Tag: video

  • Why Decolonizing the Academy Is the Most Urgent Work for Afrikan People Today

    Why Decolonizing the Academy Is the Most Urgent Work for Afrikan People Today

    decolonizing the academy

    Decolonizing the academy begins with an honest reckoning — we know far more about our oppressors than we know about ourselves. This is not an accident. Furthermore, it is not a personal failure. It is the deliberate architecture of colonial miseducation, designed to keep Afrikan people mentally captive. As a result, our capacity to act in our own interest remains severely limited. What we do for ourselves depends directly on what we know of ourselves. Therefore, without that knowledge, our liberation stalls before it begins.

    How Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Kambon Makes the Case for Decolonizing the Academy

    In this landmark 2017 presentation, Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon — Pan-Afrikan linguist, scholar, and architect of Abibitumi — names the problem with precision and power. He does not soften the diagnosis. Moreover, he does not leave his audience without direction. Using examples that feel immediate and personally recognizable, he exposes how colonial institutions place their knee on the collective neck of Afrikan people. Most importantly, he demonstrates that we can breathe again — but only through deliberate, self-determined Afrikan education.

    Ɔbenfo Kambon connects individual confusion to systemic colonial design. He shows that our current malaise is not cultural weakness. Instead, it is the predictable outcome of a system built to produce exactly this result. In addition, he challenges us to reject the false comfort of enemy knowledge while remaining strangers to our own Afrikan identity, history, and genius. Abibifahodie — Black Liberation — demands that we reclaim what was deliberately taken. However, reclaiming it requires tools, frameworks, and teachers rooted in Afrikan truth.

    This lecture runs 1 hour, 27 minutes, and 37 seconds. Every minute earns its place. Consequently, students, scholars, parents, and community builders across the Afrikan world will find this presentation essential viewing. It is not theoretical comfort — it is a concrete, actionable roadmap. Furthermore, it reflects the core mission of Abibitumi: to equip Afrikan people globally with the knowledge and language tools needed to build free, self-determined communities. Do not wait to access this work. Watch it, study it, and share it widely. Get it here: Decolonizing the Academy with Birthright Africa.

  • Rooting Our Youth in OurStory: The Ancestral Wall Project That’s Changing Communities

    Rooting Our Youth in OurStory: The Ancestral Wall Project That’s Changing Communities

    Afrikan ancestral wall project

    The Afrikan ancestral wall project is one of the most powerful tools for youth education and liberation emerging from our communities today. Knowing where you come from is not a luxury — it is a weapon. Furthermore, when our children see themselves reflected in the greatness of Afrikan history, something profound awakens within them. This is exactly the work Abibitumi exists to amplify.

    In this electrifying session from the Abibitumi Exclusive Seminar Series, Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon hosts an in-depth conversation with Baba Jerry Johnson — a community builder whose vision brought a monumental wall mural to life. This wall depicts Afrikans of historical significance from across the entire world. As a result, it transforms a physical space into a living classroom. Most importantly, it speaks directly to our youth in a language they can see, feel, and remember.

    Why the Afrikan Ancestral Wall Project Inspires Real Community Liberation

    Baba Jerry Johnson did not simply create art. He created an act of Abibifahodie — Afrikan liberation made visible and tangible. The mural pulls from OurStory, drawing on the legacy of Kmtyw and freedom fighters across the Afrikan world. In addition, it challenges the erasure of Afrikan greatness that colonized schooling has normalized. However, this project goes beyond the wall itself. It sparks conversations between elders and children. It plants seeds of pride, identity, and responsibility in the next generation.

    Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon’s platform, Abibitumi, consistently brings these transformative conversations directly to our people. This session is no different. It challenges every community builder, parent, and educator to ask: what are we building for our youth? Moreover, it calls us to act — not tomorrow, but now. If you are ready to be inspired and equipped to carry this work forward in your own community, do not wait. Watch this powerful session today.

    📌 Watch / Get it here: SSS #55 — Knowing Where You Come From: Inspiring the Youth Ancestral Wall Project

  • Reclaiming the Language of Blackness: Why sbAyt nt Kmtyw Matters

    Reclaiming the Language of Blackness: Why sbAyt nt Kmtyw Matters

    Studies of Black People

    The battle over Studies of Black People begins with a single, powerful question: who owns the language we use to define ourselves? Words are not neutral. They carry history, intention, and power. Furthermore, the roots of any term we use to describe Afrikan people reveal whose worldview we are operating from. This is precisely the terrain that Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon enters in this essential presentation — and he enters it armed with primary source texts, linguistic precision, and uncompromising clarity.

    The term “Afrikology” sounds Afrikan-centered. However, its roots are firmly embedded in greco-roman linguistic traditions. As a result, it carries the conceptual fingerprints of a non-Afrikan worldview. In contrast, sbAyt nt Kmtyw — meaning Studies of Black People — is indigenous to Black people themselves. Moreover, it locates Afrikan people throughout all of space and time. It does not invite non-Black people into the center of a framework built for us. This distinction is not academic hairsplitting. It is a matter of liberation or continued conceptual colonization.

