Tag: Kemet

  • Black Civilization Reclaimed: Ɔbenfo Kambon’s Groundbreaking ASCAC Midwest 2025 Presentation

    Black Civilization Reclaimed: Ɔbenfo Kambon’s Groundbreaking ASCAC Midwest 2025 Presentation

    Black civilization history

    Black civilization history is not a mystery — it is a suppressed truth waiting to be reclaimed by Afrikan people. Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon, world-renowned Pan-Afrikan linguist and architect of Abibitumi, delivered a landmark presentation at ASCAC Midwest 2025. The lecture, titled “In the Spirit of Ameny,” previews his forthcoming book, The Construction of Black Civilization. Furthermore, it stands as one of the most powerful scholarly contributions to Abibifahodie in recent memory.

    In 39 minutes and 7 seconds, Ɔbenfo Kambon dismantles colonial distortions and builds something far greater in their place. He examines classical Kmt(yw) — the Kmtyw themselves — and their rightful place at the center of Afrikan history. In addition, he confronts questions of Black self-identification with precision and unapologetic clarity. As a result, this lecture gives Afrikan people the intellectual foundation to stand firmly in their own story. Every scholar, student, and community builder needs this material.

    Classical Kmt and the Foundations of Black Civilization History

    Most importantly, Ɔbenfo Kambon roots this entire presentation in evidence — linguistic, historical, and cultural. He traces the historical foundations of Black Power Pan-Afrikanism directly to classical Afrikan civilization. However, this is not nostalgia. This is strategic reclamation. The presentation slides, included with the replay, reinforce every argument with visual clarity. Furthermore, Ɔbenfo’s command of the source materials transforms what could be abstract theory into lived Afrikan truth.

    This video replay gives our entire global Afrikan community direct access to that power. Scholars will gain rigorous citation material. Students will gain unshakeable grounding in who we are. Parents will gain tools to teach the next generation without apology. In addition, community builders will gain a framework rooted in Ma’at and Abibifahodie. Black civilization history belongs to us — and Ɔbenfo Kambon has given us yet another key to unlock it. Watch the full replay and download the presentation slides today.

    Watch / Get it here: The Construction of Black Civilization — ASCAC Midwest 2025 Video Replay

  • Reclaiming Kemet: Why True Decolonization Must Begin With Afrikan Time and Ma’at

    Reclaiming Kemet: Why True Decolonization Must Begin With Afrikan Time and Ma’at

    Classical Kemet decolonization

    Classical Kemet decolonization is not a metaphor — it is a mandate. In January 2025, Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon, Associate Professor of African Studies at the University of Ghana, delivered a landmark presentation at the Pan-African Leadership Institute’s Transformational Leadership Immersion Course. Furthermore, he did so in one of the most hallowed academic spaces on the continent — the Institute of African Studies, University of Ghana. This was not a routine lecture. It was a declaration.

    Over three hours and across 94 meticulously crafted slides, Ɔbenfo Kambon dismantled aAmw eurasian frameworks at their root. He challenged the very word “decolonization” — exposing how even our liberation language can carry colonial contamination. Most importantly, he restored the cyclic Afrikan concept of time against the linear eurasian distortion that has misdirected our people for centuries. When we understand time as Kmtyw understood it, we stop chasing eurasian endpoints. Instead, we return to the rhythm of Ma’at — harmony, balance, and cosmic order as a living practice.

    How Classical Kemet Decolonization Restores Ma’at as the Way Forward

    Ma’at is not a relic. It is the operating system of Afrikan liberation. Ɔbenfo Kambon’s presentation makes this undeniable. He re-centers Ma’at not as a dusty museum concept but as the guiding principle for Black people building power globally. In addition, he connects the thought of Kmtyw — Black people — directly to contemporary struggle and strategy. As a result, this lecture does not simply inform. It transforms. Every scholar, student, parent, and community builder who watches this will leave with a sharper, more grounded vision of Abibifahodie.

    This is precisely the work that Abibitumi was built to carry. We do not offer passive education. We offer tools for liberation. This three-hour masterclass — complete with all 94 slides — is available now for just $20. However, its value is immeasurable. If you are serious about understanding Classical Kemet decolonization and walking the path of Ma’at with clarity and conviction, this presentation is essential. Watch it, study it, and share it with your community.

    Watch / Get it here: Classical Kemet, Decolonizing “Decolonization,” and The Way Forward for Global Kemet

  • What Was Israel to Black People? Breaking Free From the Danger of a Single Story

    What Was Israel to Black People? Breaking Free From the Danger of a Single Story

    Israel and Black people history

    The real history of Israel and Black people history has been buried under centuries of a single, unchallenged narrative. Most people know only one story — the biblical Exodus. However, ancient and classical historical texts tell a far more complex and revealing truth. Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon, world-renowned Pan-Afrikan linguist and architect of Abibitumi, brings that truth into sharp focus.

    In this powerful seminar, Ɔbenfo Kambon draws from primary historical sources to present an Afrikan-centered analysis of Israel’s relationship to Kmtyw — Black people, the Ancient Egyptians. Furthermore, he examines how scholars have long identified the expulsion of the Hyksos with the Exodus story. Most importantly, he documents how that expulsion actually unfolded. The differences between competing historical narratives are significant. As a result, relying on a single biblical account leaves us deeply uninformed.

