RBG Afrikan- Centered Cultural Development and Education

RBG Afrikan- Centered Cultural Development and Education

RBG Street Scholars Think Tank's Purpose: This Educational Program and Research Project is Dedicated to Further Building the Hip Hop--Black Liberation Movement Connection by Integrating Conscious Digital Edutainment with A Scholarly...

RBG Street Scholars Think Tank's Purpose:
This Educational Program and Research Project is Dedicated to Further Building the Hip Hop--Black Liberation Movement Connection by Integrating Conscious Digital Edutainment with A Scholarly Self Directed Learning Environment.

Welcome to one of the baddest EduTainment Resources on the Web. A one-stop-shop for education,consciousness raising, entertainment and liberation. And the nicest thing about it is that you can become a contributor. Just start out by reading this overview and learning how things work. You can play a video right within this start page and even browse to it's music. Or turn on an audio playlist to facilitate your browsing. Tons of other options, too numerous to mention here are also right at you finger tips. Ride it however you like, it's all good. Once you get going, check out a Multi-Media Article that interests you and make a comment. I, RBG Street Scholar-Your Zine author, editor and guru will respond. The aforementioned approach is a kol gateway to doing bigger and better things in and with the Communiversity.


WHAT IS RBG STREET SCHOLARS THINK TANK AT ZIMBIO ALL ABOUT?

It's about creating and maintaining the best "Afri-Conscious Cyber EduTainment Portal / Communiversity on the Web".

It's about saving time doing study, learning / teaching together and having madd fun doing it.
The merticulously researched choice of links can be thought of as our votes in the popularity contest that is the "Best of the Best in Black Internet" . The intention is to provide a diverse and concise starting point for you to begin your quest for whatever information you are looking for from a progressive/radical/revolutionary Black perspective . As most of these sites have vast links sections of their own, so do the sites they link to, and so on, and so forth—starting from these links, you can delve further into whatever area interests you.


You got a myspace, youtube, odeo, website etc.
Add your Stuff Folx--and let's learn from each other, build together and teach the world

Our Zines are intended to help us develop and maintain a resource for scholarly research, build together and learn about any subject / topic related to what we're already about: Namely, the "Africentric Idea of Education" let's take the learner from G.E.D. to Ph.D in the contemporary liberal arts and sciences;

Including:
> computers & information technology,
> history and cultural development,
> religion and spirituality,
> sociology,
> political science,
> creative productions/ entertainment,
> education,
> health promotion and disease prevention
> economics and
> psychology
A one stop shop using all forms of media to interactively showcase our ideas of relavent education, unification, collectivity and self definition.


They say " Black Folx Can't Unite, I say they're a lie" Let's show the world our truth and culture; all under the umbrella of Black Nationalism> PanAfrikanism> Scientific Socialism> Revolutionary Change>Afrikan Internationalism.

Browse existing content in any of our four Zines and you will discover that they are all concentricly integrated, thus providing you with a most rich and wholesome interactive learning experience.

Help RBG Street Scholar, your Resident Guru, build our school with your good works.

Rate each others work as to keep us on point.

I'VE STARTED US OUT WITH SOME SOLID CONTENT. NOW WE MUST CONTINUE BY BUILDING TOGETHER. A GOOD WAY TO START IS BY FIRST SIGNING UP AND THEN BROWSING EACH FIELD IN THE TABLE OF CONTENTS PANE TO THE LEFT AS TO GET QUICKLY ORIENTED. A LINK BELOW TO "RBG STREET SCHOLARS THINK TANK RULES OF ENGAGEMENT" WILL TAKE YOU DEEPER STILL.

THE FOLLOWING IS A GUIDING SYNOSIS TAKEN FROM THE COMMUNIVERSITY PROPER:
With strick attention to developing our student’s basic education skills in the context of the highest standards of academic excellence, suitable for one to confidently sit for high stake exams(ie. SAT/ACT and MCATs, LSATs), we simutaneously advance the psycho-emotional healing and spiritual upliftment of our people by providing KNOWLEDGE, WISDOM AND OVERSTANDING of the historo-cultural, socio-political and psycho-educational experiences of Africans in America in away that RADICALLY REAPPRAISES EDUCATION from the pained and angry perspective of the oppressed black community.

WHY WE NEED TO DO THIS:
With the present day high rates of Black on Black homicide, suicide, and imprisonment and a rise in single-parent homes, rampant police brutality, unprecedented unemployment, and Blacks use of popular (ENEMY) culture (through music, video games and popular movies) to celebrate "anti-intellectualism, ignorance, irresponsible parenthood, drunkenness, dope dealing, weed smoking, cocaine, x-pills, loose sexual behavior and criminal lifestyles / thuggism"; we have chose to design a curriculum that, rather than getting caught up in the entertainment / BLACKPLOTATION aspects of hip hop/rap, will use hip hop/rap within a historo-cultural, socio-political and psycho-educational framework to address these various death walks forthrightly. Our new methodological style is intended to get our young people to begin to think critically about themselves, their world and their role as people of Afrikan descent.

WHERE WE ARE AND WHERE WE WANNA GO:
This work is a comprehensive (but only a core framework) sequenced survey of subjects and topics that have confronted Afrikans in America throughout our 246 years of chattel slavery, 100 years of aparthied and only “one generation of freedom” here in America. I like to describe the school as a “cultural development and leadership training communiversity”. From our research, we have determined that the idea of Sankofa, which means "We must go back and reclaim our past so we can move forward; so we understand why and how we came to be who we are today", really encompasses the whole Afrikan-centered ideal. Nonetheless, as this is a work in evolution and always under construction, we have chosen to focus our teaching/learning journey most directly on the past 45 years of our struggle for human and civil rights—

THE THEME “THE MORE THINGS CHANGE, THE MORE THINGS STAY THE SAME, WE NEED A REVOLUTION, THE SYSTEM AIN’T GONA CHANGE UNLESS WE MAKE IT CHANGE”.

The content and character of the curriculum is Afrikan-centered and the goal is academic excellence in persuit of black power. We tease out the social, political, economic and moral imparatives of black power in the 21st century by zooming in on two povital questions throughout our course of study:

“WHAT IS BLACK OPPRESSION IN AMERICA AND WHAT IS AFRIKAN LIBERATION.”






http://i170.photobucket.com/albums/u250/RBGStreetScholar/awards-2.gif?t=1257788579
To best orient yourself to this learning environment

right click on the mp3 icon that follows>open link in new tab>once playback starts>click back on this tab>Browse and Enjoy (firefox browser)

RBG THEME
play Emotional Productions

Is this your first time visiting us or would you like to get deeper into how the communiversity teaches? Then check out
RBG Street Scholars Think Tank Rules of Engagement .

