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Nana Kamau Kambon Archives
5 Views · 9 months ago

Afrika Heartbeat
Ijinle Ilu

1. KURUMO (KRU MAN) 4:45
2. JAB-MALASSIE 4:16
3. AWODI (BLACK-KITE) 5:42
4. KWAME 6:25
5. ALAYE 6:14
6. OYA 5:47
7. OGUN 4:49
8. KO AYE SO 5:26
9. AYAN 8:08
10. YEMBELA 5:32

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All rights reserved.

Kalanfa Naka
5 Views · 7 months ago

E1 ∙ The Disturbing Confidence of Ignorance


The history of western civilization and its flourishing is the story of colonialism, genocide, slavery and exploitation, based on deep-seated doctrines of white supremacy, the founding principles of the American nation.

Ọbádélé Kambon
5 Views · 6 months ago

⁣Nana Kamau Kambon and Nana Mawiyah Kambon Interview: Sankɔfa Conference 2003

Nana Kamau Kambon Archives
5 Views · 6 months ago

Dr. Kamau Kambon

Nana Kamau Kambon Archives
5 Views · 5 months ago

Dr Kamau Interactive Session and More.

Ọbádélé Kambon
5 Views · 2 months ago

⁣"Africans Sold Africans into Slavery" and Other Fairy Tales that Keep 'white' People Safe Live Presentation – April 26, 2025 @ 7:00 PM GMT Online via Abibitumi Platform Cut through the lies. Rebuild the truth. This isn’t just a presentation—it’s a precise dismantling of the deliberately crafted myth that “Africans sold Africans into slavery.” A myth designed to protect ‘white’ people from retribution, obscure historical fact, and divide Black people through confusion and misdirection so that we stay in the fragment vs. fragment state that got us in this situation in the first place. Join Ɔbenfo (Professor) Ọbádélé Kambon for a rigorous, documented, and unapologetic exposé that reframes the conversation using primary sources, linguistic insight, historical documentation, and cultural logic. What You’ll Learn: Why the phrase “Africans sold Africans” is historically false and anachronistic—no one called themselves “African” at the time, and even the name Africa is a Latin exonym, not an indigenous term (The Latin suffix -ica (as in Africa, America, Corsica, Antarctica) attests to the foreignness of the word) How the transatlantic Maangamizi began in 1441 with direct raids and kidnappings by "whites"—not buying and selling Why resistance sites like Gwollu, Nzulenzu, and Ganvié give material proof that people who didn't see themselves as "Africans" were building to defend themselves against "white" kidnappers and others who didn't see themselves as "Africans" The full extent of "white" involvement: raiders, financiers, sellers, insurers, shipbuilders, religious justifiers, legal architects, arms suppliers, and more - If one can't return home because "Africans" sold them, how can they stay in places like amerikkka where "whites" sold them, bought them, developed religious and pseudoscientific justifications, lynched them, and committed and continue to commit every other imaginable atrocity? Why the narrative persists: because it keeps ‘white’ people safe from retribution, while encouraging Abibifoɔ 'Black People' to turn on each other -- just as we did during internecine kidnapping and raiding Registration Includes: Live access to the presentation on April 26, 2025 @ 7:00 PM GMT Private access link via Abibitumi Live Q&A session with Professor Ọbádélé Kambon Ability to connect with others serious about Abibifahodie (Black Liberation) This is not a sanitized history lesson. It’s a weaponized presentation for those who are ready to throw off confusion and deal with truth at the highest level. Register now. Reject the fairy tale. Prepare for retribution.

Kwabena Ofori Osei
5 Views · 2 months ago

Gangs are exploiting the availability of guns to exert control and spread violence throughout Haiti.
Since the killing of Haiti's president four years ago, the country has been in chaos.
Armed gangs now control more than 80 percent of the capital and most of the weapons are coming from the US.

Al Jazeera’s Teresa Bo reports from Miami, Florida.

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#haiti #gangviolence #portauprince #arielhenry #jimmybarbecue #jovenelmoise #haitiviolence #haitiunrest #haitigangs #haitigangviolence #haitipoliticalcrisis #aljazeeraenglish

Kwabena Ofori Osei
5 Views · 2 months ago

The ancient coastal city of Gedi, Kenya—a pre-colonial 11th-century trading hub built by Persian and later Arab settlers—boasted palaces, mosques, and advanced infrastructure before its mysterious 17th-century abandonment. Now a UNESCO World Heritage Site, its ruins face threats from climate change and neglect, mirroring risks to Africa’s few protected sites. UNESCO’s Nairobi conference highlighted armed conflicts (Ukraine, Mali) and disasters (Uganda’s fire) as escalating dangers. Archaeologist George Abungu stressed that heritage preservation must prioritise local values over mere UNESCO listings. Gedi’s caretakers work to safeguard its "mystical beauty," though much of its history remains lost. The site underscores Africa’s underrepresented global heritage amid growing crises.

Al Jazeera’s Catherine Soi reports from the Gedi monument in Kenya's Kilifi County.

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#kenya #gediruins #kenyaheritage #unesco #culturalheritage #ancientcities #persiantraders #worldheritage #eastafricahistory #malindi #heritageconservation #climatethreats #historicalsites #archaeology #africanhistory #unescoafrica #gedimonument #lostcivilisations

Kwabena Ofori Osei
5 Views · 2 months ago

Africa is a continent rich in natural resources with a young population. African nations in theory have the potential to transform their economies. But many of them are facing mountains of debt.

Africa’s external debt climbed to more than $650bn last year.

More than half of African countries are either in debt distress or teetering on the edge. But credit restructuring is painstakingly slow, and many governments end up spending more on servicing their debt than on healthcare or education.

The debt problem has plunged many nations into economic crisis with rising unemployment and poverty.

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#africa #economy #aljazeera #debt #unemployment #poverty #aljazeeraenglish #aljazeeranewslive




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