Tag: culture

  • Reclaiming Kemet: The Political History of Black People Across Space and Time

    Reclaiming Kemet: The Political History of Black People Across Space and Time

    political history of Kemet

    The political history of Kemet stretches far beyond what colonial education systems have ever dared to teach. Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon — world-renowned Pan-Afrikan linguist and architect of Abibitumi — delivers exactly the scholarship our people deserve. In this third installment of the Free The Youth Lecture Series, he brings university-level knowledge directly into the community. Furthermore, he does so with clarity, depth, and uncompromising Afrikan-centered truth.

    This lecture opens with a compelling, evidence-based case for abandoning the term “Africa” altogether. Ɔbenfo demonstrates why the Greco-Roman label erases our identity and disconnects us from our land. Instead, he centers Kemet — the land of Black people — as the proper framework. As a result, every slide reorients the listener toward self-knowledge and Abibifahodie. In addition, the lecture surveys multiple societies across the land of Black people, the Kmtyw, with rigor and ancestral reverence.

    The Mbôngi and the Political History of Kemet’s Organizational Power

    Most importantly, Ɔbenfo gives a thorough and detailed discussion of the Mbôngi — the traditional political institution of Afrikan people. This ancient structure reveals that our ancestors built sophisticated, community-centered governance long before colonization. Moreover, understanding the Mbôngi equips us with a model for organizing today. This is not abstract theory. This is living liberation strategy rooted in the political history of Kemet and its people. The lecture spans 173 slides and over three hours of dense, transformative scholarship.

    Abibitumi exists to break knowledge free from the ebony tower and place it in Afrikan hands. This lecture delivers exactly that — at just $20, it is an investment in collective consciousness. Therefore, whether you are a scholar, student, parent, or community builder, this lecture speaks directly to you. Our people are building. Our people are studying. Our people are rising. Watch it, share it, and let it fuel your work toward Ma’at and liberation.

    Watch / Get it here: Free The Youth Lecture #3 — Traditional Kemet Throughout Space and Time

  • How Black People Traditionally Understood Personhood, Time, and Reality

    How Black People Traditionally Understood Personhood, Time, and Reality

    Black conception of self

    The Black conception of self is not a western construct — it never was. Afrikan people have always held a profound, sophisticated understanding of personhood, time, and reality. However, colonial education has buried these truths beneath layers of eurasian thought. As a result, many of us have inherited frameworks that do not serve our liberation. This lecture reclaims what was always ours.

    Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Kambon Restores the Black Conception of Self and Time

    In this landmark session, Ɔbenfo (Professor) Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon delivers a masterclass in Afrikan-centered philosophy. He presented this lecture at UNiMAC for Dr. Joseph Aketema’s Introduction to African and Non-African Philosophies I class on April 12, 2025. Furthermore, he draws from the philosophies of Ancient Kemet, Yoruba, Igbo, Akan, Bini, Fon, and Bakongo traditions. Together, these traditions paint a complete picture of how Kmtyw have always understood existence. Most importantly, Ɔbenfo Kambon dismantles the linear, eurasian worldview with precision and clarity. He replaces it with a cyclical, Afrikan-centered understanding of time and identity.

    This resource pack includes a full 1 hour, 12 minute video lecture and a downloadable 83-slide PDF. In addition, you get instant access the moment you purchase. The slides alone are a powerful study tool for students, educators, and community builders alike. Therefore, this is not merely a lecture — it is a liberation resource. Every Afrikan person seeking to understand themselves outside of western definitions needs this material.

    Abibitumi exists to give Afrikan people the intellectual tools Abibifahodie demands. Consequently, every resource on this platform is built to strengthen our communities and sharpen our minds. The Black conception of self must be taught in our homes, our schools, and our study circles. This lecture makes that possible. It grounds us in Ma’at and reconnects us to the ancestors who built the foundations of human civilization. Do not let another generation grow up without this knowledge. Watch the full lecture and download the slides today.

    Watch / Get it here: Personhood, Time, and Culture — Video + Slides | Abibitumi — $20.00

  • Why Kemet Matters: Reclaiming the Black Identity of Ancient Kmt

    Why Kemet Matters: Reclaiming the Black Identity of Ancient Kmt

    why Kemet matters

    Why Kemet matters is not an academic curiosity — it is a question of liberation. For generations, non-Black Egyptologists have waged a deliberate campaign of disinformation. They replaced the indigenous term Kmt — meaning “Land of Black people” — with the hollow phrase “Ancient Egypt.” Furthermore, they replaced Kmtyw — meaning “Black people” — with the equally obscuring “Ancient Egyptians.” As a result, the entire legacy of a Black civilization became buried under layers of academic malpractice and intellectual fraud.

    This erasure is not accidental. It is systematic. It strips Afrikan people of their ancestral identity, their spiritual inheritance, and their civilizational greatness. Moreover, it renders the very language, culture, and philosophy of the Kmtyw unintelligible to their own descendants. In addition, it empowers anti-Black collaborators within academia to continue rewriting our story without our consent. Abibifahodie — Black Liberation — demands that we reclaim these names, these truths, and this history for ourselves.

