Tag: Okunini Obadele

  • Build Black Wealth Together: Why the Abibitumi Investments Club Changes Everything

    Black collective investment

    Black collective investment is not just a financial strategy — it is an act of liberation. On Saturday, May 30th, 2026, Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon hosts a powerful interest meeting introducing the Abibitumi Investments Club. This is a historic opportunity for Afrikan people globally to gather with intention and purpose. The meeting takes place online at Abibitumi.com at 7PM GMT / 3PM EST. RSVP secures your seat for just $10.

    Too often, our people approach money as a purely individual concern. However, our liberation has always depended on collective vision and disciplined action. This club is built on that truth. It invites participants to think beyond personal gain and toward long-term Black institutional capacity. Furthermore, it creates space for both beginners and experienced investors to grow together. Most importantly, it centers ownership, stability, and strategic thinking as tools of Abibifahodie.

    Why Black Collective Investment Must Be Rooted in Afrikan Liberation

    Ɔbenfo Kambon — linguist, scholar, and architect of Abibitumi — understands that economic power cannot be separated from cultural and political liberation. As a result, the Abibitumi Investments Club is not modeled after mainstream financial culture. Instead, it is grounded in the values of Ma’at and the collective traditions of Afrikan people. In addition, it builds on the Abibitumi framework of education, community, and self-determination. This is investment as a Pan-Afrikan practice — disciplined, principled, and communal.

    Whether you are just beginning your financial journey or already building your resources, this session will meet you where you are. Moreover, it will challenge you to think bigger — beyond personal portfolios and toward generational Black wealth. The Kmtyw did not build civilization alone, and we will not rebuild it alone either. Now is the time to align your resources with your values. Secure your RSVP and take your place in this movement.

    📅 Saturday, May 30th, 2026 | 7PM GMT / 3PM EST
    🌍 Online at Abibitumi.com
    💰 RSVP: $10
    Watch / Get it here: Abibitumi Investments Club Interest Meeting

  • One Afrikan Mind: Body Part Expressions Across Akan, Yorùbá, Kiswahili, and Mdw Ntr

    Afrikan language body expressions

    Afrikan language body expressions carry a power that most academic institutions will never teach. They reveal something profound — that Afrikan people, across centuries and continents, share a continuous and unified worldview. In this landmark 2021 ASCAC presentation, Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon demonstrates exactly that. He traces linguistic patterns from Akan, Yorùbá, and Kiswahili all the way back to mdw nTr — the sacred language of the Kmtyw themselves.

    How Afrikan Language Body Expressions Reveal a Shared Continental Worldview

    Ɔbenfo Kambon examines how body parts function as conceptual anchors in four Afrikan languages. Furthermore, he shows that each language preserves a tight relationship between the physical body and its symbolic meaning. This is not coincidence. It is evidence of a shared philosophical inheritance — one that connects our ancestors in ancient Kmt to our communities in West and East Afrika today. In addition, the study draws from oral and written texts, grounding every insight in real, attested Afrikan expression.

    Most importantly, Ɔbenfo Kambon introduces a powerful analytical tool — the fundamental interrelation/fundamental alienation continuum. This framework measures how closely a language preserves its original, embodied Afrikan logic. As a result, we can chart which expressions stay rooted in Afrikan thought and which show signs of colonial disruption. This lens gives scholars, students, and community builders a sharper way to understand language as liberation — or as loss.

    This 33-minute lecture is essential viewing for anyone serious about Abibifahodie. It is precise, rigorous, and unapologetically Pan-Afrikan. Ɔbenfo Kambon does not simply compare languages — he reconstructs a worldview. He proves that the linguistic thread connecting Akan proverbs to Yorùbá idioms to Kiswahili expressions to mdw nTr hieroglyphics is unbroken. Abibitumi exists to bring exactly this kind of knowledge directly to Afrikan people everywhere. Watch this lecture, study it deeply, and share it widely.

    📺 Watch / Get it here: ASCAC 2021 — Body Part Expressions in Akan, Yorùbá, Kiswahili, and mdw nTr — Available now for $20.00.

  • The Ancient Roots of Pan-Afrikanism: Kmt(yw) Consciousness and the Origins of Black Unity

    Classical Kmt Pan-Afrikanism

    Classical Kmt Pan-Afrikanism did not begin with enslavement. It did not begin as a reaction to whiteness. In fact, the unification of Kmt(yw) — Black people — stretches back thousands of years into antiquity. Most scholars treat Pan-Afrikanism as a modern political movement. However, Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon challenges that assumption with devastating scholarly precision. In this powerful 72-minute presentation spanning 97 slides, he traces the deep ancestral roots of Afrikan=Black power directly to the classical civilization of Kmt.

    Furthermore, Ɔbenfo Kambon dismantles the myth that Black identity emerged simply as a response to Bacon’s Rebellion or the rise of capitalism. Instead, he grounds Kmt(yw) identity in something far more ancient and enduring. Blackness, he demonstrates, encompasses genotype, phenotype, allegiance, culture, and politics. As a result, Black Pan-Afrikanism reveals itself as a timeless strategy of self-preservation. It is the ongoing project of Afrikan=Black people protecting and advancing their own survival across centuries and continents.

