation.
“It is with a heavy heart that we share with you, due to local logistical issues, the cancellation of our Kevin Hart event,” the company said.
The American comedian was set to perform in Cairo, Egypt, on Tuesday. The company said it was working with the Ticketsmarche team to refund customers “in the shortest possible time”.
Hart faced a flood of criticism in the Arab world’s most populous country for promoting Afrocentrism.
The movement seeks to promote the role Black people played in history and the creation of western civilisation. Hart’s critics, however, accused him of distorting history and robbing Arabs of their claim to the country’s ancient past saying he claimed that Black Africans were once the kings of Egypt.
Martin Bernal was not black, and neither were most of the other people who came up with the Kangz hypothesis
”We must teach our children the true history of Black Africans when they were kings in Egypt and not just the era of slavery that is cemented by education in America. Do you remember the time when we were kings?” he allegedly stated, though its unclear where the remarks originated.
A hashtag calling for Hart’s show to be cancelled or boycotted became one of the top trending topics on social media in Egypt in December.
One Twitter user said Afrocentrists “want to steal and attribute Egypt’s civilization to Africans and tell modern Egyptians that we are occupying Egypt from them. We must all participate in the campaign to cancel Kevin’s concert.”
Many Egyptians also criticised Hart’s financial backing of an Afrocentric animation series by the company Black Sands Entertainment, which some have accused of “Blackwashing” ancient Egyptian history.
It’s funny.
Whatever.
I don’t have a dog in this fight, but it’s funny.
Ancient Egyptians were white, by the way. Just so you understand.
Modern Arabs are at least partially descended from those ancient white people of the Middle East, however, whereas blacks definitely are not related to them at all.