    How Ɔbenfo Kambon’s Lecture Restores the Truth of Why Kemet Matters

    Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon — world-renowned Pan-Afrikan linguist and architect of Abibitumi — dismantles this fraud with precision and power. In this three-hour, twenty-six-minute seminar, he delivers 129 slides of evidence-based, liberation-centered scholarship. He uses the names the Kmtyw called themselves. Consequently, what was once obscured becomes brilliantly clear. Most importantly, Ɔbenfo Kambon grounds every argument in the indigenous language of Kmt itself — not in the distortions of outsiders. This is the kind of scholarship that builds free minds and free people.

    This lecture belongs in every Afrikan household, classroom, and community space. Students gain intellectual grounding. Scholars gain a rigorous framework. Parents gain tools to teach their children the truth. Furthermore, community builders gain a shared foundation rooted in Ma’at — truth, justice, and cosmic order. Abibitumi exists precisely to deliver this caliber of knowledge directly to Afrikan people worldwide. Therefore, do not wait. Invest in your liberation today.

    📺 Watch it now and get the slides: SSS Video Recording + Slides: Why Kemet Matters — Available at Abibitumi.com

  • Reclaiming What Was Taken: Language, Identity & Black Liberation Through Sankɔfa

    Reclaiming What Was Taken: Language, Identity & Black Liberation Through Sankɔfa

    intergenerational Black liberation

    Intergenerational Black liberation begins with one decisive act — returning to retrieve what was taken from us. Sankɔfa, the sacred Akan principle of looking back to move forward, is not merely symbolic. It is a living methodology. It is a call to action for every Afrikan person serious about freedom. Furthermore, it demands that we transmit our culture, our language, and our identity to every generation that follows us.

    Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon — Pan-Afrikan linguist, scholar, and architect of Abibitumi — answers that call directly in this powerful presentation. He draws from his own lived experience of Sankɔfa. He shows how language is not simply a communication tool. Most importantly, he reveals how language is the very vessel of consciousness, identity, and liberation. Through Twi, Mdw Ntr, and Afrikan-centered practice, Ɔbenfo Kambon demonstrates what it truly means to reclaim who we are. As a result, this lecture reaches far beyond theory into transformative, practical wisdom.

    How Sankɔfa Fuels Intergenerational Black Liberation and Cultural Continuity

    Culture does not preserve itself. We must consciously transmit it. In this lecture, Ɔbenfo Kambon walks us through the responsibility that Afrikan parents, educators, and community builders carry. However, he does not stop at identifying the problem. He equips us with the tools — language immersion, cultural practice, and Abibifahodie-centered education — to do the work. In addition, he models this transmission through his own journey as a father, scholar, and freedom builder. Every serious student of Pan-Afrikanism will recognize the urgency embedded in every word he delivers.

    This lecture belongs in every Afrikan home, classroom, and liberation study group. The Kmtyw of this generation have a sacred obligation to carry forward what our ancestors built. Furthermore, we must build new structures that ensure our children never lose themselves again. Abibitumi continues to make that mission possible by preserving and distributing transformative works like this one. Do not wait to access this essential piece of Pan-Afrikan scholarship. Watch it, study it, and share it with your community today.

    Watch / Get it here: SANKƆFA: My Experience – Intergenerational Transmission of Language, Identity & Liberation — Available now for $20.00.

  • Heal From the Root: Traditional Herbs for Afrikan Health and Liberation

    Heal From the Root: Traditional Herbs for Afrikan Health and Liberation

    traditional herbs for healthy living

    Traditional herbs for healthy living represent one of the most powerful legacies our Afrikan ancestors left us. For centuries, Kmtyw and Afrikan peoples across the continent maintained vibrant health through deep knowledge of the natural world. However, colonialism deliberately severed us from this wisdom. As a result, reclaiming it is not simply a health choice — it is an act of Abibifahodie.

    Abibitumi is proud to offer this essential seminar as part of our ongoing commitment to whole Afrikan liberation. Furthermore, this recording goes beyond theory. Fiagah Kwami Amewugah brings grounded, practical herbalist knowledge directly to our community. In addition, his teaching connects cultural identity to physical well-being in ways that Western medicine never will. Most importantly, this is knowledge that belongs to us — and he delivers it with that clarity and conviction.

    Why Traditional Herbs for Healthy Living Must Be Part of Our Liberation Practice

    True liberation requires us to heal our bodies as fiercely as we free our minds. Therefore, understanding which traditional herbs support our health is foundational work. Fiagah Amewugah walks viewers through practical applications of ancestral plant medicine. Moreover, he situates this knowledge within Afrikan cultural context — not as folklore, but as sophisticated, time-tested science. This is the kind of teaching Abibitumi was built to amplify and protect.

    Our communities deserve access to healing rooted in who we are. As a result, this seminar is an investment in yourself, your family, and the generations coming after you. Pan-Afrikan education means nothing if it does not reach into our homes and strengthen our bodies. So take this step. Watch, learn, and apply these teachings in your life today.

    🎥 Watch / Get it here: Proper Use of Traditional Herbs for Healthy Living — Abibitumi Exclusive Seminar