Top videos
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Full - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4xlkVibYIYM
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#islam #muslim #quran
In Senegal, baobabs have long served as tombs for griots, or storytellers. They're seen as sacred, as they house the spirits of the ancestors buried in their hollowed-out trunks. But due to the health risks of decomposing bodies, it's rare to find a community that still practices the tradition. The Serere are one of the last.
Rare Public TV show produced by NET/KRMA-TV Denver that discusses the present conflict between the remaining colonial powers of the West and the newly independent countries of Asia and Africa. Re - enacts the 1955 U N committee deba./ and the vote on Algeria. (Kinescope).
Renowned author of 'The New Jim Crow' says the death of Freddie Gray points to the need for concerted community action to halt excessive force targeted at African Americans. A discussion of the school to prison pipeline and how the The US government, law enforcement agencies, prison industrial complex and banks profit from the War On Drugs.
VICE on HBO looks at factors that led to the 2008 financial crisis and the efforts made by then-Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, Federal Reserve Bank of New York President Timothy Geithner, and Federal Reserve Chair Ben Bernanke to save the United States from an economic collapse. The feature-length documentary explores the challenges these men faced, as well as the consequences of their decisions.
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Promo: Why Every Black Person Should Care About What Happens in Haiti w. Bijoux Noir
Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Kambon NATAV Keynote at UDS: Kmt, not "Egypt"
Nas - Nas Is Good (Official Audio)
King's Disease II Available Now 👑2⃣
Download/Stream King's Disease II
http://Nas.lnk.to/KD2
--------------Tracklist-------------
1. The Pressure
2. Death Row East
3. 40 Side
4. EPMD 2 feat. Eminem & EPMD
5. Rare
6. YKTV feat. A Boogie Wit da Hoodie & YG
7. Store Run
8. Moments
9. Nobody feat. Ms. Lauryn Hill
10. No Phony Love feat. Charlie Wilson
11. Brunch on Sundays feat. Blxst
12. Count Me In
13. Composure feat. Hit-Boy
14. My Bible
15. Nas Is Good
-----------------Nas-----------------
http://instagram.com/nas
http://twitter.com/nas
http://facebook.com/nas
-----------------Lyrics----------------
INTRO
Escobar season begins
VERSE 1
Touch up the game like a photo edit
Camera roll like Oscar Michaeux they gotta roll the credits
Like Rome came into Kemet and they stole the essence
Before they watered it down and taught us bogus lessons
Written in stone write whatever in your history books
Me and ancient Egyptian skin tone had similar looks
On my trip out to Cairo I found home on arrival
I swam in the Red Sea
Took a boat on the Nile
It’s in my blood to drive these cars and live this large
Escobar Cigars avoidin’ the prison bars
Nas
I deserve the threads in my closet big boy deposits
Nike shares and stock tips
Catching up with those who had a head start
Used to get eviction notices that had a red mark
The lights was out that’s why we sip dark
Actin’ a fool at the pool in Queensbridge Park
n*ggas would not survive in my hood
Pull up with all of my jewels on and Nas is good
Nas is good my n*gga Nas is good
BREAK
I love my hood so much I go out in a blazing shootout
You see I can’t come out there I’ll throw it all away f*ck it
Big shout out to DU
Forever
His brother Herb
R.I.P.
VERSE 2
Now y’all woke I’m laughin’ at n*ggas
Y’all used to say Nas talkin’ that anti-establishment business
Look at my settlement cases gave they asses some stitches
Used to put bottles to faces all we ask is forgiveness
My past story full of sins somehow
I gotta cleanse
Back in 2010 Department of Justice wrote me lookin’ for one of my friends
I didn’t know where he was at
Didn’t even have a hint
And even if I did a n*gga’ll never snitch
Cheat code I walked into my greatness
Freak hoes throw their p*ssy a party ok then
Raised by a Queen that’s the only reason I made it
Kings Disease the recurrence that sh*t reinstated
Death to the pessimistic mind state
Lack of hope, low spirit muthaf*ckas
Life to Kings gettin’ a King’s ransom livin’ handsome
Ha
Yo Hit we did it
King’s Disease… 2
#nas #nasisgood #kingsdiseaseii
The first part of a compilation of audio recorded interviews with former slaves which were mostly taken in the 1930s and 1940s.
