What Black Power Really Means: Demonstration, Not Conversation

Black Power demonstration

Black Power demonstration is not a slogan — it is a living, breathing reality being built right now. Ɔbenfo James Small and Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon sit down together for a powerful conversation about exactly that. They discuss the convergence of 12,000+ Abibitumi members from across the globe descending on Ghana. Furthermore, this gathering is not merely symbolic. It is nation-building in action — concrete, unapologetic, and deeply rooted in Abibifahodie.

The occasion is the Abibitumi Conference and Abibifahodie Festival, held as part of the 27th Annual Sankɔfa Journey. This is the kind of event our ancestors envisioned. Awards are given. Art is celebrated. Music, film, fashion, and food all reflect the brilliance of Afrikan people. Most importantly, community members are not just watching — they are participating. As a result, every element of this festival becomes a declaration of who we are and what we are building together.

Black Power Demonstration: Why the Abibifahodie Festival Changes Everything

Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon — architect of Abibitumi and world-renowned Pan-Afrikan linguist — has always insisted that liberation requires action, not performance. In addition, Ɔbenfo James Small brings decades of frontline Pan-Afrikan wisdom to this dialogue. Together, they articulate a clear and urgent truth: talk without movement means nothing. However, when Afrikan people organize, gather, and demonstrate power collectively, the entire paradigm shifts. This is exactly what the Abibifahodie Festival represents — not a conference about liberation, but liberation itself in motion.

This recording is essential for every Afrikan scholar, student, parent, and community builder who is serious about the work. It challenges you to move beyond consumption and into contribution. Furthermore, Abibitumi exists precisely to give our people the tools, community, and clarity needed to build. Black Power demonstration means showing up — in Ghana, in your community, and in every space where Afrikan people gather to create. Therefore, do not miss this rare exchange between two of our most powerful voices. Watch it now and let it move you to act.

🔗 Watch / Get it here: Baba James Small on the Abibitumi Conference & Abibifahodie Festival

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