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Ọbádélé Kambon Subscription
149 Views · 4 years ago

⁣The Gwalla in retrospect: An historical account of Bagao in Navrongo and
Paga

Asantu Kweku Maroon
148 Views · 5 years ago

After years of searching for the truth, I've arrived at no such place. I only arrived at a simple explaination of existence, creation, and God and/or gods. These religions rob the Blacks = Afrikans all over world from their edge and streakness.

Ọbádélé Kambon
148 Views · 6 years ago

Onuora Abuah visits the medieval Hausa city-state of Kano in modern day Northern Nigeria. After a tour of the 600 year old Emir's Palace, we delve deep into the history of the region, whose influence spread far across the Sahara.

#kano #hausa #africanhistory

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Kɔrɔ Naka
148 Views · 6 years ago

A man disillusioned with modern Nigerian life transforms into an Okoroshi ancestral masquerade spirit and sets out on a spiritual journey.

Kwɛsi Kɛseɛ
147 Views · 1 year ago

Nana Akua Oparebea was a multi-faceted and powerful priest in her own right. With her
close associations with Ghana’s first president, Kwame Nkrumah and the Convention People’s
party, she was an astute cultural and political innovator. Emmanuel Akyeampong writes that
Nana Oparebea and the Ghana Psychic and Traditional Healing Association were part of
Nkrumah’s “pursuit of the African personality and identity.”145 As Nkrumah’s spiritual
consultant, she also helped to foster his “religious pluralism.” 146 She extended this pluralism
with her transnational cultural coalition with Nana Yao Opare Dinizulu, who was more of an
African spiritual purist, in that he did not mix Akↄm practices with other ritual applications or
dogmas even though he did socially interface with other groups in the spirit of Pan-Africanism.
With Dinizulu, she pioneered an African Diaspora legacy that is far-reaching and influential in
the United States with thousands of priests trained in service to the Akonnedi Shrine deities of
Asuo Gyebi, Adade Kofi and Nana Esi Ketewa. In 1965 they created the first Akan shrine to be
exported across the Atlantic to voluntarily bring the spiritual practice to Africans in the
Americas.

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
147 Views · 5 years ago

⁣Mhenga John Henrik Clarke
Interview
Tony Brown's Black Journal
1973

Ọbádélé Kambon Subscription
147 Views · 5 years ago

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AbibitumiKasa Discussion series welcomes Dr. DeReef Jamison to talk about the Scholarship of Dr. Amos Wilson

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
146 Views · 5 years ago

Dr. Charles Finch III: The Great Mother - The Origin of Human Culture




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