    The Dikènga Theory and Classical Kmt Pan-Afrikanism as a Living Framework

    In addition to tracing these ancient origins, Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon introduces the Dikènga Theory of Kmt(yw) Consciousness. This framework maps the cyclical nature of Afrikan=Black consciousness and liberation. Moreover, it connects the spiritual and political traditions of ancient Kmt directly to our present-day struggle for Abibifahodie. The Dikènga is not merely academic. It is a living tool that Afrikan people can use to understand where we are in our collective journey. Most importantly, it points clearly toward where we must go next.

    This lecture belongs in the home, the classroom, and every liberation study circle. Scholars, students, parents, and community builders will all find deep nourishment here. Abibitumi exists precisely to place this level of Afrikan-centered scholarship directly in our hands. Therefore, do not wait to engage this knowledge. Every minute of these 72 minutes builds the intellectual foundation that Abibifahodie demands. Watch it, study it, and share it with your community.

    Watch / Get it here: RBG100: Classical Kmt Origins of Pan-Afrikanism — Abibitumi

  • Why Afrikan Indigenous Languages Must Be Taught to Our Children

    Afrikan indigenous languages

    Afrikan indigenous languages are not relics of the past — they are living vessels of identity, power, and resistance. Language shapes how we think, how we see the world, and how we organize for liberation. Furthermore, when we lose our languages, we lose the intellectual architecture our ancestors built over millennia. This is precisely why Abibitumi continues to center language reclamation as a cornerstone of Abibifahodie.

    Ɔbenfo Kambon on Afrikan Indigenous Languages, Neologisms, and Development

    In this powerful 51-minute presentation, originally aired on Mx24 GH TV, Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon speaks directly to the urgency of teaching our languages to our children. He breaks down what “language development” truly means for Afrikan people. In addition, he explores how neologisms — newly coined terms — allow our languages to grow, adapt, and serve modern Afrikan life. Most importantly, he demolishes every excuse we have been given for abandoning our tongues.

    Ɔbenfo Kambon does not speak in abstractions. He delivers grounded, actionable truth rooted in Pan-Afrikan scholarship and lived Afrikan experience. He draws on the legacy of the Kmtyw and connects ancient linguistic tradition to present-day community building. As a result, this lecture speaks powerfully to scholars, parents, students, and every Afrikan person committed to raising the next generation in full cultural dignity. However, you do not need a degree to receive what he is offering here — you simply need the willingness to reclaim what was always ours.

    The title of this lecture carries a deliberate, provocative strike through the word “local.” That single editorial choice says everything. Our languages are not merely local — they are indigenous, sovereign, and sacred. Therefore, every Afrikan family, school, and community organization must treat language transmission as a liberation priority. If you have been searching for the clarity and conviction to begin that journey, Ɔbenfo Kambon gives you everything you need in this one talk. Do not wait. Watch it, study it, and share it with your community.

    Watch / Get it here: PROMOTING INDIGENOUS LANGUAGES featuring Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Kambon — $10.00

  • Black Economic Power: How to Turn Every Investment Into a Weapon for Liberation

    Black Economic Power: How to Turn Every Investment Into a Weapon for Liberation

    Black economic power

    Black economic power is not a metaphor — it is a mandate. Afrikan people globally face a deliberate, engineered war of economic exclusion. As a result, we must respond with equal precision and strategy. Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon, world-renowned Pan-Afrikan linguist and architect of Abibitumi, delivers exactly that. In this powerful session, he introduces the Abibitumi Exclusive Quarterly Investment Opportunities Club. Furthermore, he frames every financial decision as a strategic act of Abibifahodie — Black Liberation.

    Building Your Arsenal: Black Economic Power as a Liberation Strategy

    This is not a passive investment seminar. Ɔbenfo Kambon calls these tools “silent weapons for quiet wars.” He teaches Afrikan people to transform their resources into instruments of collective power. Moreover, he dismantles the myth that economic participation within oppressive systems must remain accidental or reactive. Instead, he hands us a blueprint. Every dollar becomes a deliberate strike. Every investment becomes a coordinated move toward freedom for our families and our communities.

    Abibitumi has always operated from a foundation of Ma’at — truth, justice, and divine order. This session honors that foundation fully. Ɔbenfo Kambon does not water down the reality of economic warfare against Afrikan people. He names it. Then he arms us. In addition, he introduces an exclusive club structure designed to concentrate collective Afrikan wealth with intention and discipline. This is Pan-Afrikan economics in practice — not theory, not performance, but direct action rooted in community accountability.

    Most importantly, this replay is available right now for your household, your study group, and your liberation circle. Black economic power grows when knowledge moves. Share it. Study it. Act on it. The Abibitumi community does not wait for permission to build. We build because Abibifahodie demands it. Therefore, do not let this resource sit untouched. Secure your copy, gather your people, and step into the economic arena that Ɔbenfo Kambon has prepared for us. Watch and get it here: Weapons of Mass Construction — Video Replay.