Tag: agriculture

  • Secure Land Next to Abibitumi HQ in Ghana — Build the Liberated Community We Deserve

    Secure Land Next to Abibitumi HQ in Ghana — Build the Liberated Community We Deserve

    invest in Afrikan land Ghana

    The opportunity to invest in Afrikan land in Ghana — right next to Abibitumi Headquarters — is here, and it demands your full attention. Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon, world-renowned Pan-Afrikan linguist and architect of Abibitumi, has released an exclusive video replay covering this rare land opportunity. In it, he breaks down exactly what is available, why it matters, and how you can act now. This is not a distant dream. This is a concrete, actionable step toward Abibifahodie.

    For $10,000, you can secure a 100×70 plot of prime land adjacent to Abibitumi Headquarters in Ghana. Furthermore, this is not simply a real estate transaction. It is a declaration. It is a commitment to building a physically rooted, self-sufficient, liberated Afrikan community. Repatriation requires infrastructure. As a result, every plot secured strengthens the foundation of what we are collectively building. Ɔbenfo Kambon does not offer vague inspiration — he offers a precise, grounded vision backed by real land, real coordinates, and real community.

    Why Invest in Afrikan Land in Ghana Through Abibitumi

    Abibitumi exists to advance Pan-Afrikan education, agriculture, and self-sufficiency. In addition, this land sits directly within that ecosystem. Securing your plot means you are not only investing in property — you are investing in proximity to a living, breathing liberation infrastructure. Most importantly, Ɔbenfo Kambon has built Abibitumi as more than a platform. It is a headquarters, a hub, and now a growing physical community. Your presence on that land contributes to something our people have fought for across generations. However, opportunities like this do not remain open indefinitely. The time to move is now.

    Abibifahodie demands that we move from theory into action. Therefore, watching this video replay is the first step. Ɔbenfo Kambon walks you through every detail with clarity and vision. He answers the critical questions so you can make an informed, empowered decision. This is Pan-Afrikan community building in its most tangible form. Watch the full land update replay and take your place in the future we are building together.

    Watch / Get it here: Land Update Video Replay — Abibitumi

  • 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

  • Reclaiming Kemet: Why the Land of Black People Was Never “Ancient Egypt”

    Reclaiming Kemet: Why the Land of Black People Was Never “Ancient Egypt”

    Kemet land of Black people

    Kemet — land of Black people — has been systematically erased from global consciousness through one of history’s most deliberate and sustained disinformation campaigns. Non-Black Egyptologists replaced the indigenous name Kmt with “Ancient Egypt.” They replaced Kmtyw — meaning Black people — with “Ancient Egyptians.” As a result, the world inherited a deliberately falsified record. Furthermore, Afrikan people were cut off from their own greatness, their own language, and their own identity.

    This erasure was never accidental. It was calculated. Anti-Black scholars understood that names carry power. By stripping Kmt of its indigenous meaning, they rendered the entire civilization unintelligible. Consequently, students, scholars, and communities worldwide were left studying a people — stripped of Blackness — as though race never mattered. However, race mattered enormously to the Kmtyw themselves. They named their land after who they were. In addition, they left that testimony in stone, in scripture, and in language.

    Why Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Kambon’s Lecture on Kemet and Black Identity Is Essential

    Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon — Pan-Afrikan linguist, scholar, and architect of Abibitumi — confronts this academic malpractice directly. His revised 2019 lecture, Why Kemet (Land of Black People) Matters!, dismantles the fraud with precision. Most importantly, he uses the very language of the Kmtyw to restore what was stolen. He demonstrates that calling the civilization by its indigenous name is not symbolic — it is corrective. Furthermore, it is an act of Abibifahodie — Black liberation through knowledge, language, and self-definition.

    This lecture is essential for every Afrikan person seeking clarity about who built Kmt and why that truth matters today. Parents can use it to teach children the real story. Scholars can anchor their research in linguistic truth. Community builders can use it as a foundation for unapologetic Pan-Afrikan education. Abibitumi exists precisely to provide resources like this — tools that restore dignity, sharpen the mind, and advance the liberation of Afrikan people worldwide. Do not allow the longest-running gaslighting campaign in history to continue unchallenged. Watch this lecture. Study it. Share it.

    Watch / Get it here: Why Kemet (Land of Black People) Matters! — Revised 2019 Edition — available now at Abibitumi.com for $20.00.

  • Afrikan Food Sovereignty: Reclaiming the Land and Our Liberation

    Afrikan Food Sovereignty: Reclaiming the Land and Our Liberation

    Afrikan food sovereignty

    Afrikan food sovereignty is not a trend — it is a revolutionary act. Abibitumi is proud to present SSS 49, a vital seminar recording featuring Edwin Baffour. This lecture speaks directly to the power of Afrikan people feeding, sustaining, and liberating themselves. Furthermore, it aligns perfectly with the mission of Abibifahodie that Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon has built into every corner of this platform.

    Why Afrikan Food Sovereignty Must Be Central to Our Liberation Work

    Self-sufficiency begins with the land. Edwin Baffour brings deep knowledge and practical grounding to this conversation. He challenges Afrikan people to move beyond dependency and toward true agricultural autonomy. In addition, his presentation connects food production directly to collective power, community resilience, and Pan-Afrikan self-determination. This is not theory for the classroom alone — it is a call to action for every Afrikan family and community builder worldwide.

    Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon has consistently taught that liberation requires material conditions, not just ideology. As a result, Abibitumi curates seminars that arm our people with real, applicable knowledge. This recording does exactly that. Moreover, it sits within the Abibitumi Exclusive Seminar Series — a body of work designed to produce thinkers, builders, and leaders committed to Abibifahodie. Every lecture in this series strengthens the foundation our communities urgently need.

    Most importantly, knowledge without access helps no one. For only $20.00, you can own this full video recording and return to it again and again. Share it with your family. Screen it in your community. Use it to spark real organizing around agriculture and self-sufficiency. Abibitumi exists so that Afrikan people everywhere — scholars, students, parents, and builders — can access transformative education on their own terms. Watch the SSS 49 seminar recording with Edwin Baffour now and take your next step toward Afrikan food sovereignty.

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

  • 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