Is Your Spiritual Practice Truly Liberating? The Hard Truth About Afrikan Material Culture

Afrikan spirituality liberation

Afrikan spirituality liberation demands more than belief — it demands honest, unflinching examination of the tools we use every day. Too many Abibifoɔ practice spiritual systems built on material culture that was never truly ours. Furthermore, we rarely stop to ask who profits from what we burn, wear, pour, and pray over. That question has real consequences for our freedom.

Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon — world-renowned Pan-Afrikan linguist and architect of Abibitumi — confronts this reality head-on. He centers one powerful, necessary question: How Indigenous is the material culture of our spiritual systems? In addition, he forces us to reckon with what that answer means in practice. Most importantly, he connects spiritual authenticity directly to the political economy of Abibifahodie. Every item we purchase for ritual, ceremony, or devotion carries an economic and ideological weight. As a result, our spiritual choices either build Black power or quietly fund our own oppression.

Examining Afrikan Spirituality Liberation Through a Political Economy Lens

This presentation does not flatter us — and that is exactly why it matters. Ɔbenfo Kambon traces how colonialism and capitalism embedded themselves inside the material culture of Afrikan spiritual systems. However, he does not stop at critique. He equips scholars, students, parents, and community builders with a sharper lens for discernment. Furthermore, he grounds his analysis in the legacy of the Kmtyw and the broader Pan-Afrikan struggle for self-determination. True liberation, he reminds us, must extend into every dimension of Afrikan life — including the altar.

This lecture is essential viewing for every serious student of Abibifahodie. It challenges comfortable assumptions and replaces them with grounded, actionable clarity. Moreover, it reflects the core mission of Abibitumi — arming Afrikan people with knowledge that actually liberates. Do not consume spirituality passively. Instead, interrogate it, refine it, and align it with the freedom of Afrikan people everywhere. Watch Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon deliver this vital presentation now for just $20.00.

Watch / Get it here: The Political Economy of “Afrikan Spirituality’s” Material Culture — Abibitumi

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