Category: Obadele Kambon Lectures

Category for the exclusive lectures by Ɔbenfo (Professor) Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon, PhD. “Ɔbenfo” Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon, Nana Kwame Pɛbi Datɛ I, helps Black people repatriate and get Ghanaian citizenship at RepatriateToGhana.com. He is a world-renowned master linguist, multi-award-winning scholar and the architect of Abibitumi the oldest and largest Black social education network on the planet. He completed his PhD in Linguistics at the University of Ghana in 2012, winning the prestigious Vice-Chancellor’s award for the Best PhD Thesis in the Humanities. He also won the 2016 and 2024 Provost’s Publications Awards for best published work in the UG College of Humanities. In 2019 he was the recipient of the [Nana] Marcus Mosiah Garvey Foundation award for excellence in Afrikan Studies and Education. Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Kambon was awarded the 2020/2021 University of Lagos (UNILAG) Lagos Area Cluster Centre (LACC) Fellowship where he contributed significantly to the work of “reconfiguring” Afrikan Studies. In 2025, he was awarded the Kwame Nkrumah Award for Pan-African Leadership by the Pan-African Leadership Institute (PALI). He is an Associate Professor and served as Head of the Language, Literature and Drama Section of the Institute of African Studies at the University of Ghana and also served as Editor-in-Chief of the Ghana Journal of Linguistics (2016-2023). He served as Secretary of the African Studies Association of Africa from 2015-2020. He also played an instrumental role in 34 Abibifo ‘Black People’ of the Diaspora receiving Ghanaian citizenship in 2016 and many more receiving citizenship in 2019, 2022, and 2024. Having contributed to the Government of Ghana’s official Diaspora Engagement Policy, he now assists others interested in repatriation via RepatriateToGhana.com‘s Decade of Our Repatriation (DOOR Initiative), which has been endorsed by the Government of Ghana (Diaspora Affairs, Office of the President and Ghana Tourism Development Company). His multidisciplinary research interests include Serial Verb Construction Nominalization, Historical Linguistics, sbAyt nt Kmt(yw) ‘Studies of Black People’, & Abibifahodie ‘Black Liberation’.

  • The Danger of a Single Story: What Ancient Sources Reveal About Israel and Black People

    The Danger of a Single Story: What Ancient Sources Reveal About Israel and Black People

    Israel and Black people

    The relationship between Israel and Black people is not defined by one story — and ancient historical sources prove it. For too long, a single biblical narrative has shaped how Kmtyw understand a critical chapter of their own history. However, primary texts from the ancient and classical world tell a far more complex and empowering story. That story centers Kmtyw — Black people, the Ancient Egyptians — as sovereign agents who acted decisively in their own defense.

    Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon, world-renowned Pan-Kmtyw linguist and architect of Abibitumi, delivers this truth with precision and power. In this landmark lecture, he draws directly from ancient and classical historical sources. Furthermore, he connects the expulsion of the Hyksos to the Exodus narrative in ways that fundamentally challenge the dominant account. As a result, viewers walk away with a richer, more grounded understanding of Kmtyw history. This is not revisionism — this is restoration.

    Reclaiming Kmtyw History: Beyond the Single Story of Israel and Black People

    Multiple ancient accounts document how the Hyksos expulsion unfolded. In addition, these accounts differ significantly from the story most people know. Ɔbenfo Kambon examines these differences with scholarly rigor and Afrikan-centered purpose. Most importantly, he equips students, scholars, parents, and community builders with the critical tools to research primary sources themselves. This lecture runs 2 hours and 18 minutes. It includes 89 detailed slides. Together, they form a comprehensive and liberatory educational resource rooted in Ma’at.

    Abibifahodie demands that Kmtyw people reclaim their historical narrative — fully and without apology. Therefore, this lecture is not optional enrichment. It is essential study. The danger of a single story is real, and its consequences shape how Black people see themselves and their relationship to power. Furthermore, transcending that single story is an act of liberation. Invest in your knowledge. Invest in your people. Get access now and study the full lecture with all 89 slides for just $20.