0:00 Introduction
2:09 Alice Gaston, Alabama (1941) (Good Audio Quality)
5:17 Isom Moseley, Alabama (1941) - (Mostly Good Audio Quality - Some Loud Background Noise at Points)
15:26 Joe McDonald, Alabama (1940) (Good Audio Quality)
19:17 Charlie Smith, Florida (1975) (Mostly Good Audio Quality - Some Background Noise)
48:25 Dave White, Georgia (1933) (Poor Audio Quality)
55:34 Wallace Quarterman, Georgia (1935) (Medium Audio Quality - Loud Background Noise - Watch Out for Loud Dog Barking Incredibly Loudly and There’s a Pause Halfway Through Before Singing Starts)
1:04:54 Wallace Quarterman, Georgia (1933) (Medium-Poor Audio Quality)
1:10:49 Fountain Hughes, Maryland (1949) (Good Audio Quality - Deceptively Loud in the Beginning)
1:40:06 George Johnson, Mississippi (1941) (Medium Audio Quality)
2:58:22 Irene Williams, Mississippi (1940) (Good Audio Quality - Watch Out for Loud Blare in the Beginning) -
3:11:42 Ann Scott, South Carolina (1932) (Medium Audio Quality - Very Loud in the Beginning)
3:20:22 Samuel Polite, South Carolina (1932) (Medium Audio Quality - Very Fuzzy)
3:29:38 Susan A. Quall, South Carolina (1932) (Medium Audio Quality)
Digitized Collections of the Transcripts of Around 2,300 Interviews With Former Slaves:
https://www.loc.gov/collection....s/slave-narratives-f
Alice Gaston - Gee’s Bend, Alabama
Recording Part 1: (you can get the transcript by clicking on the link and clicking ‘PDF’ next to where it says ‘transcript’ just underneath the audio player): https://www.loc.gov/item/afc1941018_afs05091b/
Isom Moseley - Gee’s Bend, Alabama
Recording Part 1: (you can get the transcript by clicking on the link and clicking ‘PDF’ next to where it says ‘transcript’ just underneath the audio player): https://www.loc.gov/item/afc1941018_afs05091a
Joe McDonald and unidentified woman - Livingstone, Alabama
Recording Part 1: (you can get the transcript by clicking on the link and clicking ‘PDF’ next to where it says ‘transcript’ just underneath the audio player): https://www.loc.gov/item/afc1940003_afs04033b/
Charlie Smith - Bartow, Florida
Recording Part 1: (you can get the transcript by clicking on the link and clicking ‘PDF’ next to where it says ‘transcript’ just underneath the audio player): https://www.loc.gov/item/afc1975023_afs17510
Dave White - St Simons Island, Georgia
Recording Part 1: (you can get the transcript by clicking on the link and clicking ‘PDF’ next to where it says ‘transcript’ just underneath the audio player):
https://www.loc.gov/item/afc1984011_afs25666a
Wallace Quarterman - Fort Frederica, St Simon’s Island, Georgia (1935)
Recording Part 1: (you can get the transcript by clicking on the link and clicking ‘PDF’ next to where it says ‘transcript’ just underneath the audio player): https://www.loc.gov/item/afc1935001_afs00342a/
Wallace Quarterman - St Simon’s Island, Georgia (1933)
Recording Part 1: (you can get the transcript by clicking on the link and clicking ‘PDF’ next to where it says ‘transcript’ just underneath the audio player): https://www.loc.gov/item/afc1984011_afs25665a
Fountain Hughes - Baltimore, Maryland
Recording Part 1: (you can get the transcript by clicking on the link and clicking ‘PDF’ next to where it says ‘transcript’ just underneath the audio player): https://www.loc.gov/item/afc1950037_afs09990a
George Johnson - Mound Bayou, Mississippi (1941)
Recording Part 1: (you can get the transcript by clicking on the link and clicking ‘PDF’ next to where it says ‘transcript’ just underneath the audio player): https://www.loc.gov/item/afc1941002_afs04777a
Irene Williams - Rome, Mississippi (1940)
Recording Part 1: (you can get the transcript by clicking on the link and clicking ‘PDF’ next to where it says ‘transcript’ just underneath the audio player): https://www.loc.gov/item/afc1940003_afs04011a/
Ann Scott - St. Helena Island, South Carolina (1932)
Recording Part 1: (you can get the transcript by clicking on the link and clicking ‘PDF’ next to where it says ‘transcript’ just underneath the audio player): https://www.loc.gov/item/afc1984011_afs25657a
Samuel Polite - St. Helena Island, South Carolina (1932)
Recording Part 1: (you can get the transcript by clicking on the link and clicking ‘PDF’ next to where it says ‘transcript’ just underneath the audio player): https://www.loc.gov/item/afc1984011_afs25656a
This video highlights the enduring legacy of Garveyism in Port Limon, Costa Rica and interviews elders who kept the movement moving for nearly 100 years.
