Tag: video

  • Ghana Citizenship Crisis: What Every Diasporan Must Know Before It’s Too Late

    Ghana Citizenship Crisis: What Every Diasporan Must Know Before It’s Too Late

    Ghana citizenship Diaspora

    Ghana citizenship for Diasporans is under serious pressure — and this moment demands your full attention. Historic Diasporan leaders in Ghana have already convened to unite around urgent concerns about new citizenship criteria. Now, they are bringing that conversation directly to you. This free town hall is your opportunity to hear directly from those on the ground. Furthermore, it arrives at a profoundly symbolic moment — the 100th anniversary of Nana Carter G. Woodson’s launch of Black History Month in 1926.

    Baba James Small unpacks the full arc of that centennial legacy — from Woodson’s original blueprint to the concrete action our people must take today. Moreover, Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon and Abibitumi have built this platform precisely for moments like this one. This is not a passive webinar. It is a strategic assembly for Afrikan people who are ready to move from reflection to resolution. In addition, if you have ever considered relocating to Ghana or anywhere on the continent, this session speaks directly to you.

    Why This Ghana Citizenship Town Hall Cannot Wait

    The political climate in the United States, United Kingdom, and across the Diaspora is shifting rapidly. As a result, more Afrikan people are seriously exploring return — not as fantasy, but as strategy. However, shifting citizenship criteria in Ghana mean that your window to act may be narrowing. This panel brings together Diasporan leaders, legal voices, and community builders to give you clarity. Most importantly, they offer a path forward grounded in Abibifahodie — Black liberation — not fear.

    This is a free, live event hosted through Abibitumi — the premier Pan-Afrikan education and liberation platform built by Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon to serve our people globally. Therefore, whether you are a scholar, a parent, a student, or a community organizer, your presence matters here. Register now and show up ready to build. This centennial moment calls for clarity, courage, and collective action — and Abibitumi is holding the space for exactly that. Watch and register here: Diaspora Town Hall — What Does Citizenship in Afrika Mean to Me?

  • Before 1619: Reclaiming the Full Truth of Afrikan Resistance and Freedom

    Before 1619: Reclaiming the Full Truth of Afrikan Resistance and Freedom

    Afrikan resistance before 1619

    Afrikan resistance before 1619 is far older, far bolder, and far more victorious than mainstream narratives dare to teach. Most people have been handed 1619 as the beginning of the Afrikan story in the western hemisphere. However, that starting point is a deliberate misorientation. In truth, by 1526 — nearly a century earlier — enslaved Afrikans at San Miguel de Guadalupe had already defeated the Spanish and established free settlements. Their victory was real. Their freedom was won. Furthermore, this was not an isolated moment but the beginning of a long, powerful chain of resistance.

    In addition, the history reaches back even further. By 1441, the European trafficking of Afrikans had already begun — more than 175 years before Jamestown. These are not footnotes. They are foundations. Most importantly, when we accept 1619 as the starting point, we erase generations of Afrikan freedom fighters who triumphed long before that date. As a result, our understanding of ourselves becomes fractured and incomplete. Abibifahodie demands that we reclaim every year, every victory, and every name.

    How Ɔbenfo Kambon’s Lecture Reorients Afrikan Resistance Before 1619

    Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon — linguist, scholar, and architect of Abibitumi — delivers this truth with scholarly precision and unapologetic clarity. His lecture, Nakumbuka: 400 Years? Enduring Historical Misorientation and Disorientation, dismantles the colonial timeline piece by piece. Furthermore, he does not simply critique — he rebuilds. He equips Afrikan people with accurate historical grounding. Moreover, the accompanying slides make this knowledge accessible for students, educators, and community builders alike. This is the kind of scholarship that Abibitumi was built to carry.

    Knowledge rooted in Ma’at is knowledge that liberates. Therefore, this lecture is not merely academic — it is a tool for Abibifahodie. Every Afrikan who watches it walks away more grounded, more equipped, and more dangerous to the systems built on our disorientation. In addition, at only $20, this exclusive video and slide package puts world-class Pan-Afrikan scholarship directly in your hands. Do not let another year pass on a false timeline. Reclaim the full story of your people. Watch and get it here: Nakumbuka — Exclusive Video & Slides at Abibitumi.

