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Morgan State University (MSU) is slated to establish an international presence on the African continent by way of a new pilot program. During the recent public session of the MSU Board of Regents' winter quarterly meeting, the Board unanimously approved a proposal for the university to begin offering three degree programs — a Master of Business Administration, a Master of Science in Global Multimedia Journalism and Communications, and a Bachelor of Science in Entrepreneurship — in partnership with the African University College of Communications (AUCC) in Adabraka, Accra, Ghana. The pilot program is scheduled to begin in fall 2020, creating opportunities for western African students to pursue degrees from Morgan. The collaboration marks a first of its kind for an HBCU in Ghana, with Morgan poised to join only a select few American universities offering degree programs in Africa.
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Badagry - The Joy of the Return
DNA - Using Genealogy to change my last (slave) name
Discussions
February 22 2020 End of Class Roda
Ogyefuo (February) 15, 2020 End of Class Roda
The Preview..pg 17
Origin and development of study..18
Origin and Steps in the study..20
Scope of the study..21
The White Arabs...23
The European Journey...24
The Field Studies..27
The Theoretical Framework...35
The Scholars"war" on the Blacks...37
The New approach...41
Dr. Chancellor James Williams (1898-1992). Chancellor Williams, the youngest of five children, was born in Bennetsville, South Carolina December 22, 1898. His father had been a slave; his mother a cook, nurse, and evangelist.
COLD FACTS: When the Nation of Islam murdered Malcolm X they prevented him from going into The United Nations to get the ball rolling for reparations, and you wonder why in 2018 why you are in bad shape. When it comes to talking about what happened to Malcolm X , Prof. Kondo is the "go to man", everybody else is BORING and will actually put you to sleep. The game is over, go on home, the case is closed. My prediction is that 2018 will be the year Malcolm's killers who are still alive will pay for what they did. It's time to get on up and get on down. How can you sit on your rusty dusty and ignore a warrior like Malcolm X who tried to get you your reparations? You ought to be ashamed of yourself. What?, you think that because you are in the year 2018 that you have progressed?, You think that because you can wear a red black and green Baseball Cap or a Ankh around your neck or some other cosmetic thing that you are free? Git-da-fuc-outta-here!
Warning: We are watching you very carefully while you embrace Malcolm's killers, you may one day be called on the carpet to explain yourself and if you don't provide the right answers your head may be severed form your body (that is intellectually). Your record of what you say today about Malcolm's killers and what side of the fence you sit on may one day be used against you, and you won't be able to flip the script the way you do every time you are around both camps. When you are with Malcolm's enemies you cheer with them, and then when you are around Malcolm's supporters you speak ill of the other group, we can see right through your bullshit.
Johannesburg, 20 October 2014 - In this special feature eNCA investigates how far land reform has progressed.
Training with Abibifahodie
Our great Ancestor/Warrior/Scholar Dr. Chancellor Williams states in his master work "The Destruction of Black Civilization" that northern Afrika was invaded by asiatic settlers 3000 years ago. The descendants of these invaders can still be found in Algeria, Libya, Tunisia, Mauritius, Egypt and other parts of north Afrika. These arab states have, for the most part, marginalized and discriminated against the indigeneous Afrikan population. This video deals primarily with the situation in Tunisia, but can also be applied to most of the other north Afrikan, muslim states. How can these nations be allowed to be members of the "African Union" under these types of conditions?
In January 2011, driven to despair by high unemployment, food inflation, corruption, a lack of political freedom and poor living conditions, Tunisians ousted President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali and introduced democracy to their country.
As the celebrations of this remarkable achievement began to quieten down, people got ready to enjoy the benefits of liberty - especially those to do with fairness, human rights and equality.
And indeed, many of those benefits did follow; even though many Tunisians continue to feel economically marginalised and the country faces security problems, for the most part the repression that was such of feature of the Ben Ali years has gone. Tunisia is widely regarded as one of the few successes of the Arab Spring.
But not all Tunisians would agree. Five years on from the revolution, the country's large black minority - roughly about 15 percent of the population - say they have yet to fully experience the freedoms that their fellow citizens enjoy. They say that racial abuse and discrimination are still widespread in a society that is supposed to have done away with inequity and prejudice - and that the authorities are failing to take action.
People & Power sent filmmaker Nada Issa to investigate.
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The Untold Story of The African Liberation Struggle tells the story of the role played by African Women Freedom Fighters who gave of themselves in the fight for their identity, their territory and their land. The documentary from African Women Studies Centre of The University of Nairobi highlights the role played by women in liberation struggle and whose voices are either muted or whose story and role is not fully appreciated