Dr. Marimba Ani on Yurugu and Afrikan Rebirth/ Full Video Workshop and link to her RBG Classroom

Dr Ani Marimba — African Worldview Yurugu is on e of RBG Street Scholars Think Tank's Two Required Textbooks (T he other being Dr. Amos Wilson's Blue Print for Black Power) Following is a Audio Clip and Textbook Extracts: Chapter 1, Utamawazo: The Cultural Structuring of Thought Archaic European Epistemology: Substitution of Object for Symbol The African world-view, and the world-views of other people who are not of European origin, all appear to have certain themes in common. The universe... Access Full Lesson

Jacob H. Carruthers is a founding director of the Association for the Study of Classical African Civilizations and a current member of its national board of directors. He is a founding member of both the Kemetic Institute of Chicago and the Temple of the African Community of Chicago. He is the acting director of the Center for Inner City Studies, Northeastern Illinois University, where he also serves as a professor. He is the author of Science and Oppression, The Irritated Genie, and MDW NTR Divine Speech.

http://africawithin.com/carruthers/carruthers.htm

Intellectual Warfare

By: Jacob Carruthers,

A scholarly work several years in the making, Intellectual Warfare testifies that the foundation of modern Western thought, theory, and practice can be traced back to ancient African thought, theory, and practice. Dr. Carruthers exposes the African influence on Greek and Roman thought and its influence on the development of modern Western society, then establishes the urgency to defend and honor the role of Ancient African civilizations on this major event

In the pages of Intellectual Warfare , Dr. Carruthers exposes fallacies and reestablishes new and undistorted ways of viewing the formation of Western society and how classic literature shaped the contemporary world in intricate and sometimes startlingly and brutally honest and uncompromising detail. He is not satisfied with simply challenging the reader to think about things differently, but goes further citing specific examples and offering instruction on how to begin to retrain oneself to think about the origins of modern society in other terms. The esteemed scholar and defender of African centered thought is ever vigilant and provocative in the pages of this text. He separates this latest work from other such critical efforts by expanding the text with instruction for implementing new ways of looking at the educational curriculum to ensure the challenge to improve education can be taken up by future generations. He offers insight into how to incorporate the reexamination of classical African literature in the education system.



RBG STREET SCHOLAR PRESENTS: "The Deepest Academic EduBlog in the World"

LINK 2 THE ACTUAL FULLY INTERACTIVE  POST ALL IMAGES ARE HOT AND EXPANDABLE /RIGHT CLICK  AND VIEW /OPEN IN NEW TAB B aba Del Jones Classroom ENHANCED WITH INTELLIGENT IMAGERY / MSE   R BG Blakademics PDF Learners Manuals and Booklets RBG Street Scholars Think Tank Core Curriculum EduBlog Our Professors are Our Scholars ...cultural workers, raptivists, revolutionaries and grassroots communty folk; including the likes of DPZ and Family, UNO The Prophet, Paris, KRS-1, PE/Chuck D, Dr. Mutulu... Read Full Story


http://www.knowingafrica.com/



The Falsification of Afrikan Consciousness:
Eurocentric History, Psychiatry and the Politics of White Supremacy

(Awis Lecture Series)

 By Dr. Amos N. Wilson

Description

T his book presents two ground-breaking lectures by Amos Wilson. The first, European Historiography and Oppression Exposed: An Afrikan Perspective and Analysis, was among the first contemporary analyses which delineated the role Eurocentric history-writing plays in rationalizing European oppression of Afrikan consciousness. It explicates why we should study history, how history-writing shapes the psychology of peoples and individuals, how Eurocentric history as mythology creates historical amnesia in Afrikans in order to rob us of the material, mental, social and spiritual wherewithal for overcoming poverty and oppression. Moreover, this engrossing lectures the relationship between the rediscovery and rewriting of Afrikan history and achievement of liberation and prosperity by Afrikan peoples. The second lecture, Eurocentric Political Dogmatism: Its Relationship to the Mental Health Diagnosis of Afrikan People, advances the contention that the alleged mental and behavioral maladaptiveness of oppressed Afrikan peoples is a political-economic necessity for the maintenance of White domination and imperialism. Furthermore, it indicts the Eurocentric mental health establishment for entering into collusion with the Eurocentric political establishment to oppress and exploit Afrikan peoples by officially sanctioning these egregious practices through its misdiagnosing, mislabeling, and mistreating of Afrikan peoples’ behavioral reactions to our oppression and our efforts to win our freedom and independence.




RBG FEATURED STUDY GROUPS


RBG FEATURED CLASSROOMS (70)


Right click and view image for full size poster
Left click to open link
/ firefox

RBG4Lif Web TV: 24-7 Live Stream and Video On Demand



WANT A PANORAMIC VIEW OF THE WHOLE COLLEGE?
THEN DOWNLOAD OUR ORGANIZING TOOL AND CAMPUS NAVIGATION MAP/TOOLBAR.




RBG BLAKADEMICS DEFINED




Brotha Praylu is RBG Street Scholars Think Tank's Master Video Educator.
We started this project five years ago.

Here's what I wrote up in 2006 regarding this warrior-scholar.

I would like to take the opportunity to thank and welcome RBG Street Scholars Think Tank's newest contributor. My good friend and colleague Praylu. We started out together about two years ago teaching on You Tube. There were only about seven of us on You Tube at that time doing Re-education of Afrikan people work. The others were-ParadigmS...., Akeem, Dadieshak, Antihostile , Rootsymali and SynQ....READ MORE IN OUR HIP HOP AND CONSCIOUS RAP MUSIC  WIKIZINE






RBG CULTURAL DEVELOPMENT DEFINED

RBGz WORKING DEFINITION OF CULTURE:

http://www4.pictures.zimbio.com/img/831c/RBGStreetScholar/1733l.jpg
RBG Blakademics reflects the cultural continuity and recurring spiritual and pedagogical themes of Afrikan peoples education and socialization across space and time; from ancient classic Nile Valley Civilizations to West Africa (from which we most directly come from) North , Central and East Africa and throughout the Diaspora, right on up to our present day experience here in the hells of north America. So the process does not put in as much as it draws out what is already pre... Read Full Story





Culture is not one of life’s luxuries: it is life itself.

“Culture” may be defined as “the integrated pattern of human knowledge, belief, and behaviour… language, ideas, beliefs, customs, taboos, codes, institutions, tools, techniques, works of art, rituals, ceremonies, and other related components…” (Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1989).


