The town of Francistown in Northern Botswana is an ancient gold mining town. It is thanks to the gold mining that Kalanga language is still spoken in the surrounding areas - northern Botswana, south western Zimbabwe. Nyangabwe, as Franscistown was called during the Anunnaki-led mining operations, is connected to Mapungubwe hill by seasonal dry river channels.
So what is gold called in Kalanga? I have long puzzled over what is seemingly the absence of a word for gold in Kalanga. It was not until I adopted a methodical inquiry that things became clear. The leading Anunnaki workgroup in mining operations were the Bakhurutshe. Indeed some accounts give their name as deriving from "mining supervision". The most technically advanced group of Bakhurutshe are the Russians. So what do the Russians call gold? Well, they call it "zolota"; as interesting a Kalanga word as they come.
The Kalanga verb "Ku lota" means "to burn and turn into ash". So the word "Zolota" means "that which burns and turns into ash/powder". To me this is the first confirmation that the stories I have been reading about monatomic gold (ormus) during the Anunnaki presence on Earth are true. So the Kalanga word for gold is the same as the Russian word for it - "zolota". It has to be, because the word is a Kalanga word anyway!
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