THE ALPHA FREQUENCY #764 - RANGATIRATANGA AND THE KINGDOM: DEFINING TRUE SOVEREIGNTY
The Source of Power
Kia ora e te whānau. As we move deeper into Research Report #268, we come to a topic that is often misunderstood in modern politics: sovereignty. For many today, sovereignty is about who has the most guns or who sits in a big building in Wellington. But for our Ngāpuhi ancestors and the ancient people of Ethiopia, true sovereignty, or Rangatiratanga, was never something human beings created on their own. It was a gift and a responsibility handed down from the Creator.
The King of Kings
In the Ethiopian tradition, the leader was known as the Negusa Nagast, which means "King of Kings." This title wasn't meant to brag about earthly power. Instead, it was a constant reminder that any earthly leader is subservient to the Divine. In Ethiopia, the state was seen as a servant of God, limited by the laws of heaven. This matches the way our own rangatira viewed their role. Leadership was not a career choice; it was a sacred vocation to maintain the balance between the people and the spiritual realm.