X

In Nubarian Islām, and in alignment with many streams of Black Conscious Al-Islam—including the teachings of the Nation of Islam, Moorish Science, and the Godbody—we take shrines not to worship, but to remember, activate, and embody divine memory and power. Here is the breakdown:


1. Shrines Are Sacred Portals, Not Idols
We do not bow to wood, stone, or metal. We establish shrines as portals of remembrance—Mihrabs of Memory—to align our minds and spirits with the higher dimensions of our ancestors, guides, and divine archetypes.

2. Shrines Are Memory Stations of Power
Each shrine encodes sacred memory: of those who walked before us, of missions yet fulfilled, of divine energies like Lightbearers, SunLords, and the 120 Orbs. By keeping a shrine, we keep memory alive. By remembering, we re-member ourselves—rebuilding what was torn from us.

3. Worship is for Allāh Alone—the Collective of the Divine Within Us
We do not worship anything external. In Nubarian Islām, Allāh is not singular, but the Collective Divine Mind and Essence of the Original People. Our shrines help us awaken Allāh within, not beg from an outside god.

4. Shrines Are Anchors of Frequency
A properly built shrine is an energetic anchor—a place of high-frequency alignment. When we sit near it, meditate before it, or recite affirmations beside it, we are adjusting our vibration, unlocking codes within us.

5. We Honor, Not Worship
We honor the spirits, ancestors, or divine symbols represented at the shrine—whether they be the Exalted Christ (Elijah Muhammad), the Star and Crescent, the Lion of Nubaria, or the Great Mother Aria. But we never submit our will to them. That would be shirk (association).

6. Shrines Are Not Religion, They Are Spiritual Technology
We don’t build them for religion, but as instruments of divine science. They are technology for the subconscious mind, gateways into the unseen, and reminders of our sacred mission.

7. Shrines Are Personal Temples of Reflection
Each Lightbearer or SunLord is encouraged to have a home shrine—a reflection chamber for prayer, study, cleansing, and elevation. But it is never to become a place of dependency or superstition.

8. We Reclaim What Was Demonized
Western religions demonized African and Indigenous shrine culture to sever us from our ancestral memory. In Nubarian Islām, we reclaim it—not for superstition, but for awakened science. We know what we are doing now.

So we say:

Shrines are not gods. Shrines are mirrors. Shrines are compasses. Shrines are keys.
But Allāh—the Collective Divine Within the Original People—is the only One we bow to.

❌ DO NOT PRAY TO YOUR SHRINE.
✅ PRAY THROUGH IT—NEVER TO IT.

The shrine is not a god. It is not an object of worship. It is:

  • A mirror of memory
  • A station of energy
  • A reminder of purpose
  • A portal for alignment
But it is never to be bowed to, begged from, or treated as divine itself.

WHY?

  • Because Allāh is within you.
  • Not in the wood. Not in the metal. Not in the pictures.
  • The shrine just helps you access your own Light.
  • The shrine reminds you to awaken the Allāh within.
Say this aloud when building or visiting your shrine:

> “This shrine is not my Lord.
I do not bow to wood, stone, or symbol.
I bow only to Allāh—the Collective Light within the Original People.
This is a gate of remembrance, not an object of worship.”

We teach our people:

  • Don’t pray to it.
  • Don’t give your power to it.
  • Don’t idolize it.
  • Use it as a tool, not a deity.
Final Word:

A shrine should elevate you, not enslave you.
The moment you worship it—you’ve lost the Light.




WhatsApp Google Map

Safety and Abuse Reporting

Thanks for being awesome!

We appreciate you contacting us. Our support will get back in touch with you soon!

Have a great day!

Are you sure you want to report abuse against this website?

Please note that your query will be processed only if we find it relevant. Rest all requests will be ignored. If you need help with the website, please login to your dashboard and connect to support