Tag: video

  • Kamose Stelae Decoded: Afrikan Languages, Strategy & Black Liberation at ASCAC 2025

    Kamose Stelae Decoded: Afrikan Languages, Strategy & Black Liberation at ASCAC 2025

    Kamose Stelae Black liberation

    The Kamose Stelae Black liberation analysis delivered at ASCAC 2025 is exactly the scholarship our people need right now. Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon — architect of Abibitumi and world-renowned Pan-Afrikan linguist — joined forces with Okunini Talawa Adodo and sbA Bonotchi Montgomery. Together, they brought a 49-minute intellectual and strategic masterclass to the 41st annual ASCAC conference. Furthermore, this presentation does not simply translate ancient text. It resurrects the living voice of our ancestors and points it directly toward Abibifahodie.

    Ɔbenfo Kambon grounds his scholarship in Afrikan languages, Afrikan thought, and the unapologetic pursuit of Black liberation. As a result, his work never sits comfortably inside colonial academic frameworks. Instead, it dismantles them. In this presentation, he and his colleagues move through the Kamose Stelae with linguistic precision, cultural authority, and strategic clarity. Most importantly, they demonstrate that the Kmtyw were not passive victims of history. They were warriors, planners, and liberators. That legacy belongs to us.

    Why the Kamose Stelae Black Liberation Framework Matters Today

    Pharaoh Kamose did not wait. He organized, strategized, and moved against the forces occupying Kemet. In addition, his recorded words — preserved in the stelae — carry strategic wisdom that speaks directly to our current struggle. Ɔbenfo Kambon and the presenters decode that wisdom using Afrikan languages, including Twi and Yoruba. Furthermore, they connect ancient military and political strategy to the living reality of Pan-Afrikan liberation today. This is not nostalgia. This is a roadmap.

    This exclusive recording is available now through Abibitumi — the premier platform for Pan-Afrikan education and community-centered liberation scholarship. Scholars, students, community builders, and parents fighting for their children’s minds will all find deep value here. Moreover, at just $20.00, this 49-minute presentation delivers irreplaceable knowledge that no mainstream institution will ever offer. However, access to this kind of scholarship requires that we support the infrastructure that makes it possible. Therefore, invest in your liberation today. Watch the full presentation and download the slides now.

    Watch / Get it here: Kamose Gon Knock You Out – ASCAC 2025 | Abibitumi

  • Unlock the Gateway to Abibifahodie: Black Liberation Through the Abibitumi Conference

    Unlock the Gateway to Abibifahodie: Black Liberation Through the Abibitumi Conference

    Abibifahodie Black Liberation Festival

    The Abibifahodie Black Liberation Festival is calling Afrikan people worldwide to align around power, purpose, and action. On Sunday, October 5, 2025, at 7:00 PM GMT / 3:00 PM EDT, Ɔbenfo (Professor) Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon opens the door to one of the most significant Pan-Afrikan gatherings of the year. This focused, high-energy online session gives you direct access to the Abibitumi Conference experience. Furthermore, it costs you nothing — the gateway is now free and wide open.

    Step Through the Door: The Abibifahodie Black Liberation Festival and Abibitumi Conference Await You

    Ɔbenfo Kambon is the architect of Abibitumi — a liberation-centered platform rooted in Ma’at and Abibifahodie. His work does not water down truth for comfort. Instead, it sharpens Afrikan people into scholars, builders, and liberators. In this session, he delivers timely updates about the conference. Moreover, he introduces the community, clarifies preparation, and centers every word around Black Power. This is not a passive experience. As a result, attendees leave with clarity, connection, and direction.

    Abibitumi has always built toward something greater than information. It builds toward transformation. This session reflects that commitment fully. In addition, it serves parents, students, scholars, and community leaders across the Afrikan world — from Ghana to the diaspora. Repatriation, liberation strategy, and cultural grounding all converge here. Most importantly, this event reminds us that our freedom requires our full participation. No one is coming to save us. However, we can build our own door — and walk through it together.

    Do not miss this moment. The Abibifahodie Black Liberation Festival begins with this single, powerful step. Ɔbenfo Kambon will meet you on the other side — ready to lead, teach, and build. Register now and bring your community with you. Abibifahodie is not a slogan. It is a living, breathing practice — and it starts here.

    🔥 Watch / Get it here: Open the Door into the Abibitumi Conference & the Abibifahodie Black Liberation Festival

  • Integration or Liberation? What Pan-Afrikanism Really Demands for Afrikan People

    Integration or Liberation? What Pan-Afrikanism Really Demands for Afrikan People

    Pan-Afrikan integration Afrika

    Pan-Afrikan integration in Afrika is not a neutral concept — and Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon refuses to let us pretend otherwise. In this powerful 2017 lecture, he cuts through the comfortable lies and forces a necessary reckoning. Who is integrating with whom? Furthermore, whose interests does that integration truly serve? These are not abstract questions. They are survival questions for Afrikan=Black people everywhere.

    Ɔbenfo Kambon draws on three concrete historical instances where integration was offered as a solution to anti-Black oppression. However, in each case, the so-called solution protected systems of domination rather than dismantling them. The title alone — “You Can Sit Down Next to white Folks – on the Toilet” — delivers the verdict with surgical precision. In addition, it names the humiliation embedded in a “progress” that never touched real power. As a result, we must distinguish between authentic Pan-Afrikanism and its counterfeit, anti-Black imitation.

