
Empress T is dedicated to uncovering and preserving the true legacy of Native Black Americans. Through Revelations of the Remembered, she combines lived experience, certified research, and verified documentation to reconstruct the narrative of a people who were never lost — only misclassified.
We Ain't African: 33 Reasons I Stopped Accepting the Label T'Malkia Zuri
We Ain’t African is not a history lesson-it’s a personal journey.
In this bold and unfiltered book, T’Malkia Zuri walks readers through the exact questions, discoveries, and moments that led her to challenge the label “African American.” Instead of asking readers to accept a conclusion, she opens the door to her process-what she saw, what didn’t add up, and why she started digging deeper.
Through 33 thought-provoking reasons, she explores records, language, historical inconsistencies, and lived experiences that made her pause and reconsider what she had always been told about identity.
This book doesn’t try to convince you.
It invites you to think.
If you’ve ever questioned where you come from, how identities are formed, or why certain labels exist at all-this is a conversation worth stepping into.
This Book Is for Those Questioning the “African American” Label
We Ain’t African: 33 Reasons I Stopped Accepting the Label is a personal journey through the questions, records, observations, and moments that made me stop and rethink everything I had been taught about Black American identity.
This book is for those who have always felt something didn’t fully add up.
It’s for the people who grew up hearing their grandparents say, “We got Indian in our blood,” but were taught to dismiss those words as myths. It’s for researchers, genealogists, truth-seekers, and everyday Black Americans who decided to look beyond consensus and investigate their own history for themselves.
This is not a book written to force beliefs onto anyone.
It is a conversation.
A journey.
A collection of moments that made me pause and question the narrative surrounding the “African American” identity.
Through historical newspapers, genealogy research, old maps, migration theories, racial reclassification records, and personal family memories, this book explores why I personally stopped accepting the African label placed on Black Americans.
Ultimately, this work encourages readers to think deeper, research harder, and revisit the stories we inherited about who we are and where we come from.
What This Book Documents
- Why the “African American” label never fully resonated with me
- The inconsistencies and unanswered questions surrounding the Transatlantic Slave Trade narrative
- Historical distinctions made between “Africans” and “American Negroes” in older newspapers and records
- The impact of racial reclassification laws such as the 1924 Racial Integrity Act
- The repeated “Indian grandmother” stories passed down through countless Black American families
- Why old maps, census records, and genealogy documents made me question mainstream narratives
- The role consensus, media, and institutional narratives play in shaping identity
- How broad racial labels like “Negro” and “African” were historically used as blanket classifications
- Personal reflections from a Black American woman tracing her roots, questioning labels, and reclaiming her voice
- Why this journey is ultimately about research, memory, lineage, and self-discovery
This book does not ask readers to blindly agree.
It asks them to pause, think, and possibly begin asking questions of their own.
Table of Contents- 33 Reasons
- Consensus Is the Gatekeeper to Common Sense
- Efforts to Convince Black Americans That They Are African
- The African Jacket — A Label That Doesn’t Fit
- The “Out of Africa” theory turned me off
- The Transatlantic Slave Trade Story Doesn’t Add Up to Me
- The American Slave Trade Was Worse Than the African Slave Trade
- Continental Africans Ain’t Even African
- The Āfrī Tribe —Historical Africans Of The North
- Reclassification — How to Create an African
- Pan-Africanism: Africans Desire Unity With Us But Not Each Other
- "Back To Africa” Schemes Failed For Lack Of Support
- The 1828 Definition Of The Original "American"
- Destiny Swap: The Greatest Hoax To Replace Us
- I am Negro by Phenotype. Not by DNA
- The "Negroland" Scam: A Commercial Zone, Not A Country
- DNA Testing— The Greatest Genealogy Lie
- The One Drop Rule — The Legal Erasure of My Indigeneity
- Ethnogenesis Applies To Everyone But Black Americans
- They Changed Our Identity On Paper
- The 1870 Brick Wall Is A Red Flag For Me
- The "Data Gap" Scam: Blood And Saliva Don’t Mix
- The "Indian Grandma" Trope. When Grandma Says I Am Indian
- Real Testimonies: Where There’s Smoke, There’s Fire
- Fufu And Jolof: We Don’t Share The Same Cuisine
- They Say Africans and Black Americans Look Like Relatives
- We Don’t Have Kinks — We Have Coils
- How Africans Used Us to Civilize Africa
- Africans Often Adopt Black American Culture, Not The Other Way Around
- Immigrants’ role in the erasure of native black Americans
- Black Indians: The Mystical Creature Of North America
- They Say That Black Americans Are Non-Deportable
- War Of The Gods. Hijacking Our Spiritual Systems
- Bonus: We are the Only Group Fighting For Our Indigenous Identity