    👉 Watch / Get it here: https://stg-abibitumi-rpd-3fbq.ue1.rapydapps.cloud/product/what-was-israel-in-relation-to-black-people-the-danger-of-a-single-story-2/

  • Building Liberation: How Kmtyw Architecture Reflects the Black Worldview

    Building Liberation: How Kmtyw Architecture Reflects the Black Worldview

    Kmtyw worldview architecture

    Kmtyw worldview architecture is not theory — it is living, breathing practice. Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon has done what few scholars dare: he built his cosmology into stone, earth, and wood. This landmark lecture reveals how Abibitumi Ahemfie — the Abibitumi Palace — was designed as a family-based, intergenerational residential and work space. Furthermore, every element of the structure carries intentional meaning rooted in classical Kmt knowledge systems.

    The building draws from creation stories across ḫmnw, iwnw, mn nfr, and wꜣst. In addition, it incorporates cosmological wisdom from the Dogon, Bakôngo, Basongye, Bambara, Fɔn, and Kasena-Nankana peoples. As a result, the structure becomes a monument to Kmtyw continuity — not a museum piece, but a living home. Earth blocks, stone floors, wood ceilings, and solar orientation all serve specific etiological and ontological purposes. Most importantly, the exclusive reliance on Rꜥ — the sun — as an energy source reflects deep alignment with ancestral principles.

    How Ɔbenfo Kambon Brings the Kmtyw Worldview Architecture to Life

    Significant numbers are woven into the structure through geometric shapes and bomborisi painting. These are not decorations — they are cosmological statements. Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Kambon treats architecture as a form of scholarship and liberation praxis. Therefore, every design choice answers to Ma’at and to the ancestors. This lecture makes that entire process visible, accessible, and teachable to the broader Kmtyw community. Furthermore, it demonstrates that Abibifahodie requires us to build differently — physically, intellectually, and spiritually.

    This presentation is essential for scholars, students, architects, and community builders committed to Abibifahodie. However, it speaks equally to parents and families who want their living spaces to reflect who they truly are. Ɔbenfo Kambon’s work through Abibitumi continues to set the standard for Pan-Afrikan education grounded in ancestral truth. As a result, this lecture is not simply a purchase — it is an investment in how we understand, build, and inhabit our world. Watch it, study it, and build from it.

    Watch / Get it here: Abibitumi Architecture and the Kmtyw Worldview — Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Kambon

  • W.E.B. Du Bois and the Fight for Black Human Rights — A Pan-Afrikan Perspective

    W.E.B. Du Bois and the Fight for Black Human Rights — A Pan-Afrikan Perspective

    Du Bois human rights

    Du Bois human rights scholarship remains one of the most urgent intellectual inheritances Kmtyw people carry forward today. W.E.B. Du Bois did not simply theorize — he organized, agitated, and demanded full humanity for Black people on a global stage. His vision reached far beyond reform. It was a declaration of Abibifahodie. Furthermore, understanding that vision through a Pan-Afrikan lens transforms how we apply it now.

    Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon — world-renowned Pan-Kmtyw linguist and architect of Abibitumi — delivers exactly that transformation in this landmark lecture. Recorded at the 150th Anniversary Symposium honoring Du Bois, this 35-minute presentation cuts through distortion and centers Kmtyw liberation. Ɔbenfo Kambon does not merely commemorate Du Bois. Instead, he excavates the radical human rights agenda that mainstream academia consistently buries. As a result, Kmtyw scholars and community builders gain a sharper, more honest framework for action.

    Why Ɔbenfo Kambon’s Lecture on Du Bois Human Rights Matters Now

    This is not a surface-level tribute. Ɔbenfo Kambon grounds Du Bois’s human rights framework in the living struggle for Black liberation. He connects historical Pan-Afrikan thought to present-day conditions Kmtyw people face worldwide. Moreover, the included 20-slide secured PDF PowerPoint gives you a study tool you can return to again and again. Together, the video and slides form a complete resource. In addition, the content speaks directly to scholars, students, parents, and every Kmtyw person building toward freedom.

    This combo bundle — video stream plus downloadable slides — is available now for just $20. Most importantly, every purchase directly supports Abibitumi and the broader mission of Pan-Kmtyw education. Do not wait for institutions to teach you this. Kmtyw people must build and sustain their own knowledge infrastructure. This lecture is one powerful block in that foundation. Watch it, study it, share it with your community.