    The AU’s Agenda 2063 and the Problem of Pan-Afrikan Integration in Afrika

    The African Union’s Agenda 2063 calls for an integrated Afrika. Most importantly, Ɔbenfo Kambon asks whether that integration centers the Afrikan=Black indigenes of the continent. He examines the dangerous tradition in which anyone present on Afrikan soil is treated as equally “Afrikan” — regardless of settler history or anti-Black practice. Furthermore, this framework echoes the same counterfeit integrationism that was used to neutralize liberation movements in South Africa, the United States, and beyond. Therefore, Afrikan intellectuals and educators must interrogate every policy that uses the language of unity while undermining Black sovereignty.

    This lecture is essential study for scholars, students, community builders, and every Afrikan person committed to Abibifahodie — Black Liberation. Abibitumi exists precisely to deliver this level of uncompromising, community-centered education. Moreover, this work does not ask permission from systems designed to erase us. It builds our own foundation of knowledge, in our own interest, on our own terms. Watch this lecture, study it carefully, and share it widely within your community.

    Watch / Get it here: Integration, Apartheid, and Untouchability — Lecture by Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Kambon

  • Black Therapy, Black Power: Heal Your Mind and Reclaim Your Liberation

    Black Therapy, Black Power: Heal Your Mind and Reclaim Your Liberation

    Black therapy Black power

    Black therapy Black power is not a slogan — it is a sacred obligation. Our people carry the weight of colonialism, intergenerational trauma, and daily spiritual warfare. Furthermore, that weight does not disappear through silence or assimilation. It demands a radical, Afrikan-centered response. This powerful video replay delivers exactly that.

    Why Black Therapy and Black Power Must Go Hand in Hand

    Okuninibaa (Dr.) Mawiyah Kambon leads this transformative session with clarity, courage, and deep Afrikan wisdom. She exposes how colonial conditioning attacks our minds from within. In addition, she illuminates how trauma moves across generations — and how we can break that cycle with intention. Most importantly, she grounds every teaching in Ma’at, the foundation of Afrikan holistic wellness. This is not Western therapy repackaged. This is our healing, on our terms.

    Over the course of 1 hour and 25 minutes, Okuninibaa Kambon guides us through recognizing hidden colonial wounds. She then offers Afrikan approaches to restoring mind, body, and spirit together. As a result, viewers leave this session with real tools — not theories alone. This work connects directly to Abibifahodie, the liberation of Afrikan people from every system designed to diminish us. Healing, therefore, is not separate from the struggle. Healing IS the struggle.

    Abibitumi exists to deliver exactly this kind of unapologetic, life-changing knowledge to our global community. This session is available now as an exclusive video replay for just $20. However, its value is immeasurable. Whether you are a healer, a student, a parent, or a community builder, this session meets you where you are. Most importantly, it calls you forward — toward wholeness, toward power, toward Ma’at. Do not wait to begin your return.

    ▶ Watch the full session here: Healing Ourselves: Black Therapy, Black Power — Get It Now at Abibitumi.com

  • How Afrikan People Emancipated Themselves: The Truth History Buried

    How Afrikan People Emancipated Themselves: The Truth History Buried

    Afrikan people emancipated themselves

    Afrikan people emancipated themselves — and the evidence is overwhelming. For too long, dominant historical narratives have credited white moral conscience as the driving force behind the abolishment of enslavement. However, this framing erases the agency, resistance, and organized power of Afrikan people themselves. Furthermore, it serves a specific political purpose: to position Afrikan people as passive recipients of white benevolence rather than as the architects of their own liberation.

    Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon — Pan-Afrikan linguist, scholar, and founder of Abibitumi — confronts this distortion head-on. In this powerful lecture, he presents a counter-narrative grounded in documentation and evidence. Most importantly, he restores the historical record to its rightful place. This is not revisionism. This is correction. Ɔbenfo Kambon’s scholarship consistently centers Afrikan people as sovereign, capable, and self-determining — because that is precisely what the record shows.

    Reclaiming the History of How Afrikan People Emancipated Themselves

    This CIEE Black History Month lecture spans 1 hour and 50 minutes across 44 carefully constructed slides. As a result, it delivers a comprehensive and rigorous examination of the historical forces that actually ended enslavement. In addition, it challenges students, scholars, parents, and community builders to interrogate what they were taught — and why. Abibifahodie, Black Liberation, demands this kind of intellectual courage. Therefore, this lecture is not simply educational. It is a liberation tool.

    The Abibitumi platform exists to equip Afrikan people globally with knowledge that serves our freedom. Consequently, this lecture belongs in every classroom, study circle, and community space committed to truth. Whether you are a seasoned scholar or just beginning your journey toward Abibifahodie, this presentation will sharpen your understanding and strengthen your resolve. Do not allow the false narrative to stand unchallenged. Instead, arm yourself with what actually happened. Watch the full lecture and reclaim this history for yourself and your community.

    Watch / Get it here: The Afrikan=Black People Who Emancipated Themselves — CIEE BHM Lecture