majinbeaux:

scipiolyoko:

scipiolyoko:

savvygooner:

😂😂😂 Levels

Bruce Wayne: 9.8 Billion Dollars

Tony Stark: 12.94 Billion dollars

T’Challa: 9 Trillion dollars.

He’s over a thousand times richer than Batman.

Correction. 90.7 Trillion dollars. He’s worth more than entire countries

@capitaliststark @thedoctornumber11 about that, see –  T’Challa is the ruling Monarch (key phrase) of Wakanda thus his wealth is gained from his reserves – which Wakanda owns 99.9%. 

So yes, he is richer than Stark, Wayne, and oh, Doom

saturnineaqua:

futureblackwakandan:

kingmaktub:

thehighpriestofreverseracism:

Things you may not know about the legendary South African actor John Kani, who play’s T’challa’s Father/King T’chaka in Black Panther.

He lost his left eye to a beating he received from Apartheid Police and wears a glass prosthetic eye.

in the mid 1980′s, he performed in a play called “Miss Julie in Cape Town” Half of the audience walked out of the production when he kissed a white woman on stage – an act that resulted in death threats and an assassination attempt, in which he was stabbed 11 times.

in 1985, he lost his brother who was killed whilst reading a poem at a funeral when Apartheid police started shooting up at the mourners.

all of this happened in a minority ruled white supremacist country formed ON land where his people where the natives and the majority, apartheid “ended” in 1994.


sources:

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/journalists/dominic-cavendish/4589941/The-Tempest-How-a-legend-of-African-theatre-was-stabbed-11-times.html

History for yo ass

I kinda thought he had a prosthetic eye when I was looking at him in BP but didn’t want to assume

Also like to add that the man that played the younger T’chaka in Black Panther IS HIS SON! 

Atandwa Kani!!!

pbsthisdayinhistory:

March 10, 1913: Harriet Tubman Dies

“I was conductor of the Underground Railroad for eight years, and I can say what most conductors can’t say – I never ran my train off the track and I never lost a passenger.“ – Harriet Tubman

The underground railroad was a lifeline for slaves escaping to freedom, and Harriet Tubman was undoubtedly one of its most famous “conductors.”

102 years after her passing (March 10, 1913), we invite you to revisit the life and legacy of Harriet Tubman with PBS Black Culture Connection.

Photo: Circa 1885 photo of Harriet Tubman by H. Seymour Squyer (National Portrait Gallery)