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Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
20 Views · 4 years ago

⁣Mhenga Frances Cress Welsing: What If Children Understood Racism - White Supremacy Early

Baka Omubo
20 Views · 2 years ago

In this week's episode of Powered by Nyame, our topic is magic and the magical world we have and perhaps ought to live in. The modern world is but one version of reality, an artificial one at that. In spite of its seductive allure, of gadgets, devices, and virtual everything, it lacks a soul and remains without a guiding spirit. Making better machines is no substitute for making better human beings. The magical world of the ancients still exist, if we are receptive to it and the human impossibilities it makes possible.

This episode marks our one year anniversary. Please consider joining this channel to get access to perks:
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JRapBrown
66 Views · 4 years ago

From his 1979 album 'The Sisters'

bonotchi
82 Views · 4 years ago

Afrikan cosmic history is explored

Baka Omubo
34 Views · 1 year ago

Greetings! Welcome to another episode of Powered by Nyame. This week at PBN, we focus on unity, or the root challenges in achieving unity, if that is goal at all. I offer three factors to consider when we talk about unity or the lack thereof, among peoples of African ancestry. Your feedback will form the basis for next week's episode on the same topic.

Kwabena Ofori Osei
22 Views · 1 year ago

Is Egyptology racist? Yes

Kwabena Ofori Osei
18 Views · 1 year ago

A study by Thompson Sanders & Alexander concluded that black patients feel more accepted, understood, and perceive the provider to be more culturally sensitive when treated by black therapists. Even though that was an American study, increasingly evidence is showing this to be the case in Brazil as well.

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Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
37 Views · 4 years ago

WJZ Raw news footage of press conferences and interviews in the days following the uprisings that took place in Baltimore, MD following the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. in April 1968. Shared for historical purposes. From archive.org

1 Gov. Spiro Agnew discussing state of emergency in Baltimore City and Baltimore County, curfews, and executive orders
2 Street scenes in aftermath of riots
3 D'Alesandro press conference on the riots
4 General Gelston press conference on the riots
5 D'Alesandro press conference on the riots and proclamations
6 Traffic and street scenes, putting out fires, burned out buildings: Attman's Delicatessen
7 Unknown business owner interviewed
8 Supermarket owner or employee interviewed
9 Unknown man and woman interviewed about looting
10 Press conference with civil rights leader on his meeting with Spiro Agnew and the intent to divide the black community
11 Street scenes, people sweeping sidewalks
12 Unknown man on insurance coverage after looting
13 People in line for food distribution
14 Unknown man on hope for the future and lessons learned
15 Press conference with D'Alesandro and others on the restoration of law and order
16 Unknown man on agencies and disaster relief services for refugees
17 Press conference with D'Alesandro

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
13 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
21 Views · 4 years ago

Ted Vincent examines the Garvey Movement, the largest mass nationalistic movement in African-American history.

Credit To: Pacifica Radio Archives

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
18 Views · 4 years ago

Are superfoods all that they’re cracked up to be? There’s plenty of worldwide hype about eating chia seeds, goji berries and quinoa - but what benefits do they really bring?

This documentary looks at what superfoods do for people and more. How is the healthy eating boom influencing agriculture and business? There are more and more restaurants serving superfoods in Germany. Florian Klar of Bochum opened the first superfood bistro in the Ruhr region about a year ago. He buys in all types of food, using local suppliers when he can, but he also uses exotic superfoods in his meals.

Quinoa, goji berries and chia seeds can now all be found in supermarkets as well. The food industry has discovered selling these products is lucrative and changed its product selection accordingly. Superfoods are simply that a foodstuff contains a high amount of nutrients. "Every country has its own superfood,” says nutritionist Matthias Riedl. Blueberries, flax seed, blackcurrants, and kale are all superfoods native to Germany.

The film also takes viewers to Bolivia, a key quinoa exporter, to see how the hype has influenced farming there. Exports of the so-called "Inca corn” quadrupled between 2007 and 2013. The rising price of quinoa on global markets has led Andean farmers to increase the size of their fields. Yet after just two straight years of quinoa harvests, the soil is already exhausted and barren.

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Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
14 Views · 4 years ago

This is a documentary highlighting on the progress of The Small Scale Horticulture Development Project (SHDP) Which is jointly funded by Africa Development Bank (ADB) and The Government of Kenya through the ministry of Agriculture.

Ọbádélé Kambon
3 Views · 8 months ago

⁣Classical Kemet, Decolonizing “Decolonization,” and The Way Forward for Global Kemet

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
10 Views · 4 years ago

In this 15 minute film on homestead design, Jacob encourages us to start at the beginning, and to consider the layout of our homesteads - thinking carefully about the resources we have and need, in order to optimise our productive potential with a more integrated design. Key aspects include human needs when thinking about water capture, soil management, nursery placement, livestock protection, as well as pollination, crops and shelter belts.

