Tag: Okunini Obadele

  • Ma’at vs. Egalitarianism: What Ayi Kwei Armah Got Wrong About Kmt

    Ma’at vs. Egalitarianism: What Ayi Kwei Armah Got Wrong About Kmt

    Ma'at vs egalitarianism

    The debate around Ma’at vs egalitarianism strikes at the very heart of how we understand our Afrikan ancestral civilization. Many scholars accept distorted frameworks without question. However, Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon refuses that surrender. In this powerful lecture, he delivers a rigorous, unflinching critique of Ataa Ayi Kwei Armah’s Wat Nt Shemsw: The Way of Companions. Furthermore, he exposes how the text misrepresents the culture, myths, and history of classical Kmt — the Land of Black People.

    Ataa Armah’s work follows a deeply flawed Egyptological convention. It artificially splits Kmt’s continuous historical flow into so-called pre-dynastic and dynastic periods. As a result, it frames these periods as diametric opposites. The former receives praise as “egalitarian” and positive. The latter — characterized as monarchy — is cast as its corrupt opposite. Most importantly, Ɔbenfo Kambon demonstrates that this framing carries no evidentiary support. It distorts the lived reality of the Kmtyw people entirely.

    Why the Ma’at vs Egalitarianism Distinction Matters for Abibifahodie

    This is not a small academic disagreement. Distorting the ethical and spiritual principles of our ancestors has real consequences. Replacing Ma’at — the divine, ordered principle of truth, justice, and cosmic balance — with Western egalitarianism misrepresents what the Kmtyw actually built and believed. In addition, it smuggles foreign ideological frameworks into Afrikan thought under the cover of liberation rhetoric. Ɔbenfo Kambon makes clear that Abibifahodie demands we hold our ancestral record with precision and integrity.

    This lecture is essential viewing for every serious student of Afrikan history, spirituality, and liberation philosophy. Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Kambon equips us with the analytical tools to defend our ancestral truth against distortion — whether intentional or not. Therefore, we must study deeply, critique boldly, and build our understanding on solid Afrikan ground. Do not miss this critical contribution to Pan-Afrikan scholarship. Watch and get it here: AI Maat vs Egalitarianism — Abibitumi.com.

  • Ɔbenfo Kambon’s Burkina Faso Journey: Revolutionary Lessons from the Land of Sankara

    Ɔbenfo Kambon’s Burkina Faso Journey: Revolutionary Lessons from the Land of Sankara

    Burkina Faso Pan-Afrikan revolution

    The Burkina Faso Pan-Afrikan revolution lives — and Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon walked directly into its heart. From August 3–10, 2025, he traveled to Burkina Faso for high-level meetings, deep cultural engagements, and firsthand encounters with the living legacy of Thomas Sankara. Furthermore, he returned with insights that every Afrikan person on this planet needs to hear. This is not commentary from a distance. This is testimony from the ground.

    Ɔbenfo Kambon is the architect of Abibitumi — a Pan-Afrikan education and liberation platform rooted in Ma’at and Abibifahodie. He is a world-renowned linguist, scholar, and freedom strategist. Moreover, his work consistently connects Afrikan language, culture, and consciousness to the urgent project of Black liberation. When he speaks on revolutionary experience, he speaks with both scholarly precision and lived commitment. In addition, his voice carries the weight of decades devoted to our people’s freedom.

    Watch the Replay: Burkina Faso Pan-Afrikan Revolution Insights from Ɔbenfo Kambon

    On August 17, 2025, Ɔbenfo Kambon delivered his reflections in an Abibitumi Exclusive Seminar. He unpacked what he witnessed, what he felt, and what it means for the global Afrikan community. As a result, this replay is now available for just $20.00. Most importantly, your purchase earns you 1000 Abibisika — Black Gold Points — within the Abibitumi ecosystem. Therefore, investing in this seminar means investing directly in your own liberation education and community standing.

    Sankara’s Burkina Faso demonstrated that Afrikan people can govern themselves with dignity, discipline, and revolutionary love. Consequently, studying that legacy today is not nostalgia — it is strategy. Ɔbenfo Kambon’s direct experiences in Burkina Faso bring that strategy into the present moment. Furthermore, this seminar gives our community access to knowledge that mainstream platforms will never provide. However, Abibitumi exists precisely for this purpose — to deliver liberatory knowledge directly into Afrikan hands. Watch the replay now and let the revolution instruct you.

    Watch / Get it here: Reflections on Revolution — Abibitumi Exclusive Seminar Replay

  • Heal, Root, and Rise: Afrikan-Centered Wholistic Wellness With Okuninibaa Dr. Mawiyah Kambon

    Heal, Root, and Rise: Afrikan-Centered Wholistic Wellness With Okuninibaa Dr. Mawiyah Kambon

    Afrikan-centered wholistic wellness

    Afrikan-centered wholistic wellness is not a trend — it is a necessity for the liberation and restoration of Afrikan people everywhere. Too many of us carry generational wounds with no culturally grounded space to heal. Furthermore, mainstream wellness systems were never built with us in mind. Abibitumi’s Saturday Seminar Series exists to change that. In SSS 56, renowned healer, community elder, spiritual advisor, and PhD psychologist Okuninibaa (Dr.) Mawiyah Kambon steps forward to lead that transformation.

