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IG Creativo
47 Views · 3 years ago

OUR SUDAN is a short film to inspire a new generation. Based on a TEDxKhartoum talk by the same name it has been made to inspire young Sudanese to think differently about themselves and their future - to inspire them to believe that, "the future is not a matter of what will be, but what could be. That it is a choice and it is theirs to make."The film OUR SUDAN tells the story of a generation of young men and women raised in a world of great tumult and change in which the dream of an older generation seems to have been lost. The film presents a new perspective, offering a celebration of Sudan's promise and calling upon young people to, "dream a new dream, the dream of their generation."An Arabic version of the same is under the following link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-28EsAZ_dVo

Angela Malele
41 Views · 3 years ago

Our Story is a fun and educational way for children to learn Black History. To order the Our Story DVD, please visit http://www.niambishouse.com.

Baka Omubo
53 Views · 3 years ago

In this episode, we take a deep—yet not too deep—dive into the concept of spiritual warfare.

Mashanko
29 Views · 3 years ago

From one of my favorite jazz albums - Somethin' Else. With any luck, I plan to upload the rest of it soon (minus the first track, stupid 10min video limit). Until then, enjoy!

Kɔrɔ Naka
42 Views · 5 years ago

⁣Wild Africa Rivers Of Life Episode 3

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
40 Views · 5 years ago

La Reine Soleil (The Sun Queen) [2007]
Animation Complete in French

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
70 Views · 5 years ago

⁣Achimota School- Accra, Ghana
Denial of Admission to Dredlocked Students
The Big Agenda 19.3.2021

Kwabena Ofori Osei
72 Views · 2 years ago

The Story of Boukman - Boukman was a key leader of the slave revolt in the Le Cap‑Français region in the north of the colony. He was killed by the French planters and colonial troops on 7 November 1791,[3][4] just a few months after the beginning of the uprising. The French then publicly displayed Boukman's head in an attempt to dispel the aura of invincibility that Boukman had cultivated. The fact that French authorities did this illustrates their belief in the importance Boukman held to Haitian people during this time.
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Music by: Style Yves

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
16 Views · 5 years ago

COINTELPRO: The FBI's War on Black America

Ọbádélé Kambon Subscription
20 Views · 5 years ago

Abibitumi Kasa Live Discussion: Dr. Iyelli Ichile - Primacy of Mothers in the Afrikan Liberation Movements!!Topic Brief: What role has our Afrikan women and mothers played in the Afrikan Liberation Movements historically?About Dr. Ichile:Dr. Iyelli Ichile is the mother of an even more amazing daughter than she prayed for. She was educated in her mother's house, in several schools, and by life in general. Dr. Iyelli Ichile took a PhD in African Diaspora History from Howard University, and a Master’s in African American Studies from Columbia University. She is currently the Postdoctoral Fellow in African American History at the Reginald F. Lewis Museum and the Department of Africana Studies at the University of Maryland Baltimore County—after having taught at a number of universities and public education institutions. She has traveled to three continents as a teacher and researcher, with an emphasis on the roles of African women in liberation movements. She specifically examines the connections between African spiritual systems, traditional military cultures and interpersonal relationships as the basis for freedom-fighting. Beyond academia, Ichile is a community culture worker and a certified Kemetic Yoga practitioner

Ọbádélé Kambon Subscription
30 Views · 5 years ago

Mdw nTr Study Group at IAS

Kɔrɔ Naka
38 Views · 2 years ago

Welcome to Africa Reacts in this video we React to Animated Kids Series Made in Uganda thats Challenging the Industry . Watch here https://bit.ly/I-love-myselfKunda & Friends, the vibrant African music-led animated series about friendship and fun! Join Kunda and his friends Sana, Fela, Ella & Leo as they embark on adventures filled with laughter, music, & heartwarming life lessons.Africans React to Animated Kids Series Made in Uganda that's Challenging the Industry https://youtu.be/2r4aYBY8Q60 #africareacts #reaction -~-~~-~~~-~~-~-

Ọbádélé Kambon Subscription
15 Views · 5 years ago

Radio programming from the digital radio station Black Talk Radio Network.

Baka Omubo
24 Views · 2 years ago

⁣Okuninibaa Kerida McDonald is a Rastafari singer, songwriter, and Harvard graduate who has worked with UNICEF for over 20 years. She is also the mother of reggae singers Kelissa, Keznamdi, Miss Jamaica finalist Kamila, naturopathic doctor Kamani, and UN International school graduate Kadiya.Enjoy 'Throw Forward' clip from ⁣Okuninibaa Kerida McDonald providing sound advice to young parents.➡️ Tune into 'I NEVER KNEW 📻'🇲🇱Roots, Rock, Reggae Music🇲🇱Hosted By : Jr of 'I Never Knew Tv'https://www.WLOY.orgSunday 9 -11 AM ESTWednesday 8- 10 AM ESTThursday 10- Noon AM EST#parenting #ineverknewtv ineverknewtv

Baka Omubo
17 Views · 5 years ago

The second guest we have with us for 'Africanus Talks' is Sarah Agnela Nyaoke Ouma. Nyaoke is a Ja-Luo born in East Africa who is undertaking a post as a PHD researcher in the Seafarers International Research Centre, Cardiff. She gives us an insight into what it was like growing up as a Luo during the rise of the multiparty political system in Kenya, which was nurtured by her father, the late great Professor Ouma Muga. Join us each Saturday for new content from 'Africanus World'

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Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
21 Views · 5 years ago

This webinar focussed on good practices and lessons learned to support agroforestry in the Africa region building on global experience and in the context of LEDS. During the session, the AFOLU Working Group of the LEDS Global Partnership presented on global experience and a deep dive presentation from one African country was also featured.