This talk occurred at Malcolm X College on December 27, 2012 at the City-Wide Kwanzaa Celebration. The first two minutes are missing, but this is the bulk of what I shared. The main points that are missing are that Kujichagulia is ultimately about our capacity to define reality, not through words, but through the arduous work of social transformation. I also stated that Baba Hannibal incessantly cautioned us against imbibing the opiate of self-deception, not deluding ourselves into thinking that belief was sufficient when action is the ultimate expression of our ideals. Lastly, I used Amenemhat's Weheme Mesu in ancient Kemet (Egypt) and the struggles of the African Maroons in the Western Hemisphere as models of Kujichagulia--Africans defining their own reality. — at Malcolm X College.
Blacknificent Books & More Commercial
Full presentation: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q1GFqTGpvzg
This is the fuller version of the presentation I delivered at the Re-Engaging Pan-Africanism Conference at Birmingham City University, Dec 2018.
The presentation explores the relationship between Culture & Economics as an attempt to:
Rescue "culture" from reductive definitions by demonstrating the relationship between it & economic development.
Demonstrate how revolutionary movements have pursued economic development from a culturally appropriate foundation.
Its pre-recorded, but will be broadcast with a live chat. I look forward to hearing your feedback.
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Part of only a few black folks who said what Obama means to black folks future
Baba James Small - State of Emergency Black Community Global Town Hall Meeting.
The Image of AFRICA has been DISTORTED around the WORLD & We are CHANGING the NARRATIVES via YOUTUBE videos One Country At Time.Until the HISTORY of AFRICA is told by AFRICANS, the story of GREATNESS will always GLORIFY the IMPERIALISTS!.HAVE YOU SUBSCRIBED YET?https://www.youtube.com/c/WODEMAYABOOK ONE on ONE CONSULTANCY WITH WODEMAYAhttps://wodemaya.me/consultation/Support Our Africa Travelshttps://www.patreon.com/wode_m....ayaPaypalhttps://www OFFICE CONTACT+233591519551SHOP YOUR AFRICAN WEARS FROM MY SISTERhttps://dukezfashionline.com/FOR ENQUIRIES & SPONSORSHIPhello@wodemaya.africaFOLLOW ME ON TWITTERhttps://twitter.com/wode_mayaI....NSTAGRAMhttps://www. Love You!
Look what 6 year old Dr. Kayode is learning about... multi genius Ii-m-ḥtp (Imhotep)!
I DO NOT OWN THIS!!!
This track is originally from Deniece's album entitled Let's Hear It For the Boy but in 1996 it was released on her The Best of Deniece Williams CD. The song was originally recorded in 1984. Enjoy!! Lyrics Below:
Morning light, silken dream to flight
As the darkness gave way to dawn
You've survived, now your moment has arrived
Now your dream has finally been born
Chorus:
Black Butterfly, sailed across the waters
tell your sons and daughters
what the struggle brings
Black Butterfly, set the skies on fire
rise up even higher
so the ageless winds of time can catch your wings
ooh...ooh
While you slept, the promise was unkept
But your faith was as sure as the stars
Now you're free, and the world has come to see
Just how proud and beautiful you are
Chorus
Let the current lift your heart and send it soaring
Write the timeless message clear across the sky
So that all of can read it and remember when we need it
That a dream conceived in truth can never die
Butterfly
Cause now that you're free and the world has come to see
Just how proud and beautiful you are
Chorus
Fly
Butterfly
Yeah, yeah, yes
Fly