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
18 Views · 4 years ago

ORFC Global 2021 Workshop

The community of Shashe in the central Masvingo province of Zimbabwe is home to 500 farming families. The agricultural calendar here is marked by four seasonal ceremonies and as well as many other rituals that celebrate the relationship of soil and water, that is key to their food sovereignty.

Shashe leader, Nelson Mudzingwa, says, “The soil is very important because every living organism is dependent on it. We were made of soil, live in the soil and walk on the soil. We build on the soil and we farm in the soil, and when we die we shall be returned to the soil. We are soil.” Water is also essential as “it is the blood of the soil and must flow within it, not above it. A living soil should be moist with life in it, allowing germination of plants and their growth. In our bodies water is also important as well as in all other living things that respire or transpire”.

Join Nelson Mudzwinga, La Via Campesina General Coordinator, Elizabeth Mpofu and Vongai Dube to talk about the spiritual beliefs that guide their farming practices.

Speakers:
Elizabeth Mpofu
Vongai Dube
Nelson Mudzingwa

#ORFCGlobal
https://orfc.org.uk/

Baka Omubo
11 Views · 4 years ago

Every Ijaw woman must teach her family how to speak the language - Ijaw Women of America | Kalabari TV

Voice of Kalabari weekly Talk Sow:
Topic: The Ijaw Language.
Guest: Ijaw Women of America.
Anchor: Damaris Ferdinand
#Kalabaritv

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Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
36 Views · 4 years ago

To purchase a clean DVD of this film for personal home use or educational use contact us at questions@archivefarms.com. To license footage from this film for commercial use visit: www.travelfilmarchive.com

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
22 Views · 4 years ago

⁣Prof. James Smalls: Liberation that 'Conscious' People Must Understand

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
29 Views · 4 years ago

SONIC ACTS FESTIVAL 2019 – HEREAFTER
Filipa César, Jin Mustafa – Meteorisations: Reading Amílcar Cabral's Agro-Poetics of Liberation
24 February – De Brakke Grond, Amsterdam, The Netherlands

A reading of Amílcar Cabral’s agronomic writings exposes substrata of a syntax for liberation later performed in guerrilla language and the struggle against Portuguese colonialism in Guinea-Bissau and Cape Verde. This visual and sonic reading explores the definitions of soil and erosion that Cabral developed as an agronomist, as well as his reports on colonial land exploitation and analysis of the trade economy, to unearth his double agency as a state soil scientist and as a ‘seeder’ of African liberation. Cabral understood agronomy not merely as a discipline combining geology, soil science, agriculture, biology and economics but as a means to gain materialist and situated knowledge about peoples’ lived conditions under colonialism. The scientific data he generated during his work as an agronomist, along with his poetry, were critical to his theoretical arguments in which he denounced the injustices perpetrated on colonised land, and it later informed his warfare strategies.
Cabral used his role as an agronomist for the Portuguese colonial government subversively to further anti-colonial struggle. Cabral’s process of decolonisation was understood as a project of soil reclamation and national reconstruction in the postcolony. His agency as an agronaut ventures through soil cosmologies, mesologies, meteorisations, ‘atmos-lithos’ conflict zones, celluloid compost, violence of imperial consumption — the sugar question. Humble derives from Humus.

Performative lecture by Filipa César with sound by Jin Mustafa and images from Sana na N’Hada and Flora Gomes, 1974, Cape Verde.

This iteration of the lecture has been commissioned by Sonic Acts as a part of Re-Imagine Europe, co-funded by the Creative Europe programme of the European Union.

Filipa César is an artist and filmmaker interested in the porous boundaries between the moving image and its reception, the fictional dimensions of the documentary and the economies, politics and poetics inherent to cinema praxis. Characterised by rigorous structural and lyrical elements, her multiform meditations often focus on Portuguese colonialism and the liberation of Guinea-Bissau in the 1960s and 1970s. This research developed into the collective project Luta ca caba inda (The Struggle Is Not Yet Over). She gained an MA Art in Context at the University of Arts, Berlin. Selected exhibitions and screenings include at the São Paulo Biennial, Manifesta 8, Cartagena, and the Contour 8 Biennial in Mechelen, Belgium, and Gasworks, London. Festival screenings include the Kurzfilmtage Oberhausen, Curtas Vila do Conde, Forum Expanded at the Berlinale and the International Film Festival Rotterdam.

Jin Mustafa is a Stockholm-based visual artist, DJ and electronic music producer. Her work shifts between media, often taking the form of moving images, objects, sound and music. She is interested in the relationship between technology, imaginary spaces and questions of personal and collective memory. Recent exhibitions include I’m fine, on my way home now at Mossutställningar, Stockholm (2017); Ripple at Alta Art Space in collaboration with Signal, Malmö; If she wanted I would have been there once, twice or again at Zeller Van Almsick Gallery, Vienna; and a collaborative work with Natália Rebelo for Chart Emerging at Kunsthal Charlottenborg, Copenhagen (2018).




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