From Blessings to Bondage: How the curses of Deuteronomy Reveal the True Identity of The Scattered Hebrews


In my last blog, I laid the foundation: the people stolen from West Africa and brought to the Americas weren’t just random Africans. They were the lost tribes of Israel—the true Hebrews. Now, it’s time to go deeper.

Because Yahuah didn’t just call His people. He warned them. And those warnings—laid out clearly in Deuteronomy 28—aren’t vague prophecies. They read like a spiritual crime scene report that matches our history line by line.


"If you do not obey… all these curses shall come upon you.” (Deut. 28:15)

That’s the turning point. From verses 1–14, Yahuah promises blessings for obedience. But from verse 15 on, He lays down the consequences. Not because He’s cruel, but because He keeps His word—both the promises and the warnings.

And when we line those curses up against the Transatlantic Slave Trade and the conditions our people have lived through since? The match is undeniable.



Cursed in the City, Cursed in the Field (v.16–19)

Whether we were working cotton fields or living in urban ghettos, these verses ring true. Poverty. Struggle. Generational lack. No matter where we move—rural or urban—we face systemic challenges, from redlining to agricultural sharecropping.



Defeated Before Our Enemies (v.25)

From colonial armies to slave hunters to modern policing, we’ve been chased, beaten, captured, and suppressed. We go out unified and come back scattered—just like the verse says.



Madness, Blindness, and Confusion (v.28–29)

Mental illness. Identity crises. Spiritual confusion. Entire generations raised with no clue who they are. Lost names. Lost heritage. Lost hope. It’s not just trauma—it’s prophecy.



Wives Taken, Families Broken (v.30, 32, 41)

“Another man shall lie with her…” “Your children shall be given to another people…”

On plantations, Hebrew women were raped. Families were sold off separately. Our sons and daughters taken, renamed, and erased from memory. It happened during slavery, and it continues through foster care, mass incarceration, and generational separation.



A Byword Among the Nations (v.37)

What’s a byword? A label. A slur. An insult.

We were no longer Hebrews. We became “n****rs.” “Coons.” “Slaves.” “Thugs.” Our very name was stripped and replaced with ridicule. Again… prophecy.



The Stranger Will Rise Higher Than You (v.43–44)

Immigrants and outsiders come into our neighborhoods and set up businesses. They prosper while we remain economically trapped. Loans denied. Credit sabotaged. Ownership stolen. This is what happens when blessings are revoked.



Serve Your Enemies in Hunger and Nakedness (v.48)

Who controls our food? Our water? Our clothing industries? Who do we rely on for everything from education to medicine? We are still serving our enemies—just now in a corporate system instead of a plantation.



Scattered Among All Nations (v.64)

Not just America. Hebrews were sent to Brazil, the Caribbean, Europe, and the Middle East. This wasn’t just a tragedy—it was the diaspora prophesied thousands of years ago.



“You will go into Egypt again with ships…” (v.68)

This is the dagger.

Egypt = Bondage. Slavery. And we were taken in ships, sold to our enemies, and no one came to redeem us.

The Hebrew word for "redeem" refers to a family member buying you back.

We were left on the block.



We Were Not Just Cursed—We Were Chosen

The curses were not the end. They were the evidence.

They confirm that we are the people of the Book. That the bloodline running through our veins connects back to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.

We didn’t just suffer. We fulfilled prophecy. And now, the awakening has begun.

It’s time to return to the covenant. Time to return to the Most High. Time to stop calling ourselves cursed and start walking like we’re chosen.

Because we are.

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