    Reclaiming Afrikan Truth: Israel and Black People History Through Primary Sources

    Ɔbenfo Kambon challenges us to do the work that Abibifahodie demands — research, rigor, and radical honesty. In addition, he equips students and scholars alike with the tools to interrogate colonial narratives at their root. This seminar spans over two hours and includes 94 meticulously prepared slides. Therefore, it functions as both a lecture and a foundational research resource. Every Afrikan person serious about liberation deserves access to this level of scholarship.

    This is not surface-level content. Rather, it is the kind of deep, uncompromising intellectual work that Abibitumi was built to deliver. The danger of a single story is real — and it has political consequences for Afrikan people globally. However, when we return to ancient sources, we reclaim our power to define our own history. Watch this lecture, study the slides, and share it within your community. Get it here: Watch / Get it here — SSS Video Recording + Slides.

  • Who Are You, Really? The Kmtyw Understanding of the Person as Multiple Selves

    Who Are You, Really? The Kmtyw Understanding of the Person as Multiple Selves

    Kmtyw concepts of the person

    Kmtyw concepts of the person challenge everything the Western world has told us about who we are. For centuries, colonial thought reduced human beings to isolated individuals — biological units with no deeper cosmological identity. However, our Afrikan ancestors understood something far more profound. The person is not a single, fixed self. Instead, the person is a dynamic, relational, and multi-dimensional being — fully embedded in the cosmos, the community, and the moral order of Ma’at.

    In this essential lecture, Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon — linguist, Pan-Afrikan scholar, and architect of Abibitumi — guides us through the classical intellectual traditions of Kmt. Drawing on both continental and diasporan sources, he dismantles the atomized view of personhood completely. Furthermore, he demonstrates how each dimension of the self carries its own ontological, moral, and cosmological function. This is not abstract philosophy. Most importantly, this is a framework for liberation — for understanding ourselves as Kmtyw people on our own terms.

    Why Kmtyw Concepts of the Person Matter for Abibifahodie

    Liberation begins in the mind. Therefore, reclaiming how we define ourselves is one of the most revolutionary acts we can perform. This session — Week 2.5 of the Foundations of Kmtyw Thought series — runs nearly four hours and includes 69 slides in a secured PDF. It covers the person as a composite being, with multiple interdependent selves operating simultaneously. In addition, Ɔbenfo situates all of this within a cosmological framework that honors the depth and genius of Afrikan thought. This is exactly the kind of knowledge that schools will never teach our children.

    As a result, this lecture is essential for scholars, students, parents, and community builders across the Afrikan world. Whether you are new to Kmtyw studies or deepening an existing foundation, this session will sharpen your understanding profoundly. It will also strengthen your ability to pass this knowledge to the next generation. This is the work of Abibitumi — building a liberated Afrikan mind, one lesson at a time. Do not wait to access this knowledge.

    Watch / Get it here: Foundations of Kmtyw Thought #2.5 — The Person as Multiple Selves

  • The Afrikan Roots of Ebonics: What They Never Taught You About Black Language

    The Afrikan Roots of Ebonics: What They Never Taught You About Black Language

    Afrikan roots of Ebonics

    The Afrikan roots of Ebonics run deeper than most scholars dare to teach. This language did not begin on slave ships. It carried the living grammar of Kmt across oceans, centuries, and chains. Furthermore, it preserved the phonological and syntactic genius of our ancestors — intact, active, and undeniable. Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon proves exactly that in this powerful, uncut interview recorded for the highly anticipated documentary Talking Black in America, Part Two.

    Ɔbenfo Kambon Traces the Afrikan Roots of Ebonics from Mdw Ntr to Modern Black Speech

    In this exclusive, uncensored footage, Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Kambon delivers example after concrete example. He draws direct linguistic continuity across mdw nTr, Wolof, Twi, and Yorùbá. As a result, the connections between classical Kmt and contemporary anti-amerikkkan Afrikan speech become impossible to dismiss. He examines grammatical structures, morphology, phonology, syntax, and lexical retentions with precision. Most importantly, he presents this evidence not as theory — but as documented, scholarly fact. This is Abibifahodie linguistics at its highest expression.

    This lecture dismantles the colonial lie that Black speech is broken English. In addition, it restores the full intellectual dignity of Afrikan people globally. Kambon demonstrates that anti-amerikkkan Afrikan — what colonizers label “Ebonics” — reflects centuries of linguistic innovation rooted in Kmtyw tradition. Moreover, this is not borrowed grammar. This is inherited genius. Every Black parent, student, scholar, and community builder needs to witness this analysis. The language your family speaks carries the DNA of the world’s oldest civilization.

    This product includes the full uncut interview footage plus TWO bonus publications by Ɔbenfo Kambon on the subject. Therefore, you receive both the visual presentation and the scholarly documentation in one offering. Abibitumi continues to center the work that our liberation demands — work grounded in truth, rooted in Ma’at, and built for Abibifahodie. Do not sleep on this resource. Arm yourself with knowledge that colonizers spent centuries trying to erase. Watch it. Study it. Share it with your community.

    Watch / Get it here: Uncensored, Uncut — Origins of Anti-Amerikkkan Afrikan (Ebonics) | $15.00