Tag: Maat

  • Ma’at as a Living System: How Ancient Kemetic Order Governs All of Nature

    Ma’at as a Living System: How Ancient Kemetic Order Governs All of Nature

    Maat as a system

    Maat as a system is not a relic of the past — it is a living, active force that governs the natural world. Most people encounter Maat only as a symbol or a single concept. However, Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon goes far deeper. He reveals Maat as an overarching framework that regulates every system within nature itself. This understanding transforms how Afrikan people see themselves and their place in creation.

    Understanding Maat as a System That Regulates Nature and Afrikan Life

    Abibitumi and the Institute for Kemetic Philology present this essential lecture for serious scholars and community builders. Ɔbenfo Kambon draws directly from the sacred language and wisdom of the Kmtyw — the ancient Afrikan people of Kemet. Furthermore, he grounds every insight in the lived reality of Abibifahodie — Black liberation. As a result, this is not abstract philosophy. This is a roadmap for Afrikan people to restore right order in their communities and lives.

    The video recording includes full slides, giving learners both the spoken teaching and its visual foundation. In addition, the material is structured for deep study — not passive consumption. Ɔbenfo Kambon is among the most rigorous Pan-Afrikan linguists working today. His approach demands that Afrikan people engage their own ancestral knowledge with precision and power. Most importantly, this lecture equips us to move from information to transformation.

    Abibitumi exists to build sovereign, self-determined Afrikan minds. Therefore, every resource in the Abibitumi Exclusive Seminar Series serves that sacred mission. This lecture is no exception. It belongs in the library of every student, parent, healer, and community leader committed to Abibifahodie. For only $10.00, you gain direct access to Ɔbenfo Kambon’s scholarship — scholarship forged in love for Afrikan people and rooted in the eternal truth of Ma’at. Watch it, study it, and share it with your community.

    Watch / Get it here: Understanding Maat as a System — Video Recording + Slides

  • Ma’at and Rulership in Ancient Kmt: What Our Ancestors Knew About Justice and Power

    Ma’at and Rulership in Ancient Kmt: What Our Ancestors Knew About Justice and Power

    Ma'at and rulership in Kmt

    Ma’at and rulership in Kmt form the philosophical and political foundation that governed one of the greatest civilizations our ancestors ever built. This is not abstract history. Furthermore, it is a living framework — one that Afrikan people urgently need to reclaim today. Most importantly, understanding these principles reconnects us to the sovereign tradition of the Kmtyw, our ancient ancestors who walked in alignment, justice, and divine order.

    Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon — Pan-Afrikan linguist, scholar, and architect of Abibitumi — delivers a masterful, deeply researched lecture on exactly these principles. He draws directly from Kmtyw sources. In addition, he frames the material through the lens of Abibifahodie — Black liberation — grounding ancient wisdom in our present struggle. This is not a surface-level survey. It is a rigorous, transformative deep-dive spanning two hours and forty-nine minutes, supported by 88 detailed slides.

    Why Ma’at and Rulership in Kmt Must Ground Our Liberation Work

    Nsyt — rulership — was never simply about power for the Kmtyw. Rather, it was inseparable from Ma’at: truth, justice, balance, and cosmic order. A ruler who violated Ma’at violated the very foundation of civilization. As a result, governance became a sacred responsibility, not a privilege. However, colonial miseducation has severed Afrikan people from this understanding. Ɔbenfo Kambon restores that severed connection with precision, clarity, and unapologetic Afrikan-centered scholarship. Every slide, every reference, every analysis serves Afrikan people directly.

    This lecture originally aired on November 19, 2017, and it remains as vital and necessary as ever. Students, scholars, community builders, and parents will all find deep value here. In addition, the self-paced format means you engage on your own terms, at your own speed, as many times as you need. This is the kind of education Abibitumi was built to provide — rooted in our ancestors, designed for our liberation. Do not wait to access this knowledge. Your ancestors built civilizations on these very principles. Now it is your turn to carry that legacy forward.

    Watch the full lecture and access all 88 slides here: On Ma’at And Nsyt (Rulership) — Get It Here

  • Sound, Solidarity & Ma’at: How the Pan-Afrikan World Is Rebuilding Jamaica Together

    Pan-Afrikan Jamaica relief

    Pan-Afrikan Jamaica relief has never looked — or sounded — like this. Abibitumi is convening the global Kmtyw family for a virtual concert that fuses cultural power with collective healing. This is not charity. This is Ma’at in motion.

    Music carries memory. Reggae and Dancehall have always been vessels of Afrikan resistance and joy. Therefore, this event brings top artists from these traditions directly to our community. Furthermore, it pairs that musical power with keynote insights on Caribbean sustainability and recovery. Every note, every word, every connection serves Abibifahodie — the liberation of Afrikan people everywhere.

    Restoring Ma’at Through Pan-Afrikan Jamaica Relief and Kmtyw Unity

    Abibitumi, built by Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon, has always stood at the intersection of scholarship and action. Most importantly, this event reflects that same commitment. It is not a passive fundraiser. Instead, it is a live gathering where you interact directly with the global Pan-Kmtyw community. Your presence activates power. Your engagement restores balance. Together, we do not simply send aid — we rebuild from a foundation of Afrikan values and Kmtyw knowledge.

    This event is free. Access costs nothing. As a result, every member of our global family — scholars, students, parents, and community builders — can participate fully. In addition, the virtual format breaks every border that colonialism ever drew between us. Show up. Engage. Let us restore Ma’at together, because our unity is the most powerful resource we possess. Get access here: Watch / Get It Here.

  • Maat as Lived Practice: What Kemetic Wisdom Reveals About Death and the Afterlife

    Maat and the afterlife

    Maat and the afterlife are not separate philosophical concerns — they are one continuous, living reality in Afrikan thought. Across millennia, Afrikan people have understood that how you live directly shapes what awaits you after death. This is not abstract theology. This is ancestral science, encoded in the classical texts of Kmt and confirmed in the lived practices of Afrikan communities today.

    Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon — Pan-Afrikan linguist, scholar, and architect of Abibitumi — delivers a masterful study that bridges the ancient and the contemporary. He draws on textual evidence from classical Kmt, the Black Nation, the land of the Kmtyw. Furthermore, he brings in attested cultural practices from the Kasena-Nankana people of contemporary Afrika. As a result, we see clearly that this knowledge never died. It endured. It transformed. Most importantly, it still guides Afrikan people today.

    How Maat and the Afterlife Shape Afrikan Living Practice

    Ɔbenfo Kambon demonstrates that one’s treatment of the body after death reflects deep communal values rooted in Mꜣꜥt. Additionally, he shows how conceptions of the spiritual afterlife directly influence how Afrikans choose to act in the physical world. This is Abibifahodie — Black liberation — in its most profound form. However, this wisdom has been deliberately suppressed, distorted, and erased. That suppression ends here. This lecture reclaims what was always ours.

    In addition, this presentation challenges us to move beyond surface-level engagement with Maat. Maat and the afterlife demand that we interrogate how we actually live — not merely what we profess to believe. Ɔbenfo Kambon’s scholarship, rooted in Abibitumi’s mission of Pan-Afrikan education, equips us to walk in alignment with our ancestors’ highest standards. Therefore, this lecture is not simply academic. It is a call to live rightly, die prepared, and continue contributing to our people across all planes of existence. Watch this essential lecture now and invest in your liberation.

    Watch / Get it here: Mꜣꜥt ‘MAAT’, Death and the Afterlife — $20.00

  • 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