Top videos
Greetings Bla Xit family
After hundreds of requests to see more Gambian businesses, Bla Xit has responded to your requests by visiting a local Gambian family business, which is a growing enterprise with 5 branches across Gambia. The business was established as recently as 2010.
Please like, share and subscribe!
If you would like to make a donation, you can send the money via PayPal to bopcollective@yahoo.com
Become a Bla Xit Messenger (Subscribers only) by sending your video clip to blaxithome@gmail.com
Special thanks to our friend and YouTube Vlogger Wode Maya. You can follow him on YouTube too www.youtube.com/user/MrGhanaBaby
Bla Xit Family we attended a meeting to talk about next steps for land owners or would be land owners. Who want to develop their land into their homes. We have been seeing lots of developers and looking at their properties their architects and also their ability to build quickly to a high standard within a specific budget, with flexibility to incorporate your wishes and needs. We want you to dream your dreams and live your life to the fullest. Thanks to Fire and Edmund and Bode and team for allowing us to film. Thanks for sharing your stories. They told me they are not rushing to go back to England or Sweden "for what" they said! And I completely understand. Come home family come home. If you have not got your land yet please give us a call.
Thank you so much for watching and subscribing and sharing. Thanks for your kind comments
Thanks for your donations we appreciate every single penny or cent or Euro etc. If you would like to help us to continue to make programmes you can contribute via Paypal using Bopcollective@yahoo.com or via Patreon Bla Xit.
Bla Xit family this is a Bla Xit message with a difference. I am adding information below about his project which sounds excellent. Please remember to please share, smash the like button and comment down below. This is what he had to say:
I am really good at non-verbal communication as opposed to a direct one. I have a good heart and felt that I have a calling to use technology to help out in this turn of the century. You can say that if there is one thing I understand: It will be technology. More especially making software and hardware come together. I am African born and I have been living in the USA for a very long time. I have a plan to move back to Africa in the next 5-7 years we are proud of Africa. I carried out an interesting research and challenged the best of the best with my findings. None responded to the challenge. I was able to reverse engineer the current status quo PKI (symmetric and asymmetric) and developed a new encryption standard for anyone who wants to use it. I have also entered for 3 patents in the USA:End-point to end-point cryptographic system for cloud, internet of things and mobile devices (ECSMID)This is just data security (2048 bits of data encryption) for all mobile, pc, cloud machines and internet of things.Industrial Internet encryption system (IIES)The is high encryption (2048 bits) for standalone system and hardware like MCU, IoT and cyber physical to prop security of industry 2.0Distributed ledger system for electronic transaction (DLSeT)This standard has 2048 bits encryption which can be applied to protocols use for building emerging market internet and digital currency . The idea is to protect the information in the region used and prop smart cities defense against parametric footprints left in headers and metadata of users. Again it will also extend and replace the status quo (crypto currency) which requires mining, centralization and open to 51% or sybil attack.Now that all these are done, it is imperative that you and all other African descent know about this. Let me be inspired by all and inspire the young generation to carry the baton in further research. The new Africa must have a ‘Great Sahara-Firewall ‘ to guide its data so that our life in the continent will not be predictive as the one we live here. I have re-engineered the encryption to wrap around all internet communication of a secure continent.This is the harbinger of what must come to past. I am done with empirically creating the awareness effortlessly among the oppressors who ignores the potency for fear it will disembowel the ban-aid empire of cyber security here in. I am sorry I was a poor communication in the past. My aim is to do better as I excel with respect to my roots.I called on Bla Xit family to get the attention of the African testers and developers in joining the task force of researching, implementing and deploying this contribution. My wish is to build something that an African team can stay proud off. We must build with our hands to become relevant. Something we can rely on to protect us. https://github.com/jumezurike/....backend-master-lokdo have established ICO-HUBI to support the unification and/or merging of indigenous technology into a center of innovation. I have also created the documents with local attorney to allow diasporas to join in this effort. Any African descent who plans to bring their business to African, can join ICO-HUBI to gain bargaining power and operate before CAC registration in Nigeria. By so doing We can be viable and stronger to build an ecosystem of technology. As a result of lack governmental help this is necessary to keep the indigenous technology withing the continent. This principle could duplicated anywhere in Africa too.ICO-HUBI has 3 companies to date:Lokdon Legtech (solving legal issue with technology)BVI Media (Put to scope the local events)OVUS Electric (power generation and robotics) We need at least 7 more indigenous tech business esin order to fully establish the ecosystem.We are doing the best we can to help these wasting talents in the best way possible. I am building an application with our cryptographic technology to facilitate the funding for all these. https://www.lokdon.com/documentation. There is the preview of what I am working on. This will allow them to raise funds on their own from diaspora.I will add anyone (developers) interested as a contributor as long as they understand programming languages like c/c++, java, python, c# etc,.. More so, we kindly request 1000 testers from your channel who will help us with the much needed testing of the new Lokdon$ application. We will compensate these with 6 months free use of the application’ premium features.1. Crowdfunding2. Encrypted SMS and payments3. Secure eWallet4. Secure individual cloud storage5. Secure business cloud storage If you could help Josiah please get in contact with Blaxithome@gmail.com
Binta and Juliet have fun in the kitchen cooking a traditional and National Gambian dish
Benachin which literally means one pot in Wolof. We make fish Benachin however you can use a similar method to make chicken, beef or vegi benachin. We hope you enjoy this cooking experience and try it at home. Thanks to Binta and Seth and Adrian and Khafre and all our donors for making this programme possible. Thanks to Wode Maya for starting us on this journey.
