Author: Abibitumi Ahemfie

  • Raising Revolutionary Afrikan Girls: Grandmother Wisdom for Nation-Building Families

    Raising Revolutionary Afrikan Girls: Grandmother Wisdom for Nation-Building Families

    raising revolutionary Afrikan girls

    Raising revolutionary Afrikan girls into powerful, nation-building women requires more than good intentions — it demands Ancestral Wisdom. On October 7, 2023, Abibitumi hosted a profound Saturday Seminar dedicated entirely to this sacred work. Nana Okuninibaa Mawiyah Kambon brought deep, lived wisdom to Abibifoɔ families across the globe. Furthermore, her guidance speaks directly to parents, grandparents, and community builders committed to Abibifahodie.

    Ancestral Guidance for Raising Revolutionary Afrikan Girls to Asafo Womanhood

    Nana Mawiyah Kambon — honored elder, mother, and cornerstone of the Abibitumi community — shared transformative insights on nurturing our daughters. Her teachings draw from Ancestral tradition, not colonial frameworks. As a result, families receive tools rooted in our own cultural genius. Moderator Ɛna Njideka Karmo guided the conversation with clarity and purpose. Together, they created a seminar that empowers every family system to act with intentionality.

    Most importantly, this seminar answers a critical question: how do we shape our girls into Asafo — Warrior Women — ready to serve and defend our people? Nana Mawiyah Kambon does not offer generic advice. Instead, she delivers Nanabaa Nyansa — Grandmother Wisdom — that honors the full dignity of Afrikan girlhood. In addition, her approach reinforces the family as the first and most powerful site of liberation. Our daughters deserve nothing less than our highest commitment.

    Raising revolutionary Afrikan girls is not accidental. It is a disciplined, conscious, and communal act. This recording gives families direct access to wisdom that strengthens homes and builds nations. Therefore, whether you are a parent, aunt, uncle, elder, or community builder, this seminar belongs in your liberation toolkit. Abibitumi continues to provide the scholarship and spiritual grounding that our people need to walk in Ma’at. Watch the full recording and begin transforming your family’s approach today.

    Watch / Get it here: https://stg-abibitumi-rpd-3fbq.ue1.rapydapps.cloud/product/grandmotherwisdom/

  • When Schools Fail Afrikan Children: The Achimota Dreadlocks Case Decoded

    When Schools Fail Afrikan Children: The Achimota Dreadlocks Case Decoded

    Afrikan education colonialism

    Afrikan education colonialism is not a relic of the past — it operates today, inside Afrikan institutions, enforced by Afrikan hands. The 2021 Achimota School dreadlocks controversy in Ghana made this devastatingly clear. A school on Afrikan soil rejected Afrikan children for wearing their hair in its natural, ancestral state. Furthermore, the institution defended this rejection using the very logic European colonizers installed generations ago. This is not education. This is occupation dressed in a school uniform.

    Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon — Pan-Afrikan linguist, scholar, and architect of Abibitumi — convened a press conference to address this crisis directly. He did not mince words. In this 34-minute presentation, Ɔbenfo Kambon names the root problem: Afrikan institutions producing graduates shaped by krakkkacademic frameworks that serve white supremacy, not Afrikan liberation. As a result, these institutions graduate people who enforce colonial standards against their own. Too much schooling. Too little education. The distinction matters enormously for Abibifahodie — the total liberation of Afrikan people.

    Reclaiming Afrikan-Centred Knowledge Beyond Afrikan Education Colonialism

    Most importantly, Ɔbenfo Kambon centers a critical question: who produces knowledge, and for whom? Afrikan people — both on the continent and throughout the Diaspora — carry wounds from enslavement, colonialism, and neo-colonialism. However, those wounds do not stop at the body. They penetrate the mind and reshape what Afrikan people accept as normal, authoritative, and legitimate. In addition, when Afrikan institutions police Afrikan aesthetics, they reveal how deeply this miseducation runs. The Kmtyw and all Afrikan people deserve institutions that affirm — not erase — who we are.

    This lecture is essential viewing for every Pan-Afrikan scholar, parent, student, and community builder. It connects a local controversy to a global pattern. Furthermore, it challenges us to build knowledge systems rooted in Ma’at — truth, justice, and Afrikan sovereignty. Abibitumi exists precisely for this purpose: to provide Afrikan-centred education that colonial institutions refuse to offer. Therefore, do not wait. Study this presentation. Share it within your community. Use it to sharpen your analysis and strengthen your commitment to Abibifahodie. Watch and get it here: Press Conference on Ghana Achimota “Dreadlocks” Controversy.

  • Why Your Name Holds the Key to Afrikan Liberation

    Why Your Name Holds the Key to Afrikan Liberation

    Pan-Afrikan name power

    Pan-Afrikan name power is not a trend — it is a spiritual and cultural truth our ancestors have always known. Names, in traditional Afrikan thought, shape destiny. They carry purpose, lineage, and life force. However, colonialism and enslavement severed millions of Afrikan=Black people from that sacred connection. As a result, many of us today carry the names of our oppressors without question.

    Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon — world-renowned Pan-Afrikan linguist and architect of Abibitumi — addresses this wound directly. In this powerful Saturday Seminar, he examines how naming practices among Afrikan=Black people have been deliberately disrupted. Furthermore, he traces how neo-colonialism on the continent and neo-enslavement in the diaspora both continue this erasure. This is not abstract scholarship. This is Abibifahodie in action.