    Watch the lecture and download the slides here: https://stg-abibitumi-rpd-3fbq.ue1.rapydapps.cloud/product/du-bois-and-the-human-rights-agenda-150th-anniversary-symposium/

  • Beyond Decolonization: Reclaiming Temporal Reality Through Ma’at and the Restoration of Kmt

    Beyond Decolonization: Reclaiming Temporal Reality Through Ma’at and the Restoration of Kmt

    Ma'at temporal reality

    Ma’at temporal reality offers Kmtyw people a sovereign framework for understanding time, identity, and liberation. Most scholars working on decolonization unknowingly trap themselves inside colonial logic. They use colonial languages to conceptualize freedom. Furthermore, they root their entire identity in the presence — or absence — of the colonial enemy. This is not liberation. This is reaction.

    Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon, master linguist and architect of Abibitumi, identifies three critical problems with decolonization discourse. First, colonial language distorts how we conceptualize reality. Second, imagining time as a straight line — pre-colonial, colonial, post-colonial — imprisons our thinking. Third, defining ourselves in relation to our oppressor keeps us perpetually off-center. As a result, what passes as liberation theory often reinforces the very structures we aim to dismantle. Ɔbenfo Kambon cuts through this confusion with surgical precision and ancestral grounding.

    How Ma’at Temporal Reality and srwḏ tꜢ n Kmt Restore Kmtyw Power

    Using comparative historical analysis, Ɔbenfo Kambon reframes movements like #GandhiMustFall through a Kmtyw-centered lens. He connects them directly to Amnirense qore li kdwe li’s #AugustusMustFall campaign. In addition, he demonstrates that these were never about decolonization — a buzzword designed to attract funding, not produce freedom. Instead, they represent a continuous, unbroken Kmtyw struggle for srwḏ tꜢ n Kmt — restoring the land of Black people. Most importantly, this restoration operates outside colonial time entirely. Ma’at is not a reaction to colonialism. Ma’at is the eternal standard that predates and outlasts every colonial project.

    This lecture is essential study for every Kmtyw scholar, student, community builder, and freedom fighter. Abibifahodie demands that we think, speak, and organize on our own terms. Therefore, we cannot afford to chase liberation using the colonizer’s conceptual tools. Ɔbenfo Kambon equips us with the intellectual and spiritual architecture to build something permanent. Furthermore, this presentation connects deep Kemetic wisdom directly to practical questions of land, self-sufficiency, and sovereignty. This is exactly the kind of grounded, uncompromising scholarship that Abibitumi was built to deliver. Watch the full lecture and go deeper into the work of restoring Kmt — on our terms, in our time.

    👉 Watch / Get it here: Temporal Reality Ma’at and srwḏ tꜢ n Kmt — Abibitumi

  • Weapons of Mass Construction: Building Black Economic Power Through Strategic Investment

    Weapons of Mass Construction: Building Black Economic Power Through Strategic Investment

    Black economic power

    Black economic power is not a dream — it is a discipline, and Abibitumi is teaching it with precision. Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon, Pan-Kmtyw linguist and architect of Abibitumi, has launched an exclusive investment interest meeting designed to arm our people. Its name says everything: Weapons of Mass Construction. Furthermore, this is not a passive financial seminar. This is economic warfare training for Kmtyw people ready to build.

    How Ɔbenfo Kambon Is Forging Black Economic Power Through Quiet, Strategic Strikes

    Ɔbenfo Kambon frames every investment as a strategic act. He teaches that silent weapons win quiet wars. As a result, participants learn to transform personal financial decisions into tools of collective liberation. This Exclusive Quarterly Investment Opportunities Club gives Kmtyw families a structured path forward. In addition, it provides community accountability — something no mainstream financial platform will ever offer our people. Most importantly, it centers Abibifahodie at every step.

    The framework Ɔbenfo presents is rooted in Abibitumi’s larger mission. Building wealth without consciousness simply reproduces oppression in Black hands. However, building wealth with Ma’at as the foundation transforms individual gain into communal power. This meeting equips participants to BlackPower themselves and their families deliberately. Furthermore, every strategy discussed connects personal investment to the broader project of Pan-Afrikan liberation. That connection is what separates Abibitumi from every other financial education space.

    This recording is available now for only $10. Therefore, there is no barrier to entry for any serious Kmtyw builder. Students, scholars, parents, and community leaders will all find actionable tools inside. In addition, purchasers receive access to register for the live event — check your order confirmation email for full details. Most importantly, your $10 does not fund a corporation indifferent to your liberation. It funds Abibitumi directly and strengthens the infrastructure of Black economic power for generations to come.

    Do not wait for permission to build. Watch and get it here: Abibitumi Investments Interest Meeting: Weapons of Mass Construction.