At times,“culture” and “civilization” have been regarded as synonymous; at others, culture has been regarded as the end and civilization the means. In anthropological terms, culture encompasses a broad range of material objects, behavior patterns and thoughts. In western society, culture is commonly regarded as something highbrow, a luxury rather than a necessity. Certain activities are deemed to constitute culture, while others are excluded. This paper argues that a democratic culture where there is access, respect, coherence and/or relevance in the public interest is not elitist, but a basis for human and social development.

Senegal’s former president, the poet Léopold Sédar Senghor, once stated in an interview: “At intellectual conferences in the Third World culture is made an instrument for politics, although Marx was of the opinion that politics should be the instrument for culture. To Marx the purpose of politics is to make man free in order to be able to ‘create works of beauty’. Culture, not politics is the weave that keeps a society together. But industrialized countries in East and West do not accept the notion that cultures be equal although different. They do not take African culture and philosophy seriously as long as we have no economic power.” 4

“Is ‘culture’ an aspect or a means of ‘development’, the latter understood as material progress; or is ‘culture’ the end and aim of ‘development’, the latter understood as the flourishing of human existence in its several forms and as a whole?” 5

These quotations reflect a longstanding and ongoing discussion of two viewpoints. These can, however, be combined without one overshadowing the other. They are interdependent and nurture one another.

On the one hand, the importance of culture is thought to lie in its function as a medium of messages for educational or other social purposes. Here, the sharpness of the instrument depends on the dedication, skills and depth of the conveyor.

The other viewpoint emphasizes culture as a means of paving the way for creativity and showing experience that can be neither measured nor weighed. The artist’s imagination, or the world it builds, is a laboratory of the not-yet-experienced.

In the words of John Gardner, the American novelist, “Art is as original and important as it is precisely because it does not start out with a clear knowledge of what it means to say.”

To stimulate our imagination and nourish our dreams, we seek art, literature, film, music and theatre for a varied range of aesthetic experience. This applies to people all over the world, of all social classes and ages, women and men alike. What we cannot dream about cannot be realized either.

Culture helps us transgress limits, self-imposed or otherwise; to challenge ourselves; and to discover talents we were unaware of – talents that are valuable in every kind of situation in life. Without imagination and creativity, we are prisoners of the structures and thoughts of others.
Four aspects of the role of culture in development may be discerned. There is no competition between the four: rather, they empower one another.
They are:
* using culture to illustrate or clarify a medical, political, educational, agricultural or family problem = culture for development
* strengthening the cultural sector = cultural development
* the importance of analysing the consequences of development cooperation on the culture of a country, community or group.
* mainstreaming culture in all development work.

Modified from: The Power of Culture

Companion Article: African Culture and the Ongoing Quest for Excellence Dialog, Principles, Practice by Maulana Karenga, Ph.D.


RBG AFRIKAN CENTERED EDUCATION DEFINED

 

 

Dedicated educator and educational theorist Dr. Barbara Sizemore applied the expertise she acquired at premiere institutions to work on behalf of disadvantaged students. Sizemore was born on December 17, 1927, in Chicago. Upon completing a B.A. in classical languages at Northwestern University, she began teaching in the Chicago public school system. Sizemore returned to Northwestern and received an M.A. in elementary education in 1954. Twenty-five years later, she graduated from the University of Chicago with a Ph.D. in educational administration. In 1963, Sizemore was among the first African American women to serve as principal of a Chicago school. Six years after switching from elementary to high school administration, she was the first African American woman elected superintendent of a major city's school system in 1972. For two years Sizemore served as the top official of the District of Columbia's public schools. She then accepted a position at the University of Pittsburgh, which she retained until 1992. At Pitt, Sizemore studied schools located in low-income, high-crime areas whose students were predominately African American. She incorporated her findings into an innovative educational strategy called School Achievement Structure (SAS), which she championed as dean of DePaul University's School of Education from 1992 to 1998. Schools that followed her routines had tremendous success raising their students' test scores, increasing these individuals' chances for success in system that often works against them. A former member of the board of directors of The Journal of Negro Education, Sizemore participated in the dialogue of how to empower students as a prolific writer and member of the National Alliance of Black School Educators. She has received numerous awards and honors recognizing her contribution to educational theory. Sizemore's children, Kymara Chase and Furman G. Sizemore, are also professors. She passed away on July 24, 2004. Sizemore was interviewed by The HistoryMakers on April 9, 2003.

Ten Vital Principles for Black Education and Socialization


We are not new to the study of and practice of education and socialization that is rooted in deep thought.

We will not accept a dependent status in the approach and solution to our problems.

Chapter 2 (excerpt)

The image “http://www.nathanielturner.com/images/New_Folder3/blackedcover.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.Ten Vital Principles for Black Education and Socialization

1. We exist as African people, an ethnic family. Our perspective must be centered in that reality.

2. The priority is on the African ethnic Family over the Individual. Because we live in a world where expertness in alien cultural traditions (that we also share) have gained hegemony, our collective survival and enhancement must be our highest priorities.

3. Some solutions to problems that we will identify will involve differential use of three modes of response to domination and hegemony: a) Adaptation—adopting what is deemed useful, b) Improvisation—substituting or improvising alternatives that are more sensitive to our culture and c) Resistance—resisting that which is destructive and not in the best interests of our people.

4. The “ways of knowing” provided by the arts and humanities are often more useful in informing our understanding of our lives and experiences and those of other oppressed people than the knowledge and methodologies of the sciences that have been privileged by the research establishment despite the often distorted or circumscribed knowledge and understanding this way of knowing produces.

5. Paradoxically, from the perspective of the education research establishment, knowledge production is viewed as the search for facts and (universal) truth, while the circumstances of our social and existential condition require the search for meaning and understanding.

6. The priority is on research validity over “inclusion.” For research validity highest priority must be placed on studies of: a) African tradition (history, culture and language), b) Hegemony (e.g., uses of schooling/socialization and incarceration), c) Equity (funding, teacher quality, content and access to technology) and d) Beneficial practice (at all levels of education, from childhood to elderhood).

7. Research informs practice and practice informs research in the production and utilization of knowledge; therefore, context is essential in research: a) Cultural/ historical context, b) Political/economic context and c) Professional context, including the history of AERA and African people.

8. We require power and influence over our common destiny. Rapid globalization of the economy and cyber-technology are transforming teaching, learning and work itself. Therefore, we require access to education that serves our collective interests, including assessments that address cultural excellence and a comprehensive approach to the interrelated health, learning and economic needs of African people.