    Why the Language of Studies of Black People Must Come From Us

    Ɔbenfo Kambon goes deep into the etymology of both terms. He shows precisely how names shape reality — especially regarding land, belonging, and sovereignty. Most importantly, he addresses what the term Kmt actually means: the land of Black people. Therefore, naming that land and its study using our own linguistic heritage is an act of Abibifahodie. In addition, the presentation tackles the urgent question of non-Kmtyw presence in Kmt — drawing directly from ancient Afrikan source texts. This is Abibitumi at its most foundational: returning the tools of knowledge to the people those tools were always meant to serve.

    This lecture is essential for scholars, students, community builders, and every Afrikan person who has ever felt something was missing from mainstream academic frameworks. The work of Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Kambon does not ask for permission to center Black people. Instead, it demonstrates — through rigorous linguistic and historical scholarship — that centering us was always the only correct path. Consequently, this presentation belongs in every Pan-Afrikan study circle, classroom, and household committed to genuine liberation. Do not sleep on this one.

    Watch / Get it here: https://stg-abibitumi-rpd-3fbq.ue1.rapydapps.cloud/product/afrikology-vs-sbayt-nt-kmtyw-studies-of-black-people-the-battle-for-conceptualization/

  • How Afrikan Food Choices Shape Your Mind, Body, and Liberation

    How Afrikan Food Choices Shape Your Mind, Body, and Liberation

    Afrikan food and health

    Afrikan food and health are inseparable — and understanding that connection is an act of liberation. For too long, our communities have been fed misinformation by industries that profit from our sickness. However, a new conversation is rising. Abibitumi brings you this eye-opening video replay that cuts through the noise and puts the power of nourishment back in our hands.

    In just over 52 minutes, this session covers what your body truly needs to thrive. Furthermore, it exposes the hidden costs buried inside our daily food habits. You will explore nutrient-rich eating for energy, longevity, and disease prevention. Most importantly, you will learn how food industries shape what we consume — and how to take that control back. Simple, deliberate shifts in what you eat can produce profound results. In addition, those results extend far beyond your plate — reaching your finances, your clarity, and your spirit.

    Reclaiming Afrikan Food and Health Through Knowledge and Intention

    Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon built Abibitumi as a platform for Afrikan people to access the tools of real liberation. This session carries that same spirit. Whether you are plant-based, transitioning your diet, or simply seeking better well-being, this replay meets you where you are. Moreover, it challenges you to go further. Food is not just fuel — it is memory, culture, medicine, and resistance. As a result, every conscious choice you make at the table is a political and spiritual act rooted in Abibifahodie.

    This session was recorded live on Saturday, February 22, 2025. Therefore, you can watch it on your own time, revisit key insights, and share it with your family and community. Afrikan food and health wisdom belongs to all of us. Do not let another season pass eating in ways that diminish your power. Instead, invest in this knowledge today and begin living with intention, vitality, and purpose. Watch the full replay here: The Power of Food — Watch / Get It Here.

  • Who Are You Really? Discover the Afrikan Concept of the Person as Multiple Selves

    Who Are You Really? Discover the Afrikan Concept of the Person as Multiple Selves

    Afrikan concept of the person

    The Afrikan concept of the person is not singular, fixed, or defined by Western frameworks. It is layered, dynamic, and rooted in cosmological truth. Furthermore, this truth is older than any colonial system designed to suppress it. At Abibitumi, we center this knowledge because our liberation depends on it. Most importantly, knowing who we are — fully and completely — is the foundation of Abibifahodie.

    Multi-award-winning scholar Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon has dedicated his life to recovering and transmitting this knowledge. In this powerful mini course, he guides participants through the core principles of Afrikan thought and knowledge production. As a result, attendees gain far more than academic insight. They gain tools — living, applicable tools — drawn directly from the wisdom of our Kmtyw ancestors. In addition, Ɔbenfo Kambon grounds every concept in both ancient cosmology and everyday lived experience. This is scholarship that serves the people.

    Understanding the Afrikan Concept of the Person Through Kmtyw Cosmology

    This course opens with a profound question: who is the person, really? Ɔbenfo Kambon reveals that our ancestors understood the self as multiple selves — not one identity, but an interconnected web of divine and natural forces. Therefore, understanding ourselves means understanding the cosmos. This is not metaphor. This is Afrikan science, philosophy, and spirituality working as one unified system. Moreover, this framework challenges every reductive, colonial definition of Black humanity. It replaces limitation with sovereignty.

    The Foundations of Thought Mini Course Part 1 is self-paced and available now for just $30. Consequently, there is no barrier between you and this transformative knowledge. Whether you are a student, a scholar, a parent, or a community builder, this course meets you where you are. However, it will not leave you where it found you. This is Abibitumi — education as liberation, knowledge as power, and thought as a weapon for Afrikan people everywhere. Watch it. Study it. Share it.

    👉 Watch / Get it here: Foundations of Thought Mini Course Part 1 – Abibitumi.com