Author: Abibitumi Ahemfie

  • Is Your Afrikan Spirituality Liberating You — Or Keeping You Enslaved?

    Is Your Afrikan Spirituality Liberating You — Or Keeping You Enslaved?

    Afrikan spirituality liberation

    Afrikan spirituality liberation calls many Kmtyw home — away from eurasian religions and back toward the sacred traditions of our ancestors. However, not everything labeled “Afrikan” actually serves Afrikan people. In fact, some of it serves our oppressors directly. This critical truth sits at the heart of one of Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon’s most important presentations available now through Abibitumi.

    In this powerful lecture, Ɔbenfo Kambon applies participant observation to examine what fills the altars and ritual spaces of ostensibly Afrikan spiritual systems. Furthermore, he identifies a troubling pattern: imported alcohol, tobacco, talcum powder, and other commodities dominate these sacred spaces. As a result, someone is profiting — and that someone is not us. Ɔbenfo asks the essential question directly: who ultimately benefits economically, politically, and socially from the tastes and desires now embedded in our spiritual practice?

    Unmasking the Political Economy Hidden Inside Afrikan Spirituality Liberation

    Most importantly, this lecture does not stop at critique. Ɔbenfo Kambon charts a clear and actionable path forward. He distinguishes between spiritual systems that genuinely advance Abibifahodie and those that quietly extend our enslavement under a different name. In addition, he equips Kmtyw with the analytical tools to see these distinctions clearly. Therefore, this is not simply an academic exercise — it is a roadmap for our collective liberation.

    This lecture is essential for scholars, community builders, students, and every Afrikan person seriously committed to Abibifahodie. Moreover, it pairs a full video recording with slides, giving you both the depth of Ɔbenfo’s analysis and the visual framework to study and share it. Abibitumi continues to deliver the knowledge our communities need — uncompromised and unapologetic. Watch it, study it, and act on it.

    🎥 Watch / Get it here: The Political Economy of Afrikan Spirituality’s Material Culture — $20.00

  • What Was Israel to Black People? Breaking Free From the Danger of a Single Story

    What Was Israel to Black People? Breaking Free From the Danger of a Single Story

    Israel and Black people history

    The real history of Israel and Black people history has been buried under centuries of a single, unchallenged narrative. Most people know only one story — the biblical Exodus. However, ancient and classical historical texts tell a far more complex and revealing truth. Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon, world-renowned Pan-Afrikan linguist and architect of Abibitumi, brings that truth into sharp focus.

    In this powerful seminar, Ɔbenfo Kambon draws from primary historical sources to present an Afrikan-centered analysis of Israel’s relationship to Kmtyw — Black people, the Ancient Egyptians. Furthermore, he examines how scholars have long identified the expulsion of the Hyksos with the Exodus story. Most importantly, he documents how that expulsion actually unfolded. The differences between competing historical narratives are significant. As a result, relying on a single biblical account leaves us deeply uninformed.

    Reclaiming Afrikan Truth: Israel and Black People History Through Primary Sources

    Ɔbenfo Kambon challenges us to do the work that Abibifahodie demands — research, rigor, and radical honesty. In addition, he equips students and scholars alike with the tools to interrogate colonial narratives at their root. This seminar spans over two hours and includes 94 meticulously prepared slides. Therefore, it functions as both a lecture and a foundational research resource. Every Afrikan person serious about liberation deserves access to this level of scholarship.

    This is not surface-level content. Rather, it is the kind of deep, uncompromising intellectual work that Abibitumi was built to deliver. The danger of a single story is real — and it has political consequences for Afrikan people globally. However, when we return to ancient sources, we reclaim our power to define our own history. Watch this lecture, study the slides, and share it within your community. Get it here: Watch / Get it here — SSS Video Recording + Slides.

  • Afrika Knew No Divide: When Science and Humanity Were One

    Afrika Knew No Divide: When Science and Humanity Were One

    Afrikan science and humanities

    Afrikan science and humanities were never two different things — they were always one. Modern academia invented that split. Ancient Afrika did not recognize it. In this powerful 2014 lecture delivered at the NYU/IAS Conference on the Humanities, Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon dismantles that false division with precision and evidence. Furthermore, he does it in just 13 minutes and 25 seconds.

    How Ɔbenfo Kambon Reconnects Afrikan Science and Humanities Across 13,000 Years

    Ɔbenfo Kambon walks us through 13,000 years of Afrikan intellectual history. He shows clearly that the Kmtyw used geometric principles, mathematics, and engineering as expressions of philosophy, spirit, and culture. In addition, he demonstrates that STEM and the humanities were not competing fields in ancient Afrika. Most importantly, they were complementary forces within a unified Afrikan worldview. This lecture challenges every colonial framework still operating inside our institutions today.

    The presentation includes 67 slides packed with evidence, analysis, and visual support. Ɔbenfo covers languages, literature, philosophy, religion, archaeology, linguistics, semiotics, and more. He shows how each of these areas flows naturally from a single Afrikan root. As a result, this is not just an academic lecture — it is a blueprint for how we must rebuild Afrikan education. Abibifahodie demands that we reclaim how we define, organize, and transmit knowledge.

