Tag: Kemet

  • 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.

  • Reclaim Your Roots: Studying Afrikan Philosophy Through the Lens of Kmtyw Thought

    Reclaim Your Roots: Studying Afrikan Philosophy Through the Lens of Kmtyw Thought

    Kmtyw Black people's thought

    Kmtyw Black people’s thought is not a footnote in history — it is the foundation of human knowledge itself. Yet most graduate programs erase this truth entirely. As a result, Afrikan scholars enter PhD programs equipped with European frameworks and stripped of their own epistemological inheritance. That gap is not accidental. Furthermore, it is a wound that demands a deliberate, disciplined healing.

    Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon — world-renowned Pan-Afrikan linguist and architect of Abibitumi — built this course to close that wound. Foundations of Kmtyw (Black People’s) Thought Part I introduces students to the core principles, patterns, and history of knowledge production in Kmt — the Black Nation. In addition, the course spans from antiquity to the present. Most importantly, it equips students with indigenous Afrikan theoretical frameworks they can apply directly to their own scholarly research.

    Why Kmtyw Black People’s Thought Must Ground Every Afrikan Scholar

    This course is not an elective. It is a necessity. Afrikan MPhil and PhD students deserve an epistemological universe rooted in their own civilization. Through this seminar, students gain familiarity with fundamentally Kmtyw concepts and ideas. Furthermore, they develop the tools to construct contemporary indigenous frameworks — frameworks built by Afrikan people, for Afrikan people. This is what Abibifahodie — Black Liberation — demands of our scholars. Moreover, it is what our ancestors built and what we are called to restore.

    Abibitumi exists to make this restoration possible. This course offers a rare and powerful entry point into a living intellectual tradition. However, access to this knowledge requires commitment and investment in our collective future. The price reflects the depth, rigor, and irreplaceable value of what Ɔbenfo Kambon delivers. Therefore, if you are a student, educator, parent, or community builder ready to ground your work in truth — this is your next step. Watch the lecture and begin your journey now.

    Get it here: Foundations of Kmtyw (Black People’s) Thought Part I — Abibitumi.com

  • Afrikan Martial Science Reclaimed: Kmtyw Thought in Combat and Military Strategy

    Afrikan Martial Science Reclaimed: Kmtyw Thought in Combat and Military Strategy

    Afrikan martial science

    Afrikan martial science is not a footnote in history — it is a living, breathing system of knowledge that sustained our people through centuries of resistance. In this powerful Week 11 installment of the Foundations of Kmtyw Thought series, Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon delivers nearly three hours of rigorous, unapologetic scholarship. He illuminates the deep roots of Afrikan combat traditions across the continent and throughout the diaspora. This is not watered-down academic theory. This is Abibifahodie in practice.

    How Kmtyw Thought Transforms Our Understanding of Afrikan Martial Science

    Ɔbenfo Kambon grounds this lecture in essential scholarly texts. He draws directly from T. J. Desch-Obi’s Fighting for Honor, which traces Afrikan martial art traditions across the Atlantic World. Furthermore, he engages F. B. Aboagye’s critical work on indigenous Afrikan warfare in the Gold Coast, Asante, and the Northern Territories. Together, these readings build an iron foundation. They reveal that our ancestors developed sophisticated, strategic, and spiritually grounded systems of combat. In addition, this lecture connects those ancestral systems to Afrikan resistance movements in the diaspora. The result is a full, powerful picture of Kmtyw military intelligence.

    This lecture comes as a Video + Secured PDF combo. The PDF includes 53 slides of carefully organized content. However, the real power lives in watching Ɔbenfo Kambon teach. He synthesizes historical analysis, linguistic precision, and Pan-Afrikan vision into every minute of this 2-hour, 52-minute session. Most importantly, he teaches in a way that activates — not just informs. Every Afrikan scholar, student, parent, and community builder needs this knowledge. Abibitumi exists precisely to deliver this kind of transformative education directly to our people.

    Understanding Afrikan martial science is inseparable from understanding liberation itself. Our ancestors did not wait passively. They organized, trained, and fought with brilliance and purpose. As a result, their legacy demands that we study, preserve, and build upon their strategies today. This lecture is your entry point into that tradition. Moreover, it belongs in every study circle, classroom, and liberation curriculum across the Black world. Do not sleep on this resource. Watch it, study it, and share it with your community.