9. The Universal Declaration of Human Rights proclaims, and the UNESCO World Education 2000 Report, issued in Dakar, Senegal, affirms that “education is a fundamental human right” and “an indispensable means for effective participation in the societies and economies of the twenty-first century.” We are morally obligated to “create safe, healthy, inclusive and equitably resourced educational environments” conducive to excellence in learning and socialization with clearly defined levels of achievement for all. Such learning environments must include appropriate curricula and teachers who are appropriately educated and rewarded.

10. African people are not empty vessels. We are not new to the study of and practice of education and socialization that is rooted in deep thought. We will not accept a dependent status in the approach and solution to our problems...

Click to Read More, Purchase the Book and See the Video Documentary




Quick Links to RBGStreetScholars
Recent Multi-media EduBlogs:



(RBG Worldwide 1 Nation Asafo / 450 Strong)





 Mouse  Over for Capsules

RBG Who, What, Why and How: Background & Significance and A Review of the Afrikan Centered Education Literature(Books)

Black Child Development Under White Supremacy / Audio, Text and Video, The Honorable Dr. Amos Wilson and Afrikan Cultural Studies

Two Types of Scholars in The Global African Community and Profile of a RBG Street Scholar

Why We Fight: "Battle of China (ca. 1944)

Dr. Marimba Ani On Yurugu and Afrikan Rebirth

RBG On The Black Power Movement and Education : Past, Present and Future

Hip Hop :The Culture vs The Industry and The White Supremacy Factor

Dr. Chancellor Williams On "The Destruction of Black Civilization"

Who Are You and What's Really Really Happin ?: "Tha People Speak Out"

RBG Communiversity: Some Audio and Video Introductory Remarks by RBGStreetScholar

"Hip Hop and Politics In Tha Mix": Afrika Bambaataa, Paris, KRS-1 and Chuck D Speak / Teach On It

Intro to RBG Street Scholars Think Tank Multi Media e-Journal: "History is a Weapon in Taking Off the White Mask"

Remembering Black Wall Street in Light of the Barack Obama Nomination: "The True Story"

REAL TALK: Let's Stop Black on Black Violence With RBG Luv

Sam Greenlee and The Spook Who Sat by the Door-Full Movie, Online Book and more

"A RBG Case for Reparations"

 


http://api.ning.com/files/Bz9-Qq9qurvpeHjJLG28gxXu911g5-JT*i4J6TnPQenRWfSc581t*kxpch2V6dHPZMCYZ2co51tiN6H7X-UsxBEoXN7*Q*9a/RBGProfessorsPoster.jpg

The Reality of Black Leadership

 

 

  1. play Niggers / A MX-Last Poets Remix
  2. play Fanny Lou Hamer On Struggle
At RBG Minister Malcolm Lives and Teaches

  1. play Malcom X - Black Power
  2. play Malcom X - Last Speech
  3. play The Assasination
  4. play Ossie Davis-2-27-1965 — Eulogy Malcolm-X
  5. play Mumia Abu Jamal — Sons of Malcolm
  6. play Minister Malcolm X — Whites Disease
  7. play Malcolm X Black Nationalism Can Set You Free
  8. play I'm A Field Negro
  9. play No Sell Out
  10. play Stop Singin' And Start Swingin'
  11. play Malcolm X -Alex Haley Autobiogrphy 7of 8
  12. play Minister Malcolm X on Housing in Harlem
  13. play Minister Malcolm X — Racist-in-Reverse?
  14. play Malcolm X-Touchtone Terrorisst - Malcolm X Stamp (Comedy)
  15. play Malcolm X — Niggers/Last Poets


Malcolm X (born Malcolm Little; May 19, 1925 – February 21, 1965), also known as El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz, was an African American Muslim minister, public speaker, and human rights activist. To his admirers, he was a courageous advocate for the rights of African Americans, a man who indicted white America in the harshest terms for its crimes against black Americans. His detractors accused him of preaching racism and violence. He has been described as one of the greatest and most influential African Americans in history.

Malcolm X was born in Omaha, Nebraska. By the time he was 13, his father had died and his mother had been committed to a mental hospital. After living in a series of foster homes, Malcolm X became involved in the criminal underworld in Boston and New York. In 1945, Malcolm X was sentenced to eight to ten years in prison.

While in prison, Malcolm X became a member of the Nation of Islam. After his parole in 1952, he became one of the Nation's leaders and chief spokesmen. For nearly a dozen years, he was the public face of the Nation of Islam. Tension between Malcolm X and Elijah Muhammad, head of the Nation of Islam, led to his departure from the organization in March 1964.

After leaving the Nation of Islam, Malcolm X made the pilgrimage, the Hajj, to Mecca and became a Sunni Muslim. He traveled extensively throughout Africa and the Middle East. He founded Muslim Mosque, Inc., a religious organization, and the secular, black nationalist Organization of Afro-American Unity. Less than a year after he left the Nation of Islam, Malcolm X was assassinated while giving a speech in New York...read more