  • The Pan-Afrikan Sound Connecting Yorùbá, Akan, and the Diaspora

    The Pan-Afrikan Sound Connecting Yorùbá, Akan, and the Diaspora

    Yorùbá Akan Pan-Afrikan music

    Yorùbá Akan Pan-Afrikan music carries a living thread that connects our ancestors across continents and centuries. Ralph MacDonald’s song “The Path” tells the story of enslaved Afrikans — from the continent to the Diaspora and back again. Furthermore, it does so through the transformative power of sound, language, and poetic verse. Most importantly, this song holds layers that most listeners have never fully explored. Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon now unlocks those layers with precision and brilliance.

    In this landmark lecture, Ɔbenfo Kambon conducts a deep stylistic analysis of Jími Ṣólańkẹ́’s poem Ọ̀nà Là — the poetic verse that opens “The Path.” Ṣólańkẹ́ draws directly from the celebrated Akan drum text Ɔkwan Atware Asuo. However, he transforms it into a Yorùbá-language performance of extraordinary Pan-Afrikan vision. As a result, the poem becomes a bridge — linguistic, cultural, and spiritual — across the entire Afrikan world. In addition, Ṣólańkẹ́’s creative translation anticipates a future of Afrikan reunion and Abibifahodie.

    How Ɔbenfo Kambon Decodes Yorùbá Akan Pan-Afrikan Linguistic Unity

    Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon approaches this work as only he can — with the full power of Afrikan linguistics, cultural analysis, and liberation scholarship. He maps the journey from the original Akan drum text to MacDonald’s English interpretation. Then he traces Ṣólańkẹ́’s bold re-translation back into Yorùbá. Furthermore, he reveals how this creative arc models the very process of Pan-Afrikan cultural recovery. This lecture runs nearly two hours and includes 35 slides of detailed linguistic and stylistic analysis. Therefore, it offers serious scholars and curious students alike an extraordinary learning experience.

    This combo bundle includes the full video lecture and a secured downloadable PDF of all 35 presentation slides. Together, they form a powerful study resource for anyone committed to Abibitumi — the deep knowledge that fuels Abibifahodie. Most importantly, this work affirms that our languages, our drum texts, and our poetic traditions never died. They traveled. They transformed. Moreover, they are calling us home. Do not miss this essential contribution to Pan-Afrikan scholarship and Afrikan liberation education.

    Watch and download the full lecture here: Chanting YorùbÁkan — Watch / Get It Here

  • How to Claim Benin Citizenship as a Diaspora Afrikan — Watch the Full Replay

    How to Claim Benin Citizenship as a Diaspora Afrikan — Watch the Full Replay

    Benin citizenship diaspora

    Benin citizenship for the Diaspora is no longer a distant dream — it is a concrete, actionable path available to Abibifoɔ right now. The Republic of Benin extends a powerful invitation to Black people worldwide. As a result, Diaspora Abibifoɔ now have a legal, structured pathway to reclaim their rightful place in Abibiman. Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon and the Abibitumi community brought this vital knowledge directly to the people. Furthermore, this session ensures that no one who missed the live event goes without this critical information.

    Watch the Replay: Concrete Steps Toward Benin Citizenship for the Diaspora

    Sis Reign delivers clear, step-by-step guidance throughout this powerful on-demand session. She walks Abibifoɔ through every requirement, every document, and every process needed to move forward. In addition, she breaks down who qualifies and exactly what to expect. This is not theory — it is practical Abibifahodie in action. Most importantly, this session equips you to move with purpose, not confusion. Abibitumi consistently produces knowledge that serves Black liberation at the highest level. Therefore, this replay stands as another essential resource in that legacy.

    Repatriation is one of the most powerful acts of Pan-Afrikan self-determination. However, many Abibifoɔ hesitate simply because they lack clear information. This session removes that barrier completely. Moreover, it connects the legal process of citizenship to the deeper spiritual and political work of reconnecting with Ancestral land. Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon has long taught that liberation requires both vision and strategy. Consequently, this replay delivers both in full measure. Abibiman belongs to Abibifoɔ — and this session shows you how to claim your place within it.

    The full replay is available now for only US$20. Furthermore, this investment goes far beyond a recording — it is a direct step toward your liberation. Every Abibifoɔ serious about repatriation, reconnection, and rebuilding in Abibiman needs this knowledge. In addition, the affordable price ensures that access remains within reach for our entire community. Do not wait for a perfect moment — move now with the tools Abibitumi has placed in your hands. Watch the replay and take your concrete steps toward Benin citizenship for the Diaspora today.

    👉 Watch / Get it here: Benin Citizenship: Concrete Steps for Abibifoɔ — Full Replay (US$20)

  • 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