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A Short Commentary on The Cultural Significance of the Word Hotep

By Bashir Akinyele In the past two weeks, community activists and peace workers have been conducting  aggressive anti-violence maneuvers  in the streets of Newark, NJ. Outrage with the uptick in senseless community violence in the city in recent weeks, community activists and the city’s peace workers hosted Massive Stop The Violence March and Rally in […] ....

United States , Weequahic High School , New Jersey , Puerto Rico , Puerto Rican , Bashir Akinyele , Malcolmx Omowale El , Los Angeles , Ken Gibson , Maulana Karenga , Ujima Kiswahili , Habari Gani Kiswahili , Harbari Gani , Umoja Kiswahili , Amiri Baraka , Nguzu Saba Kiswahili , Kujichagulia Kiswahili , Habari Gani , Kuumba Kiswahili , Imani Kiswahili , Molefi Kete Asante , Weequahic High School In Newark , Office Of Violence Prevention , National Black Political Convention In Gary , Afrocentric Movement , Newark Public School ,

Black Pride and Kwanzaa


By Bashir Muhammad Akinyele
-Imamu Amiri Baraka
White supremacy and systematic racism left Black people as one of the most oppressed groups in America. Many Afrikan American leaders came forward to help liberate Black people from centuries of socioeconomic disparities caused by racial discrimination. During the high levels of the Black Liberation Movement in the 1950s to the early 1970s, Civil Rights and Black power became the world wide rallying call for social justice.  We as Afrikan people in the United States have been in a protracted struggle to protect our blackness and our humanity ever since 1619. That is the year Black people arrived on the American shores in chains. Like millions of Afrikans before us, we were kidnapped in Afrika and forced into an European-American slave making system that totally disconnected us from our land, language, and culture for the sole purpose to be exploited by whiteness and capitalism. But Afrika’s children were not the only thing ....

United States , University Of Southern California , Puerto Rico , Alliant International University , Puerto Rican , Harlem Mau , Maulanga Karenga , John Henrik Clarke , Bashir Muhammad Akinyele , Amy Mckeever , Malcolmx Omowale El , Los Angeles , Ken Gibson , Floyd Mckissick , Ron Karenga , Maulana Karenga , Jacobh Carruthers , Umoja Kiswahili , Yosef Ben Jochannan , Amiri Baraka , Jessie Jackson , Ronald Mckinley Everett , United States International University , Us Organization , National Black Political Convention In Gary , National Geographic Magazine ,

Newark, Black Pride And Kwanzaa: History Teacher Offers Lesson


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Centuries of White supremacy and systematic racism left Black people in America in an oppressed condition. Many Afrikan American leaders came forward to help liberate Black people from racial discrimination. During the heightened conscious levels of the Black Liberation Movement in the 1950s to the early 1970s, Civil Rights and Black power became the worldwide rallying call for justice. We as Afrikan people in the United States have been left in a protracted struggle for blackness ever since 1619. In Afrika, and throughout the Afrikan diaspora, systematic racism made us believe that we have no history of being the very first people on the planet earth that initiated humanity, civilization, religion, and culture. But some Black leaders came forward to rebuild Afrikan Americans through Afrikan centered cultural empowerment and for Black political power. A respected Los Angeles, California community activist named Ronald McKinley Everett, an advocate for pan Afrikan sel ....

United States , Weequahic High School , New Jersey , University Of Southern California , Puerto Rico , Alliant International University , Puerto Rican , Maulana Karenga , Ron Karenga , Tom Davis , Harlem Mau , Maulanga Karenga , Umoja Kiswahili , Amiri Baraka , Bashir Muhammad Akinyele , Amy Mckeever , Ronald Mckinley Everett , Jessie Jackson , Malcolmx Omowale El , Los Angeles , Ken Gibson , Floyd Mckissick , United States International University , Us Organization , National Black Political Convention In Gary , National Geographic Magazine ,