Latest videos

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
12 Views · 4 years ago

⁣Kwame Ture: Zionism

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
9 Views · 4 years ago

⁣Kwame Ture: Revolutionary Without An Organization

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
21 Views · 4 years ago

Kwame Toure & Marcus Garvey Jr. discuss Pan Africanism.

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
25 Views · 4 years ago

⁣Pan Afrikanism and the New World Order - Kwame Ture

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
31 Views · 4 years ago

This video was recorded on a UMATIC 3/4 inch video tape cassette. Unfortunately, the leader broke on tape 1 of 2 and we only have a DVD copy of tape 2 of 2.

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
46 Views · 4 years ago

What is Afrocentrism? Dr. Molefi Asante, one of the pioneer in Afrocentric thought tells you what Afrocentrism is and what it is not and the direction Afrocentrism must go.

The Afrocentric paradigm is a revolutionary shift in thinking proposed as a constructural adjustment to black disorientation, decenteredness, and lack of agency. The Afrocentrist asks the question, “What would African people do if there were no white people?” In other words, what natural responses would occur in the relationships, attitudes toward the environment, kinship patterns, preferences for colors, type of religion, and historical referent points for African people if there had not been any intervention of colonialism or enslavement? Afrocentricity answers this question by asserting the central role of the African subject within the context of African history, thereby removing Europe from the center of the African reality. In this way, Afrocentricity becomes a revolutionary idea because it studies ideas, concepts, events, personalities, and political and economic processes from a standpoint of black people as subjects and not as objects, basing all knowledge on the authentic interrogation of location.

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
31 Views · 4 years ago

All African People's Revolutionary Party ancestor and former member of the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee and later the Black Panthers Kwame Ture speaks on lessons learned from the African liberation struggle in the 60s. This talk was filmed at the University of Chicago on February 18th, 1989.


Learn more about the All African People's Revolutionary Party at aaprp-intl.org.

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
11 Views · 4 years ago

Kwame Ture at University of Illinois
February 14, 1990
Urbana, Illinois

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
10 Views · 4 years ago

The great ancestor Kwame Ture discusses a range of topics in this fascinating interview with Howard Univesity TV. For more info on the All African People's Revolutionary Party, go to www.aaprp-intl.org

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
5 Views · 4 years ago

During a lecture to students at Howard University, Stokely Carmichael speaks about the movement of black people toward unity with a clear, common ideology based on science. He stresses black people must put theory into practice - organize and take action. He speaks about the differences between revolutionary and reform movements; Pan-Africanism; the All African People's Revolutionary Party; scientific socialism; nkrumahism; capitalism; and imperialism.




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