    Watch / Get it here: Foundations of Kmtyw Thought #11 — Afrikan Thought in Combat/Military Science | $20.00

  • The Truth About ADDI’s Burkina Faso Citizenship Initiative — And Why the Journey Continues

    The Truth About ADDI’s Burkina Faso Citizenship Initiative — And Why the Journey Continues

    Burkina Faso citizenship initiative

    The Burkina Faso citizenship initiative shook the Afrikan Diaspora — and Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon is telling the full truth about what happened. This is not a watered-down summary. This is a direct, unfiltered briefing from the architect of Abibitumi himself. Furthermore, he addresses the questions our people have been asking since this initiative first emerged on the horizon of Abibifahodie.

    Ɔbenfo Kambon holds nothing back in this live session replay. He walks through the real twists, turns, and timelines that shaped this effort. As a result, viewers gain clarity that mainstream media and surface-level commentary never provide. In addition, he speaks candidly about why citizenship is no longer on the table for ADDI members — and why that has not stopped him. Most importantly, he explains exactly why he is still going. His commitment to Afrikan return is unshaken. That resolve alone makes this session essential viewing for every Kmtyw ‘Black People’ worldwide.

    Why the Burkina Faso Citizenship Initiative Still Matters for Kmtyw Diaspora

    Repatriation is not a trend. It is a strategic, spiritual, and political act of Abibifahodie. However, the path to return is rarely clean or linear. This session demonstrates that reality with full transparency. Ɔbenfo Kambon models what Pan-Afrikan leadership looks like when obstacles arise — you pivot, you persist, and you keep moving toward liberation. Furthermore, this briefing equips community builders, scholars, students, and parents with the knowledge they need to think critically about continental return. The Burkina Faso citizenship initiative opened a door. Understanding what happened next is part of our collective education.

    This replay includes the full video, presentation slides, and a decree — all for $20.00. There is no substitute for hearing this directly from Ɔbenfo Kambon. His analysis connects ancestral vision to present-day strategy. As a result, this is not just a recording — it is a document of our movement in motion. Abibitumi continues to build the infrastructure our people need to act, not just aspire. Most importantly, this session calls every Kmtyw person in the Diaspora to stay engaged, stay informed, and stay committed to the journey home.

    Watch the full replay and access the slides and decree here: Get It Now at Abibitumi.com

  • Does Afrikan Philosophy Have Validity? Ɔbenfo Kambon Answers Definitively

    Does Afrikan Philosophy Have Validity? Ɔbenfo Kambon Answers Definitively

    Afrikan philosophy validity

    Afrikan philosophy validity is not a question — it is a declaration. For too long, colonial frameworks have attempted to erase, dismiss, and delegitimize the profound intellectual traditions of Afrikan people. However, that erasure ends here. In this landmark 2016 lecture, Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon — Pan-Afrikan linguist, scholar, and architect of Abibitumi — delivers a masterful defense and affirmation of Kmtyw philosophical thought. Furthermore, he grounds that affirmation in thousands of years of documented Afrikan genius.

    This is Week 9 of the Foundations of Kmtyw (Afrikan=Black) Thought course series. In nearly three hours of rigorous instruction, Ɔbenfo Kambon draws from essential texts by Chukwunyere Kamalu, Théophile Obenga, Emmanuel Eze, and Kwasi Wiredu. Most importantly, he centers Kemet — ancient Black civilization — as the philosophical bedrock of Afrikan people globally. As a result, students walk away with an unshakeable intellectual foundation. In addition, the accompanying 32-slide secured PDF reinforces every key concept presented in the lecture.

    Why This Lecture on Afrikan Philosophy Validity Belongs in Every Black Scholar’s Collection

    This lecture does not ask for permission to exist. Instead, it commands intellectual space for Afrikan thought on its own terms. Obenga’s African Philosophy: The Pharaonic Period grounds the discussion in pre-colonial truth. Moreover, Wiredu’s comparative framework sharpens students’ critical analysis across traditions. Ɔbenfo Kambon synthesizes these texts with extraordinary clarity and purpose. Consequently, this course session equips scholars, students, parents, and community builders with the tools to dismantle anti-Afrikan intellectual attacks. Abibifahodie — Black Liberation — demands this level of philosophical grounding.

    Abibitumi was built precisely for this work. Every product on this platform serves the liberation of Afrikan people worldwide. Therefore, this lecture is not merely academic — it is an act of resistance and reclamation. Whether you are a seasoned researcher or beginning your journey into Kmtyw thought, this session will sharpen your mind and strengthen your commitment to Abibifahodie. Do not wait to secure this resource for yourself and your community.

    Watch and get it here: Foundations of Kmtyw (Afrikan=Black) Thought #9 — Abibitumi.com