    Why Afrikan-Centered Wholistic Wellness Must Come From Our Own Roots

    Healing that disconnects us from our culture is incomplete healing. Okuninibaa Dr. Mawiyah Kambon understands this truth deeply. In this powerful seminar, she discusses the vision and purpose behind the Bennu Wholistic Afrikan Centered Wellness Retreat. Moreover, she outlines how grounding in natural environments, cultural reconnection, and nourishing community can restore our wholeness. This is not a retreat from struggle — it is preparation for it.

    The Bennu Retreat took place September 21–24, 2023. However, the wisdom shared in this Saturday Seminar recording remains timeless and essential. Participants explored vision and clarity, savored nourishing meals, and reconnected with the rhythms our ancestors always knew. In addition, the seminar itself — recorded live on September 16, 2023 — captures Dr. Kambon’s guidance in full. Every word carries the weight of lived experience and scholarly depth.

    Abibitumi continues to build spaces where Afrikan people heal, study, and rise together. This recording is one such space. Most importantly, your well-being, your roots, and your community are calling you right now. Will you answer? Watch SSS 56, receive Okuninibaa Dr. Mawiyah Kambon’s full teaching, and take one powerful step toward wholeness. As a result, you invest not only in yourself — but in the collective liberation of our people. Watch and get it here: SSS 56 — Okuninibaa Dr. Mawiyah Kambon and the Bennu Wholistic Afrikan Centered Wellness Retreat.

  • How Akan Serial Verb Constructions Reveal the Depth of Afrikan Language Structure

    How Akan Serial Verb Constructions Reveal the Depth of Afrikan Language Structure

    Akan serial verb constructions

    Akan serial verb constructions stand at the heart of one of the most intellectually powerful linguistics lectures in Pan-Afrikan scholarship today. In October 2015, Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon delivered a landmark presentation at the Inaugural School of Languages Conference. His work cuts through colonial frameworks and centers Afrikan language on its own terms. This is liberation through linguistics — precise, unapologetic, and transformative.

    Serial verb constructions (SVCs) appear across four well-defined global regions. However, Benue-Congo languages of West Afrika represent one of the most linguistically rich sites of SVC development. Furthermore, when these constructions undergo nominalization — becoming noun phrases derived from verb sequences — they reveal extraordinary complexity. Ɔbenfo Kambon, alongside collaborators Osam and Amfo, defines SVCs as sequences of verbs acting together as a single predicate. Notably, they operate without overt markers of coordination or subordination. As a result, understanding them demands serious analytical precision and deep cultural grounding.

    Why Akan Serial Verb Constructions Matter for Afrikan Language Liberation

    Most importantly, this lecture does not merely describe grammar — it builds the intellectual infrastructure for Abibifahodie. Ɔbenfo Kambon demonstrates that Akan serial verb construction nominalization (SVCN) carries layers of semantic meaning that standard Western linguistic models fail to capture. In addition, his 47-slide PowerPoint presentation supports every argument with rigorous evidence. The 33-minute video is dense, focused, and deeply rewarding. Scholars, students, and community builders will find essential tools here. This is the kind of scholarship Abibitumi was built to carry forward.

    Therefore, whether you study linguistics, teach Akan, or simply love Afrikan languages, this resource belongs in your collection. Ɔbenfo Kambon’s analysis of Akan serial verb constructions opens doorways that mainstream academia has long ignored. Furthermore, this combo bundle — including the video and secured PDF — gives you a portable, replayable learning experience. Invest in your intellectual arsenal. Invest in Abibifahodie. Watch and download this essential lecture today.

    Watch / Get it here: Lexicalization and Issues of Semantic Analysis In Serial Verb Construction Nominalization — $20.00

  • Who Are You Really? Afrikan Spirituality and the Truth of Your Multiple Selves

    Who Are You Really? Afrikan Spirituality and the Truth of Your Multiple Selves

    Afrikan spirituality concepts of the person

    Afrikan spirituality concepts of the person reveal something profound: you are far more than a single body or mind. Most non-Black philosophical traditions reduce the human being to a simple, contained entity. However, Afrikan thought has always understood the person as a rich collection of spiritual and physical selves. This truth is not new. It has lived in our traditions, our languages, and our cosmologies for millennia.

    Too many of us have been taught to see ourselves through borrowed lenses. As a result, we carry incomplete pictures of who we truly are. Our ancestors never made that mistake. They understood selfhood as layered, dynamic, and deeply spiritual. Furthermore, they built entire systems of knowledge to honor every dimension of our being. Reclaiming that knowledge is an act of liberation.

    Understand Afrikan Spirituality Concepts of the Person with Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Kambon

    In this Saturday Seminar Series lecture, Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon — world-renowned Pan-Afrikan linguist, scholar, and architect of Abibitumi — guides us through one of the most essential teachings in Afrikan thought. He draws directly from our worldview to explain what the person truly is. Most importantly, he grounds every concept in Afrikan philosophy, not in foreign frameworks imposed upon us. This is not abstract theory. This is living knowledge that transforms how you see yourself and your community.

    In addition, this over three-hour seminar gives you depth and detail that a short lecture simply cannot. Ɔbenfo Kambon breaks down each spiritual and physical entity that constitutes the full Afrikan person. Therefore, whether you are a scholar, a student, a parent, or a community builder, this seminar speaks directly to you. It speaks to every Afrikan person ready to step into their full identity. Abibifahodie — Black Liberation — begins with knowing who you are at your deepest essence. Do not wait to claim this knowledge.

    Watch and own this transformative seminar now: Get it here at Abibitumi.com — Afrikan Spirituality: The Person as Multiple Selves