Please enable us to continue to bring content by supporting our Channel
You can gift us a donation via Paypal using our bopcollective@yahoo.com email address
You can donate via Patreon using Bla Xit
Or you can send us a donation via Western Union or APS please email us for details blaxithome@gmail.com
Please join us on FB at Bla Xit Movement
Or check out our website at www.Bla-Xit.com
Remember our trip to Sierra Leone early bird deals are going fast.
September 11 was Ethiopia’s New Year [this video has no sound]
Ethiopia rings in its New Year, Enkutatash, on 11 September, and not on 1 January, as the rest of the world does. The country’s unique calendar considers September, called Meskerem in the local language of Ethiopia, to be the first month of the year. The Ethiopian New Year Enkutatash means the ‘gift of jewels’. Legend has it that King Solomon of Jerusalem gave the Queen of Sheba jewels during her famous visit to Jerusalem some 3,000 years ago. Her return to Ethiopia after receiving the gift coincided with the New Year celebration in September, and hence the name Enkutatash came to be.
The number of daylight hours and nighttime hours happen to be exactly equal in every part of the globe once every September, which is one of the reasons Ethiopians celebrate New Year during this month. During this time of the year, the Sun and the Moon that are used to count time each have 12 hours before setting. The second reason is derived from the Bible, which says that the creation of the Heavens and the Earth took place in September.
Ethiopians believe that the month of September has different signs that explain why it should be celebrated as the beginning of a New Year. Blooming flowers, sunny days and a generally pleasant weather reign during this month. It is a time when people leave the rainy, foggy and thunderous months in Ethiopia’s winter period behind and move on to better days. The whole family comes together to light a bonfire in their backyard and dance around it in circles on the eve of the New Year. For the New Year celebration, young boys have a different role. Weaving their creativity into beautiful paintings that herald the coming of a bright new day, the boys go from one house to another handing out their works of art on the morning of the holiday to family members, neighbors and friends. Ethiopian girls approach you beating their drums, clapping and singing the traditional song, Abebayehosh. One of the girls leads the song and the rest respond to the lyric, chanting “lemlem”. They carry bright-yellow flowers called adey abeba, which grow in Ethiopia only from September to November. As a token of appreciation, people respond to the girls’ pleasant songs with a piece of bread prepared for the holidays, or with money – the latter taking precedence these days. young boys have a different role. Weaving their creativity into beautiful paintings that herald the coming of a bright new day, the boys go from one house to another handing out their works of art on the morning of the holiday to family members, neighbours and friends.(Serkalem Tafesse, 2018)
While the West prepares for fall, dormant trees, and cold weather, North East Africa, is in bloom. Happy New Year!
Combat Capoeira in the Rain
The hidden history of an American coup. Correction at 7:23: Cynthia's ancestors lived in Wilmington, not her descendants.In November 1898, in Wilmington, North Carolina, a mob of 2,000 white men expelled black and white political leaders, destroyed the property of the city’s black residents, and killed dozens--if not hundreds--of people. How did such a turn of events change the course of the city? For decades, the story of this violence was buried, while the perpetrators were cast as heroes. Yet its impacts resonate across the state to this day.In the new Vox series Missing Chapter, Vox Senior Producer Ranjani Chakraborty revisits underreported and often overlooked moments from the past to give context to the present. Join her as she covers the histories that are often left out of our textbooks. Our first season tackles stories of racial injustice, political conflicts, even the hidden history of US medical experimentation.Have an idea for a story that Ranjani should investigate for Missing Chapter? Send it to her via this form! http://bit.ly/2RhjxMySign up for the Missing Chapter newsletter to stay up to date with the series: https://vox.com/missing-chapterWatch Ranjani's earlier video on the hidden history of the Tulsa Massacre: https://youtu.be/x-ItsPBTFO0For more reading, check out the links below:The final report from the state commission on 1898 Wilmington: https://www.ncdcr.gov/learn/re....sources-topic/1898-w An in-depth documentary about the events of 1898: http://wilmingtononfire.com/aboutThe News and Observer’s recent coverage of 1898: https://www.newsobserver.com/article192293519.html and https://media2.newsobserver.co....m/content/media/2010 the full Missing Chapter playlist, including episodes, a creator Q&A, and more! https://www.youtube.com/playli....st?list=PLJ8cMiYb3G5 is a news website that helps you cut through the noise and understand what's really driving the events in the headlines. Check out http://www.vox.com.Watch our full video catalog: http://goo.gl/IZONyEFollow Vox on Facebook: http://goo.gl/U2g06oOr Twitter: http://goo.gl/XFrZ5H
As the world races to lead the way in blockchain technology, could Africa have an advantage? This documentary follows the journeys of two African Bitcoin pioneers, Alakanani Itireleng (Founder of the Satoshi Centre, Botswana) and Lorien Gamaroff (Founder of Usizo). Exploring their hopes for this technology and how it could be used to improve the lives of millions of people, experts in finance, economics and technology weigh in with a mix of industry research, opinions and passion for what the future global economy could hold. And, with much of the developed world’s banking system becoming increasingly unstable, this documentary starts a conversation about cryptocurrency and Africa leapfrogging problems to live in a better global financial system.
Part 4
Prof. Manu gives insight in a 3-part series on "The Spiritual Tradition of Black People in the Biblical Land of Kemet (Egypt)," sponsored by Brother To Brother (Oakland, CA).
PART 3 OF 3: Function of the Temple in Kemet