    Reclaim Pan-Afrikan Name Power for Your Family and Future

    Giving our children the names of enslavers is not innocent tradition. It is a continuation of cultural warfare. Ɔbenfo Kambon draws on foundational research — including Obeng (2001) — to show that a name fulfils or undermines one’s life purpose. In addition, he connects naming to the broader work of cultural restoration across the continent and diaspora. Most importantly, he equips us with the knowledge to make conscious, liberating choices for our children and ourselves.

    This seminar belongs in every Afrikan household, classroom, and community space. Students, parents, scholars, and community builders will all find it transformative. Abibitumi continues to provide the tools our people need to walk fully in purpose and power. Do not let another generation grow up disconnected from the names — and the destiny — that belong to them. Watch and get it here: The Power Is in a Pan-Afrikan Name.

  • Kamose Stelae Decoded: Afrikan Languages, Strategy & Black Liberation at ASCAC 2025

    Kamose Stelae Decoded: Afrikan Languages, Strategy & Black Liberation at ASCAC 2025

    Kamose Stelae Black liberation

    The Kamose Stelae Black liberation analysis delivered at ASCAC 2025 is exactly the scholarship our people need right now. Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon — architect of Abibitumi and world-renowned Pan-Afrikan linguist — joined forces with Okunini Talawa Adodo and sbA Bonotchi Montgomery. Together, they brought a 49-minute intellectual and strategic masterclass to the 41st annual ASCAC conference. Furthermore, this presentation does not simply translate ancient text. It resurrects the living voice of our ancestors and points it directly toward Abibifahodie.

    Ɔbenfo Kambon grounds his scholarship in Afrikan languages, Afrikan thought, and the unapologetic pursuit of Black liberation. As a result, his work never sits comfortably inside colonial academic frameworks. Instead, it dismantles them. In this presentation, he and his colleagues move through the Kamose Stelae with linguistic precision, cultural authority, and strategic clarity. Most importantly, they demonstrate that the Kmtyw were not passive victims of history. They were warriors, planners, and liberators. That legacy belongs to us.

    Why the Kamose Stelae Black Liberation Framework Matters Today

    Pharaoh Kamose did not wait. He organized, strategized, and moved against the forces occupying Kemet. In addition, his recorded words — preserved in the stelae — carry strategic wisdom that speaks directly to our current struggle. Ɔbenfo Kambon and the presenters decode that wisdom using Afrikan languages, including Twi and Yoruba. Furthermore, they connect ancient military and political strategy to the living reality of Pan-Afrikan liberation today. This is not nostalgia. This is a roadmap.

    This exclusive recording is available now through Abibitumi — the premier platform for Pan-Afrikan education and community-centered liberation scholarship. Scholars, students, community builders, and parents fighting for their children’s minds will all find deep value here. Moreover, at just $20.00, this 49-minute presentation delivers irreplaceable knowledge that no mainstream institution will ever offer. However, access to this kind of scholarship requires that we support the infrastructure that makes it possible. Therefore, invest in your liberation today. Watch the full presentation and download the slides now.

    Watch / Get it here: Kamose Gon Knock You Out – ASCAC 2025 | Abibitumi

  • Unlock the Gateway to Abibifahodie: Black Liberation Through the Abibitumi Conference

    Unlock the Gateway to Abibifahodie: Black Liberation Through the Abibitumi Conference

    Abibifahodie Black Liberation Festival

    The Abibifahodie Black Liberation Festival is calling Afrikan people worldwide to align around power, purpose, and action. On Sunday, October 5, 2025, at 7:00 PM GMT / 3:00 PM EDT, Ɔbenfo (Professor) Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon opens the door to one of the most significant Pan-Afrikan gatherings of the year. This focused, high-energy online session gives you direct access to the Abibitumi Conference experience. Furthermore, it costs you nothing — the gateway is now free and wide open.

    Step Through the Door: The Abibifahodie Black Liberation Festival and Abibitumi Conference Await You

    Ɔbenfo Kambon is the architect of Abibitumi — a liberation-centered platform rooted in Ma’at and Abibifahodie. His work does not water down truth for comfort. Instead, it sharpens Afrikan people into scholars, builders, and liberators. In this session, he delivers timely updates about the conference. Moreover, he introduces the community, clarifies preparation, and centers every word around Black Power. This is not a passive experience. As a result, attendees leave with clarity, connection, and direction.

    Abibitumi has always built toward something greater than information. It builds toward transformation. This session reflects that commitment fully. In addition, it serves parents, students, scholars, and community leaders across the Afrikan world — from Ghana to the diaspora. Repatriation, liberation strategy, and cultural grounding all converge here. Most importantly, this event reminds us that our freedom requires our full participation. No one is coming to save us. However, we can build our own door — and walk through it together.

    Do not miss this moment. The Abibifahodie Black Liberation Festival begins with this single, powerful step. Ɔbenfo Kambon will meet you on the other side — ready to lead, teach, and build. Register now and bring your community with you. Abibifahodie is not a slogan. It is a living, breathing practice — and it starts here.

    🔥 Watch / Get it here: Open the Door into the Abibitumi Conference & the Abibifahodie Black Liberation Festival