Sorted by: Top Picks
Written by RBGStreetScholar on
  A DEEP CUT ANALYSIS OF EUROPEAN (ARYAN AND SEMITIC) SCHOLARSHIP AND CULTURE (INCLUDING PHILOSOPHY, MYTHOLOGY AND RELIGION, POLITICS/GOVERNANCE, SOCIAL THEORY AND HISTORY, CURRENT EVENTS, EDUCATION AND ECONOMICS, LAW AND MEDICINE, MEDIA COMMUNICATIONS, CREATIVE PRODUCTIONS, ARTS AND HUMANITIES) DEMONSTRATES THAT THEY ALL SPEAK IN ONE VOICE, AND ALWAYS IN CONCERT WHEN IT COMES TO THOSE WITH THE ABILITY TO PRODUCE COLOR (MELANIN). BUT, PRECISELY BECAUSE MELANIN IS MORE THAN A MATTER OF COLOR (SKIN PIGMENTATION); RATHER, IT IS THE BASTIAN OF “HUE-MAN” ORGANIZING, UNIFYING AND PROTECTING PROBABILITY, POSSIBILITY AND POTENTIALITY; THE EUROPEAN GROUP HAS HISTORICALLY AND PRESENTLY CONTINUES TO WAGE AN UNDECLARED “MELANIN WAR”. ... Read Full Story
Written by RBGStreetScholar on
IMPF Mission Statement THE INSTITUTE FOR MINORITY PHYSICIANS OF THE FUTURE is a collective voice of African American, Native American, Hispanic American and progressive European American physicians and medical scientists. IMPF believes that the root cause of minority under-representation in United States medical schools is academic disadvantag e borne by lack of access to high-quality high school and college preparation. Consequently, IMPF mission is to become a leading organizational force for parity in medical education by helping minority students develop the skills that will enable them to compete on a more equal footing in the medical school admission process, and once in medical school, ... Read Full Story
Written by RBGStreetScholar on
“A PRESENTATION OF THE STUDY DOMAINS OUR VARIOUS CURRICULA EXECUTE IN A WEB 2.0 ENVIRONMENT” http://www.zimbio.com/RBG+Afrikan-+Centered+Cultural+Development+and+Education In NATIONBUILDING, Agyei Akoto has produced a volume that challenges all Afrikan people, particularly those of us in the United States, to confront with seriousness the responsibilities of educating for liberation, and the reality that the goal of liberation must be Nationhood. This book is a masterpiece of vision. More importantly, by writing candidly about the experience produced by 20 years of sustained kazi (work) within a collective of creative thinkers and doers, the author helps readers understand how the wisdom he reveals in NATIONBUILDING was developed. One ... Read Full Story
Written by RBGStreetScholar on
Afrocentricity by: Molefi Kete Asante Text re-post from: http://www.worldagesarchive.com/Reference_Links/Afrocentricity.htm Is an intellectual perspective deriving its name from the centrality of African people and phenomena in the interpretation of data. Maulana Karenga, a major figure in the Afrocentric Movement, says, “It is a quality of thought that is rooted in the cultural image and human interest of African people.” The Afrocentric school was founded by Molefi Kete Asante in the late 20th century with the launching of the book, Afrocentricity, in which theory and practice were merged as necessary elements in a rise to consciousness. Among the early influences were Kariamu Welsh, Abu Abarry, C.T. ... Read Full Story
Written by RBGStreetScholar on
Brotha Praylu is RBG Street Scholars Think Tank's Master Video Educator. We started this project five years ago. Here's what I wrote up in 2006 regarding this warrior-scholar. I would like to take the opportunity to thank and welcome RBG Street Scholars Think Tank's newest contributor. My good friend and colleague Praylu . We started out together about two years ago teaching on You Tube. There were only about seven of us on You Tube at that time doing Re-education of Afrikan people work. The others were- ParadigmS... ., Akeem, Dadieshak, Antihostile , Rootsymali and SynQ.... READ MORE IN OUR HIP HOP AND CONSCIOUS ... Read Full Story
Written by RBGStreetScholar on
Please  vsit and browse http://ivms.blogspot.com/ Marc Imhotep Cray is a Physician (UMDNJ-New Jersey Medical   School),Pharmacy School trained Pharmacologist / Analytical Chemist, Addiction Medicine Specialist, Basic Medical Sciences (BMS) & Black Studies Master Teacher, Medical Infomatics Expert, Webmaster, Medical & Afrikan-Centered Education Researcher and RBG Street Scholar in Evolution.   ·He is formerly Director of Office of Medical Education American International School of Medicine-Georgetown, Guyana. ·Formerly Associate Professor of Basic Medical Sciences and Campus Curriculum Coordinator International University of Health Sciences-School of Medicine-Saint Kitts, West Indies (only PBL Medical School in the Caribbean at the time) ·Dr. Cray is an Expert PBL and Case-Based ... Read Full Story
Written by RBGStreetScholar on
      Afrocentric education is education targeted towards African people. The premise behind it is the notion that human beings can be subjugated and made servile by limiting their consciousness of themselves and by imposing certain selective aspects of alien knowledge on others.[1] To control a peoples culture is to control their tools of self-determination in relationship to others.[2] Afrocentrists argue that what educates one group of people does not necessarily educate and empower another group of people. Philosophy Afrocentric education has as one of its tenets, decolonizing the African mind. The central objective in decolonizing the African mind is to overthrow the ... Read Full Story
Written by RBGStreetScholar on
The time is ripe to heed the long-standing, and most often overlooked, calls for New Afrikan Unity, Cultural Development, Education and Social Transformation. Such is what RBG most fundamentally represents. Contrary to the prevailing, misinformed assumptions,RBG (Black Nationalism / PanAfrikanism ) as an ideology, interaction and academic process is not a rabid assertion of Black supremacy. Unlike white Nationalism and American patriotism, RBG(Black Nationalism / Pan -Afrikanism ) and its proponents do not seek to humiliate, exploit, or oppress any person or people. Rather,RBG / (Black Nationalism / Pan Afrikanism ) is a positive affirmation of the cultural, political, social, economic and moral identity ... Read Full Story
Written by RBGStreetScholar on
http://rbgnation.ning.com/group/blackandbrownpower Dr. Khallid Abdul Mahammad, Robert F Williams, Malcolm X , Che Guevara , George Jackson, Fred Hampton Sr., Black Panthers, Huey Newton, Marcus Garvey, Dhoruba Bin Wahad , Herman Ferguson Maxwell Sanfrord Amiri Baraki, Chairman Omali Yeshitela; These are our revolutionary icons and guides. Other notables: Dr Mutulu Shakur, The Honorable Sonny Carson, Dr. John Henrik Clarke, Dr. Martin Luther Jr., Minister Malcolm X, Kwame Toure/formerly Stokely Carmichael, Dr. Amos Wilson, Dr Leonard Jeffries, Dr. Na’im Akbar, Dr Ben, Dr Asa Hilliard, Dr. John Jackson, Dr. Chancellor Williams, Dr. Mulana Karenga, Dr. Oba T’ Shaka, Rev. Khandi Paasewe, Dr. Molefi Asante and many, ... Read Full Story
Written by RBGStreetScholar on
LINK 2 THE ACTUAL FULLY INTERACTIVE  POST ALL IMAGES ARE HOT AND EXPANDABLE /RIGHT CLICK  AND VIEW /OPEN IN NEW TAB B aba Del Jones Classroom ENHANCED WITH INTE LLIGENT IMAGERY / MSE   R BG Blakademics PDF Learners Manuals and Booklets RBG Street Scholars Think Tank Core Curriculum EduBlog Our Professors are Our Scholars ...cultural workers, raptivists, revolutionaries and grassroots communty folk; including the likes of DPZ and Family, UNO The Prophet, Paris, KRS-1, PE/Chuck D, Dr. Mutulu Shakur, Mumia Abu Jamal, Dr. Amiri Baraka, Bro. J of X-Klan, Dr. John Henrik Clarke, Dr. Khallid Abdul Muhammad, Dr. Martin Luther Jr., Minister Malcolm ... Read Full Story
Editable by Any Member
Is this your first time visiting us or would you like to get deeper into how the communiversity works ?
Then check out RBG Street Scholars Think Tank Rules of Engagement.

The education of any people should begin with the people themselves.... The chief difficulty with the education of the Negro is that it has been largely imitation resulting in the enslavement of his mind.


