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Living Legend: Community Building Model vs. Raising Consciousnee (Live from Nairobi)
Ukombozi Library
The concepts of community building and raising consciousness represent two distinct yet intertwined approaches in the work of fostering progress and empowerment within Black communities. Here's a comparison between these two models, particularly when framed around someone being a "Living Legend":
Community Building Model
This model focuses on the practical, physical, and infrastructural development of a community. It includes tangible aspects like:
Institution Creation: Founding schools, community centers, businesses, and other communal spaces.
Economic Empowerment: Encouraging collective economics and self-reliance by creating local industries or services that provide jobs and financial stability.
Organizational Leadership: Developing strong, centralized leadership structures that help guide the community toward shared goals.
Physical Resources: Ensuring basic necessities like food, shelter, safety, and health services are accessible within the community.
In the context of a Living Legend, this model would view the individual as a builder—someone who has physically transformed their environment through strategic initiatives, leading to the empowerment of the people. Their legacy would be in the enduring institutions, wealth-generating opportunities, and overall improved quality of life for the community.
Raising Consciousness Model
This model, on the other hand, focuses on the internal, intellectual, and spiritual awakening of individuals within the community. Key elements include:
Cultural Reclamation: Teaching the importance of indigenous knowledge systems, spirituality, and identity (as you have emphasized with terms like reKemetization or de-aAmw-ization).
Educational Upliftment: Providing knowledge that helps individuals critically understand historical, social, and political forces that affect their lives, particularly around issues like colonialism, white supremacy, and global oppression.
Personal Empowerment: Encouraging individuals to understand their place in the universe, their power, and their potential, leading to self-determined action.
Collective Identity: Building a shared consciousness where people see themselves as part of a larger collective struggle for liberation, and are united in their efforts to reclaim power and autonomy.
In the Living Legend framing, someone seen as raising consciousness would be celebrated for their work in transforming minds and spirits. Their legacy would lie in the awakening of critical thought, cultural pride, and the reorientation of people towards their heritage and greater purpose. They inspire generations through teaching, writing, speaking, and spiritual leadership, rather than building physical institutions.
Interconnection
While distinct, the two models are deeply interconnected. Community building cannot thrive without a raised consciousness to fuel and sustain it, and the process of raising consciousness often requires spaces and institutions to nurture it. A Living Legend can embody both, simultaneously serving as a builder of institutions and as a catalyst for mental, cultural, and spiritual awakening.
In your own work, these models could reflect different dimensions of how you approach Black liberation and empowerment through Abibitumi, as you're engaged in both practical community building (e.g., businesses, conferences, repatriation initiatives) and in consciousness-raising (e.g., language teaching, decolonization discourses, cultural education).