    This is exactly the kind of content Abibitumi was built to preserve and deliver. However, this lecture is not just for scholars. Parents, students, and community builders all need this foundation. When we understand that our ancestors never fragmented knowledge the way colonizers do, we build stronger institutions. We raise children with whole minds. We stop apologizing for centering Afrika. Furthermore, we stop letting others define what counts as science, what counts as culture, and what counts as truth. The combo bundle includes the full video and a secured downloadable PDF of the PowerPoint — 67 slides of concentrated Afrikan intellectual power.

    Watch the lecture and download the full presentation here for just $20:
    👉 13,000 Years in 13 Minutes — Watch / Get It Here

  • Who Are You, Really? The Kmtyw Understanding of the Person as Multiple Selves

    Who Are You, Really? The Kmtyw Understanding of the Person as Multiple Selves

    Kmtyw concepts of the person

    Kmtyw concepts of the person challenge everything the Western world has told us about who we are. For centuries, colonial thought reduced human beings to isolated individuals — biological units with no deeper cosmological identity. However, our Afrikan ancestors understood something far more profound. The person is not a single, fixed self. Instead, the person is a dynamic, relational, and multi-dimensional being — fully embedded in the cosmos, the community, and the moral order of Ma’at.

    In this essential lecture, Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon — linguist, Pan-Afrikan scholar, and architect of Abibitumi — guides us through the classical intellectual traditions of Kmt. Drawing on both continental and diasporan sources, he dismantles the atomized view of personhood completely. Furthermore, he demonstrates how each dimension of the self carries its own ontological, moral, and cosmological function. This is not abstract philosophy. Most importantly, this is a framework for liberation — for understanding ourselves as Kmtyw people on our own terms.

    Why Kmtyw Concepts of the Person Matter for Abibifahodie

    Liberation begins in the mind. Therefore, reclaiming how we define ourselves is one of the most revolutionary acts we can perform. This session — Week 2.5 of the Foundations of Kmtyw Thought series — runs nearly four hours and includes 69 slides in a secured PDF. It covers the person as a composite being, with multiple interdependent selves operating simultaneously. In addition, Ɔbenfo situates all of this within a cosmological framework that honors the depth and genius of Afrikan thought. This is exactly the kind of knowledge that schools will never teach our children.

    As a result, this lecture is essential for scholars, students, parents, and community builders across the Afrikan world. Whether you are new to Kmtyw studies or deepening an existing foundation, this session will sharpen your understanding profoundly. It will also strengthen your ability to pass this knowledge to the next generation. This is the work of Abibitumi — building a liberated Afrikan mind, one lesson at a time. Do not wait to access this knowledge.

    Watch / Get it here: Foundations of Kmtyw Thought #2.5 — The Person as Multiple Selves

  • Build Your Future in Ghana: Invest in Land Next to Abibitumi Headquarters

    Build Your Future in Ghana: Invest in Land Next to Abibitumi Headquarters

    Abibitumi land Ghana

    Abibitumi land in Ghana is no longer a distant dream — it is a concrete, actionable opportunity available right now. Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon, world-renowned Pan-Afrikan linguist and architect of Abibitumi, has issued a clear and urgent call to action. In this powerful session replay, he walks our people through a live virtual tour of prime land adjacent to Abibitumi Headquarters. Furthermore, he breaks down exactly what ownership means for the future of Abibifahodie. This is not theory. This is land. This is power.

    Why Securing Abibitumi Land in Ghana Is an Act of Liberation

    Ɔbenfo Kambon teaches that liberation without land is performance. As a result, this session cuts straight to the material conditions our community must address. Each 100×70 plot is available for $10,000 — a direct investment in a liberated Black community built around shared values, self-sufficiency, and Pan-Afrikan purpose. In addition, owning land adjacent to Abibitumi Headquarters places you inside an existing ecosystem of scholarship, agriculture, and cultural reclamation. Most importantly, this opportunity connects repatriation to real, rooted action on the continent.

    This replay session is the last public presentation Ɔbenfo Kambon delivered on this topic. However, the door remains open for those ready to move with intention. The virtual tour gives you a clear, unfiltered look at the land itself. You see the terrain, the proximity to headquarters, and the potential that awaits committed Afrikan people. Furthermore, Ɔbenfo walks through the logistics, the vision, and the community infrastructure already taking shape. Every frame of this session carries the weight of serious, generational thinking.

    Our Kmtyw ancestors did not build civilization through hesitation. Similarly, our generation must stop waiting for permission to reclaim what is ours. This session replay — available for just $20 — gives you full access to Ɔbenfo Kambon’s presentation, his land update, and his strategic vision for community building in Ghana. In addition, it equips you with the knowledge and confidence to take your next step. Put your money where your liberation is. Watch the session, study the opportunity, and act. Your plot on Abibitumi land in Ghana may be waiting for you right now.

    Watch the session and secure your access here: Get the Replay Now — Put Your Money Where Your Liberation Is