Dr. Carter G. Woodson,
THE MIS-EDUCATION OF THE NEGRO, (1933)

READ THE FULL BOOK ONLINE

To study further with Dr. Woodson see this portal:

Education and Psychology Section

NEW LESSONS

Zimbio Cover - RBG Afrikan- Centered Cultural Development and Education

 

Dr. Naim Akbar and Dr. Asa Hilliard  "Voices From the Village" and 

RBG Caveats of New Afrikan Liberation

Editable by Any Member




Our Professors are Our Scholars...

cultural workers, raptivist, revolutionaries and grassroots communty folk; including the likes of DPZ and Family, UNO The Prophet, Paris, KRS-1, PE/Chuck D, Dr. Mutulu Shakur, Mumia Abu Jamal, Dr. Amiri Baraka, Bro. J of X-Klan, Dr. John Henrik Clarke, Dr. Khallid Abdul Muhammad, Dr. Martin Luther Jr., Minister Malcolm X, Kwame Toure/formerly Stokely Carmichael, Dr. Amos Wilson, Dr Leonard Jeffries, Dr. Na’im Akbar, Dr Ben, Dr Asa Hilliard, Dr. John Jackson, Dr. Chancellor Williams, Dr. Mulana Karenga, Dr. Oba T’ Shaka, Rev. Khandi Paasewe, Dr. Molefi Asante and many, many more.

Sorted by: Top Rated
Click to play video
Editable by Any Member

RBG Worldwide 1 Nation

Come and let your creative juices flow on Tha first exclusive "New Afrikan Socio-Education Network" on the Web. Dedicated to the Greatness of Our Elders and Ancestors. A place for hip hop artists, poets, scholars, activists and family to share their talents, skills, news and works with one another. We represent the best of the best in Web 2.0 Education

Enjoy all genres a Black music with a special touch of 70's RnB & Luv Ballads. It is an excellent place for family entertainment and interactive education.

Assisting someone in building a page is an great way to play each one teach one in developing their computer skills and elevating their consciousness. We are sure it will allow you and yours to learn, grow and enjoy. Please tell a friend.

RBG4Life/1

 

RBG Peace, Power and Unity, Its Bigger Than Hip Hop



Editable by Any Member
http://www.newblackpanther.com/images/khallid2.jpg
RBG Street Scholars Think Tank is
Dedicated to the Memory of
Dr. Khallid Abdul Muhammad

Photobucket





>Karibu ndani ( Welcome In Orientation Classroom)

>RBG Street Scholars Think Tank Preface, Feat. Our Pedagogy as set forth by Dr. Molefi Kete Asante

>RBG Street Scholars Think Tank is Dedicated to the Memory of Dr. Khallid Abdul Muhammad, Feat. Our "From Slave Ships To Hip Hop" Goals & Objectives

>Who and What is RBG Street Scholars Think Tank, Featuring An Audio Intro by Mumia Abu-Jamal

>
RBG It All Started with Slave Ships: Feat.,Voices of Slavery & Photo-Story Mini-Lectures "Strange Fruit"

>RBG Photo-Story Tribute: Pride Of A Panther and Assata Song, Feat. The P.I.C. & The Fugitive, An Essay By Former Black Panther Kathleen Cleaver Esq.

>RBG Photo-Story Mini-Lecture-Police Brutality-Police State, Featuring the Story of Black Revolutionary George Jackson

>
RBG What Is Black Oppression in Amerikkka ? Featuring The Official and Only Statement/ Dr.Kamau Kambon & Dr Khallid Abdul Muhammad on Donahue

> RBG Tribute To An Afrikan King: The Honorable Marcus Mosiah Garvey

>
RBG Panther Fa Life: DPZ Family Edutainment

>
RBG Core Curriculum Snap Shots and Theme Video, Featuring Info on RBG College Without Walls

>
RBG Photo College Compilation

>
RBG Core Curriculum Professors, Feat. Dr. Ani Marimba On The Afrikan Worldview

>
RBG MLK In His Own Words Feat., "He Explains How He Entered The Civil Rights Movement"

>RBG Martial Arts Edutainment & Cyber Training Promo, Freaturing A Comprehensive Overview of Afrikan Martial Arts

>RBG Malcolm Speaks/ He Explains Black Nationalism, Featuring A Jazzology Pohto-Story Tribute

>RBG Politically Conscious Rap, feat.Dr. Amiri Baraka, Graffiti & Breaking in da mix

>RBG Freedom Fighter Tribute: Feat BLA Freedom Fighter & PP Jalil Muntaqim & Cointelpro Exposed

>
RBG Afrikan Beauty: It's A Melanin Thang, featuring Real Black Girls Part I

>RBG A Legacy of Rebellion, Revolt and Resistance, Featuring the Stories of Gabriel Prosser, Denmark Vesey, Nat Turner and The Amistad




How We Provoke Thought, Discussion & Learning:

Please keep in mind that RBG is a Think Tank. A center of higher learning organized for intensive study, research, critical thinking and problem solving; focused in the areas of the use of technology in Afrikan-centered cultural development and education for the purpose of individually and collectively learning the social, political , economic and moral strategies to secure Black Power in the 21st century.



More frequently than not, we initiate our teaching / learning process by pre sen ting audio and visual resources that pose semalies, parables, metaphors, analogies and oxymorons--that's what makes you think (we hope). Then we have lively and well informed group discussions revolving around the various messages put forth in the learning objects and media assets. Next we research the facts overlaying our discussions using the voluminous number of resources available in the communiversity's web portals and learning environments. Finally, each learner has the opportunity to fill our evaluation instruments on most of the 5,000+ RLOs (Reusable Learning Objects) and media assets that comprise the core curriculum. It is out of following this methodology that we devise position papers and community policy recommendations and initiatives... Learn More


Sorted by: Top Rated
Click to play video
Editable by Any Member

..."The rules and beliefs which provide the means for legitimating White power were in fact pre-established, preordained and imposed on Blacks against their will by Whites from the beginning. The illegitimacy of White American power is founded on the illegitimacy of its original sins--genocide, theft of property, and enslavement. For social power to be exercised effectively the power holder must possess or control some important or valued material and/or social resource(s) which is the basis of his power. By strategically rewarding or depriving others of these resources, he may use them to influence behavior in ways compatible with his interests"...Read the Full Essay
Sorted by: Top Rated
Click to play video
Editable by Any Member


What is Black Oppression?: Born in the USA

My definition: The violent and coercive suppression of people of Afrikan descent in America by the global white elite minority from a nation, class and gender perspective from our natural self-expression; disallowing us the opportunity to defend, define and develop in our own image and interest. It is part and parcal to the system and business of white supremacy and is based on dint force and falsification ( violence and fruad)..."Oh yah, most white people are so racist they don't even know it. So forget about appealing to their Christian conscious, they revealed that impossibility when they shot Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.-- worthy of note, the bullet hit him in the front and blow a hold in his back large enough for a football to fit in; and all he was doing was non-violently struggling for our civil rights".
A quote from Dr. King, " If a man is not willing to die for something then he is not fit to live."