Date: 30 August 2018
Duration: 90 minutes


Speakers: Josh Ogada (SouthSouthNorth) Introductions of speakers and presentations 0:1 George Tarus (Kenya Forest Services)
The Case of Kenya
Skip to George's presentation 8:10


Felipe Casarim (Winrock International)
Agroforestry: A path to climate change mitigation and adaptation
Skip to Felipe's presentation 40:37


The presentations are available on the AfLP website: https://africaledspartnership.....org/en/2018/09/04/we

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
35 Views · 5 years ago

Thursday, February 16th 1961.

Footage of a protest held outside the Belgian Embassy in Havana Cuba after news of the murder of Patrice Lumumba, the first Prime Minister of Congo, spread all over the world.

Lumumba had been killed in secret on January 17th by an execution squad commanded by a Belgian officer.

Reuters text from 1961:

"Crowds including large numbers of students held a meeting outside the Belgian Embassy in Havana, Feb 16, in protest against the "brutal assassination of Congolese leader Patrice Lumumba".

Carrying flags and banners, the crowd shouted "Cuba Yes, Yankees No", "Congo Yes, Belgians No", Now more than ever the Congo is bound to win", and "Lumumba is dead but not his ideas".

Watched by police and militia, the demonstrators marched up and down the street in front of the Embassy. Time and again, groups stopped at the main gate to voice their protest, supporting the "Congolese people and all nations who are fighting for peace in the world", and condemning "Belgian and American imperialism".

Source Reuters News Archive.

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
39 Views · 5 years ago

On February 11, 1990 Nelson Mandela was released from prison after 27 years. Watch the in-depth reporting from CBC News: The National on that historic day.


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Baka Omubo
31 Views · 2 years ago

Nigeria erupted in protests this week against the anti-labor policies of the Tinubu administration and soaring inflation that is crippling Nigerians. Inspired by the anti-colonial uprisings across the Sahel, thousands took to the streets to demand living wages and the resignation of US-backed President Tinubu. Investigative journalist and author David Hundeyin joins the show to discuss the demands behind the #endbadgovernance protests and how the US government’s backing of Tinubu

#breakthroughnews

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
19 Views · 5 years ago

The event followed a now familiar pattern: a small convoy of dusty 4x4 vehicles drove on to the edge of the airstrip at Galkayo in Puntland, north-central Somalia; armed security guards took up watchful positions nearby and a number of bemused-looking men stepped gingerly from the cars and lined up to have their photographs taken by the media.

On this occasion there were 11 of them; all had been hostages until that morning. They were sailors from a Malaysian cargo vessel that had been hijacked by Somali pirates a few years ago and held until a ransom was paid for their release.

One of them gave a brief account of what had happened. "On November 26, 2010 our ship was hijacked in the Indian Ocean. Their demand was 20 million. After that, they threatened the owner. You now increase money or we will shoot the crew. The owner didn't increase the money and then one Indian is shot with just three bullets. Then they hit us and tortured us. Tell your family to bring us money, otherwise we will kill you!"

The crew had been held for three and a half years but they were the fortunate ones. Five of their crew mates had died in that time. Now the survivors were going home and a UN plane with two envoys on board was flying in to see them to safety.

Such scenes have become relatively commonplace in Galkayo in recent times. Eighty percent of global trade is carried by sea and Somalia sits on a key maritime route linking Europe and Asia. More than 18,000 ships pass its shores every year. Over the past decade, Somali pirates, often former fishermen whose traditional livelihoods have been destroyed by foreign trawlers and toxic waste dumping, have attacked more than 300 vessels and kidnapped 700 people.

Faced with such a threat, the international community responded aggressively. In 2008, European states, the US and others began sending naval forces to these seas. They are still there today - warships, planes and helicopters patrolling thousands of square miles and doing a fair job of keeping the hijackers at bay. The UN and others have also played an increasing role in facilitating negotiations for the release of hostages - such as those set free at places such as Galkayo - for whose liberty large ransoms have been paid.

But if the problem is now slowly coming under control in Somalia, the same cannot be said for other parts of the world where piracy is on the increase. Lawlessness, desperation, poverty, greed and even political radicalism have brought the phenomenon to the waters of South America, Asia and, perhaps most aggressively, to West Africa.

In an effort to understand the reasons why, Bertrand Monnet, a French academic and filmmaker, has been travelling to piracy hot spots around the coast of Africa. In an extraordinary and very tense series of encounters, he came to face to face with heavily armed pirate gangs operating in and around the Niger Delta, where Nigeria's huge offshore oil industry, which employs thousands of expatriates, offers rich ransom pickings. It gradually became clear that piracy in West Africa has many of the same root causes as piracy in Somalia and elsewhere, not least of which is that those who don't share in the benefits and profits of global trade have ever fewer reasons these days to respect the security of those who do.

Source: Al Jazeera


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