2017-01-03

The fraudster and polygamist Michael Noak, aka 'Brother Polight' spearheads the 'black consciousness' movement, which is not just pro-black, but anti-white and anti-Christ. He promotes Khemetology as a new religion and other esoteric Moorish concepts; but Polight has been exposed by his own irate community, for the theft and 'pyramid scheme' that he has perpetrated against them.

After denouncing the "trash" and "animals" from the Brooklyn 'hood' (where he was once a 'crip') for their "negative energy," Brother Polight moved with his three wives and children to Beverly Hills to hang out with fellow Masons of the Boule Society, like Floyd Mayweather. Noak is estimated to be worth $3.4 million, but after his supposed arrest on Hollywood Boulevard, is begging the same black "family" he recently disparaged to "gofundme" and cover his legal fees. Another scam!

While researching this scandal I read a quote claiming that Dr. Malachi Z. York is Michael Noak's father. Never having heard of Dr. York, naturally, I hit the search button. The similarities were striking, not only in their convoluted ideology with black power overtones, but also their appearance with Egyptian garb, including a fez. What I didn't expect to discover was that Dr. York is the black 'Jimmy Savile' of the USA, serving life for child sexual molestation.

Dwight D. York, also known as Dr. Malachi Z. York and Issa Al Haadi Al Mahdi, is a former singer/songwriter who founded numerous esoteric or quasi-religious fraternal orders under various names during the 1970s and 1980s. These were at first based on pseudo-Islamic themes and Judaism (Nubian Islamic Hebrews).

Later he developed a theme derived from "Ancient Egypt," eclectically mixing ideas taken from black nationalism, cryptozoological and UFO religions, and popular (Sitchin's) conspiracy theory. He last called his group the United Nuwaubian Nation of Moors, or Nuwabians.



In the late 1960s York, calling himself "Imaam Isa", combined elements of the Moorish Science Temple of America, the Nation of Islam, the Nation of Gods and Earths and Freemasonry, and founded a quasi-Muslim black nationalist movement and community.

York's groups had a variety of names and functions: quasi-religious, fraternal, and tribal. They were called "Holy Tabernacle Ministries", "Egiptian [sic] Church of Karast," "Holy Seed Baptist Synagogue", "Ancient Mystic Order of Melchizedek", "Ancient Egiptian [sic] Order", "All Eyez on Egypt", "United Nuwaubian Nation of Moors", "Yamassee Native American Tribe", "Washitaw Tribe", and "Lodge 19 of the Ancient and Mystic Order of Malachizodok."

Dwight York changed his name legally in 1990 to "Issa al Haadi al Mahdi" when he was still living in Brooklyn. He changed it again in 1993 to "Malachi York," but also adopted a number of titles and pseudonyms, including "The Supreme Grand Master Dr. Malachi Z. York," "Nayya Malachizodoq-El," and "Chief Black Eagle."

By 1985 York had added miracle-performance to his repertoire. He claimed to materialize sacred, healing ash in front of his followers, much in the fashion of Sathya Sai Baba. He presented himself as a "black Jesus" and his followers (victims) called him "saviour."

Like 'The Children of God' he moved from state to state to avoid prosecution. At York's direction, the community purchased land and built Tama-Re, an Egyptian-themed complex built on 476 acres of land near Eatonton, Georgia and like 'The Family' children were segregated from their parents, to make them accessible to their perverted cult leader.

Anonymous letters were sent to Putnam County officials alleging child molestation at the Nuwaubian community. The FBI, which had started investigating the group in 1993, assigned a major task force to it. In 2002 York was arrested and charged with more than 100 counts of sexually molesting dozens of children, some as young as four years old.

In 2004 he was convicted on federal charges of transporting minors across state lines for the purposes of sexual molestation, as well as racketeering and financial reporting violations.

According to Bill Osinski, who wrote a 2007 book about York and the case: "When he [York] was finally indicted, state prosecutors literally had to cut back the number of counts listed — from well beyond a thousand to slightly more than 200 — because they feared a jury simply wouldn’t believe the magnitude of York's evil.… [It] is believed to be the nation's largest child molestation prosecution ever directed at a single person, in terms of number of victims and number of alleged criminal acts.

In “Ungodly: A True Story of Unprecedented Evil,” Bill Osinski probes York’s diabolical underbelly, one that for the longest time too many overlooked. He chronicles York’s early days as a pimpish New York hustler who deifies himself to reap riches under the guise of religion and communal purity. (Like Brother Polight!)

“What (York) came up with,” Osinski writes, “was called the United Nation of Nuwaubian Moors, a concept composed of an extra-large dose of Egyptian schlock, served with a side dish of intergalactic mumbo jumbo.”

Bob Moser of the Southern Poverty Law Center calls York’s cult - “definitely a black supremacist group,” and he says race was another factor that kept followers flowing in. And their allegations of harassment by predominantly white law enforcers assured them a place in the all-important publicity-stirring spotlight. (Howard Sills, the Putnam sheriff who is among the book’s heroes, says that in reality “the only racial issue was that every victim York preyed upon was black.”)

....The book notes, too, how the Nuwaubian shtick drew high-profile black leaders — the Revs. Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton among them — (the Boule's 'Dark Destroyers') to hear claims of perceived racial injustice.

In an interview with York’s son, Malik, the author gets to the heart of what turns out to have been a scam perpetrated by a heartless soul. Malik York says his father once told him, “I don’t believe any of this (expletive.) If I had to dress up like a nun, if I had to be a Jew, I’d do it for this kind of money.” As York is said to have told someone close to him, “It’s all about the packaging.”

Between the years 1990-1995 York fathered nearly 18 children from multiple teens and adults in the cult who lived on his property. His fathering of children without any sense of accountability goes as far back as the 1970's on up the late 1990's. His Brooklyn community, the Monticello, New York property and the Eatonton, Georgia property was used in part as a eugenics breeding farm for York. According to some of his victims.

He is alleged to have 200 offspring, but whether he is the biological father of Michael Noak, I cannot say, however Polight admits he was "groomed" by York for his role and taken to the Masonic lodge. He also defends York, saying he is a "blessing in my life" and "still my father and my teacher" and Polight clearly emulates his mentor's style of presentation in preaching "right knowledge." The apple doesn't fall far from the tree. Dr. York also renamed Polight's wives and children!

Nuwaubian disciples still protest York's innocence and claim his convictions were a racially motivated conspiracy against him to bring down his (bogus) religion. There is a current petition to have the serial paedophile Dwight D. York pardoned and released.

360 Questions to Ask Nuwaupians:

http://nuwaupianism.com/360-question...iminal-history

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