WHAT DA PROBLEM IS !!!
(The Background)

Del Jones aka Nana Kuntu

> FEAR, DEPENDENCY AND DIS-UNITY

> CRIMINALIZATION OF BLACK MEN

> POLICE BRUTALITY/MILITARIZATION/ DWB/RACIAL PROFILING

> POOR PHYSICAL HEALTH AND MENTAL HYGIENE

> UNDER AND MISEDUCATION

> PROFESSIONAL EDUCATIONAL GAPS AND THE COMPUTER LITERACY/ DIGITAL DIVIDE

> LACK OF WEALTH AND OPPORTUNITIES FOR THE MASSES

> FAMILY AND COMMUNITY SOCIAL DISORGANIZATION/ALEIN CONTROL/DEGRADATION

> POLITICAL DISENFRANCHISMENT

> ECONOMIC EXPLOITATION

> HIGH UNEMPLOYMENT RATES

> POOR NEIGHBORHOODS AND SUBSTANDARD HOUSING AND OTHER STRUCTURES

> THE PRISON INDUSTURIAL COMPLEX AND ITS RECONSTITUTION OF SLAVERY

> ALCOHOLISM, DRUG ADDICTION, NARCOTIZATION OF OUR COMMUNITIES AND HIV/AIDS

> NIGGERIZATION AND HUMANIST-INTEGRATIONIST INBETWEENITY

> PASSIVIST PSYCHOPATHOLOGY

See notes for image-enhanced statistics:

RBG Street Scholars Think Tank "State of Black America"

 

Sorted by: Top Rated
  1
  3
  4
  5
  6
  7
Sorted by: Top Rated
  2
  3
  5
Editable by Any Member

Free Your Mind, Return to the Source:

Afrikan Origins of Civilization

This RBG Street Scholar Kemetic Learning Series is based on the lectures, book and a TV series "Free Your Mind, Return to the Source, Afrikan Origins of Civilization by Dr. Asa G. Hilliard III", the Fuller E. Callaway Professor of Urban Education in the department of educational foundation at Georgia State University.
 

Dr. Hilliard, who conducts annual study tours of Egypt, is a former Dean of the college of Education at San Francisco State University. He is a member of the editorial board of the journal of African civilizations, and has been active in most of the key litigation in test bias and validity in standardized testing for African- Americans.

Dr. Hilliard was involved in the case that outlawed IQ testing for Black children in California. He was a member of the national academy of sciences study panel on placing children in special education, and is chief desegregation and curriculum consultant to the Portland-Oregon school system. He is also chief consultant for special education to Detroit public schools, as well as a teacher, psychologist, and historian.

Dr. Hilliard began his career in the Denver Public Schools, teaching psychology, mathematics and American History, earning a BA in Psychology, MA in Counselling, and EdD in Educational Psychology from the University of Denver.

Dr. Hilliard is also the co-developer of a popular educational television series, "Free Your Mind, Return to the Source: African Origins," on which this study is based.

 

From: "Runoko Rashidi"
Date: Sun, 12 Aug 2007 21:10:09 -0700 (PDT)
Subject: [GlobalAfricanPresence]

DR. ASA HILLIARD IS AN ANCESTOR!

Greetings Family,
Just received the very bad news from his daughter that my brother, friend, and teacher Dr. Asa Hilliard just passed in Egypt. It seems like complications from malaria. A true giant has fallen and he will be sorely missed.
In love of Africa, Runoko Rashidi

 


Also See: RBG: SDL (Self Directed Learning) Black Studies Outline for Advanced Learners

Sorted by: Top Rated
Click to play video
Sorted by: Top Rated
  2
  3
  4
  5
  6
Sorted by: Top Rated
Click to play video
Sorted by: Top Rated
Click to play video
Editable by Any Member
‘In contrast with the surging growth of the countries in our socialist camp and the development taking place, albeit much more slowly, in the majority of the capitalist countries, is the unquestionable fact that a large proportion of the so-called underdeveloped countries are in total stagnation, and that in some of them the rate of economic growth is lower than that of population increase.

‘These characteristics are not fortuitous; they correspond strictly to the nature of the capitalist system in full expansion, which transfers to the dependent countries the most abusive and barefaced forms of exploitation. It must be clearly understood that the only way to solve the questions now besetting mankind is to eliminate completely the exploitation of dependent countries by developed capitalist countries, with all the consequences that this implies.’

Che Guevara , 1964.
Read this Classic Book Online

Walter Rodney 1973


Walter Rodney 1973

How Europe Underdeveloped Africa

Published by: Bogle-L'Ouverture Publications, London and Tanzanian Publishing House, Dar-Es-Salaam 1973, Transcript from 6th reprint, 1983;
Transcribed: by Joaquin Arriola.

To
Pat, Muthoni, Mashaka and
the extended family

Contents

Preface

Chapter One. Some Questions on Development

1.1 What is Development
1.2 What is Underdevelopment?

Chapter Two. How Africa Developed Before the Coming of the Europeans up to the 15th Century

2.1 General Over-View
2.2 Concrete Examples

Chapter Three. Africa’s Contribution to European Capitalist Development — the Pre-Colonial Period

3.1 How Europe Became the Dominant Section of a World-Wide Trade System
3.2 Africa’s contribution to the economy and beliefs of early capitalist Europe

Chapter Four. Europe and the Roots of African Underdevelopment — to 1885

4.1 The European Slave Trade as a Basic Factor in African Underdevelopment
4.2 Technological Stagnation and Distortion of the African Economy in the Pre-Colonial Epoch
4.3 Continuing Politico-Military Developments in Africa — 1500 to 1885

Chapter Five. Africa’s Contribution to the Capitalist Development of Europe — the Colonial Period

5.1 Expatriation of African Surplus Under Colonialism
5.2 The Strengthening of Technological and Military Aspects of Capitalism

Chapter Six. Colonialism as a System for Underdeveloping Africa

6.1 The Supposed Benefits of Colonialism to Africa
6.2 Negative Character of the Social, Political and Economic Consequences
6.3 Education for Underdevelopment
6.4 Development by Contradiction


Sorted by: Top Rated
  1
  3
  7
Sorted by: Top Rated
  1
  2
  3
  4
  5
  7
Editable by Any Member


 















Written by
RBGStreetScholar RBGStreetScholar


"Who is Jesus, Will the Real Jesus Please Stand Up"
Who is Jesus, Hair like Lambs Wool, Skin of Bronze and Feet Like Coal,
Or Blond Hair, Blue Eyes and Pale Skin,
Born in the birth-place of David

Who is Jesus, Will the Real Jesus Please Stand Up,
They say He was born in a mainger in Bethlehem
Will the Real Jesus Please Stand Up,
You know, Bethlehem / Nazareth / Nile River area,
Do you mean Bethlehem of the Arabian peninsula,
Will the Real Jesus Please Stand Up,
Was not the Arabian peninsula considered part of what we now call Africa,
(not "the Near East" or "the Middle East").
Who is Jesus, Blond Hair, Blue Eyes and Pale Skin,
Or was He Brunette wit da buttermilk complexion
Will the Real Jesus Please Stand Up,
You mean the Jesus who's family escaped the fate of his death by fleeing to Egypt
Who is Jesus, Blond Hair, Blue Eyes and Pale Skin,
Or was He Brunette wit da buttermilk complexion
Will the Real Jesus Please Stand Up,
You mean the Jesus who lived as a child in Egypt where his appearance did not make him stand out.
Will the Real Jesus Please Stand Up,
Blond Hair, Blue Eyes and Pale Skin in Africa
Or was He Brunette wit da buttermilk complexion
Who is Jesus,
You know,the one being held by Mary/ the Black Madonna/Black Virgin
Who is Jesus,
Son of the pre-Christian mother and earth Goddesses
Who is Jesus,
You mean Ancestor-Goddess Isis Son Horus,
Oh Yaaah
Aset's Son Heru, that's who Jesus is.
Who is Jesus, Will the Real Jesus Please Stand Up.
---
-----------
Also check out:
Jesus Was A Negro And The African Origans of Christ
RBG Black Jesus Montages @ Slide.com




http://www.yomn.net/

Sorted by: Top Rated
Click to play video
Sorted by: Top Rated
Click to play video
Editable by Any Member
 http://media.collegepublisher.com/media/paper853/stills/440698d28e00f-87-1.jpgView below or open the Vlog
Summary:

bell hooks is one of America's most accessible public intellectuals. In this two-part video, extensively illustrated with many of the images under analysis, she makes a compelling argument for the transformative power of cultural criticism.

In Part One, hooks discusses the theoretical foundations and positions that inform her work (such as the motives behind representations, as well as their power in social and cultural life). hooks also explains why she insists on using the phrase "white supremacist capitalist patriarchy" to describe the interlocking systems of domination that define our reality.

In Part Two, she domonstrates the value of cultural studies in concrete analysis through such subjects as the OJ Simpson case, Madonna, Spike Lee, and Gangsta rap. The aim of cultural analysis, she argues, should be the production of enlightened witnesses - audiences who engaged with the representations of cultural life knowledgeably and vigilantly.

"The issue is not freeing ourselves from representations. It's really about being enlightened witnesses when we watch representations." -bell hooks

Logistical Information:

Produced & directed by Sut Jhally
Edited by Sut Jhally, Mary Patierno & Harriet Hirshorn
Copyright 1997

Part One: On Cultural Criticism Why Study Popular Culture? / Critical Thinking as Transformation / The Power of Representations / Motivated Representations / Why "White Supremacist Capitalist Patriarchy? / Enlightened Witness

Part Two: Doing Cultural Criticism Hoop Dreams: Constructed narrative / Dealing with OJ / Madonna: From feminism to conservatism / Spike Lee: Hollywood's fall guy / KIDS: Whose gaze? / Rap: Authentic expression or market construct? / Black Female Bodies: Color caste systems / Consuming Commodified Blackness

Biographical Summary:

bell hooks, Distinguished Professor of English, City University of New York, is the author of many books of commentary, criticism and autobiography, including Reel to Real: Race, Sex & the Class at the Movies and her most recent book, Salvation: Black People and Love.

Sorted by: Top Rated
Click to play video
Sorted by: Top Rated
Click to play video
Sorted by: Top Rated
  1
  2
  4
  6
  7
Sorted by: Top Rated
  4
  5
  7
Editable by Any Member

Medical Apartheid: From the Tuskegee Experiments to the Present

Medical Apartheid
Medical Ethicist Harriet Washington Documents How Blacks Still Suffer at the
Hands of Medicine (Click here for the Video )

"The fear of medicine is based on real events. And real events go way beyond -- way before and way after -- Tuskegee," says Harriet Washington. "There are things that are happening now that will keep [African Americans] from going to the hospital."


We've all heard of the Tuskegee syphilis experiment and how black men were allowed to languish and spread this fatal disease in the name of medical research -- without their knowledge or permission.

In her recently released book, 'Medical Apartheid: The Dark History of Medical Experimentation on Black Americans from Colonial Times to the Present,' Harriet A. Washington painstakingly documents how blacks -- whether it's slave women unwillingly having gynecological experiments done on them or artificial blood being used in inner city hospitals -- have been dehumanized and often brutalized by a profession which takes an oath to heal.

Unfortunately, Tuskegee was not an anomaly.

It's no coincidence, Washington explains, that blacks do not seek medical care until "the pain is too much" often forsaking preventative care because of stories like these or blatant disrespect at the hands of doctors...Read More


Tuskegee Syphilis Study
Full Version with video:

Vanessa Northington Gamble, M.D., Ph.D., is Associate Professor at Johns Hopkins University, and is an internationally recognized expert on ... all » the history of race and racism in American medicine, cultural competence, and diversity. She discusses the enduring causes and consequences of the Tuskegee Syphilis Study Series: "LeNoir/NMA Memorial Lecture"
Click here for Tuskegee In Photos

Sorted by: Top Rated
  2
  3
  4
  5
  6
  7
Editable by Any Member

The image “http://icons.imeem.com/OzbysE0f.jpg?w=60” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.Turn on "The Black Panther of Rap Music" /
RBG's
Paris Audio Playlist
(Once the audio opens click back on this tab to continue your browsing)


Click for the PDF

Click here for a RBG Jpeg Slide Show Presentation

HD Live Link PowerPoint Show Available in
Advaned Version of the School


The Black Panther Party (originally called the Black Panther Party for Self-Defense) was an African American organization founded to promote civil rights and self-defense. It was active within the United States in the late 1960s into the 1970s.

Founded in Oakland, California by Huey P. Newton and Bobby Seale in October 1966, the organization initially espoused a doctrine calling for armed resistance to societal oppression in the interest of African American justice, though its objectives and philosophy changed radically throughout the party's existence. While the organization's leaders passionately espoused socialist doctrine, the party's black nationalist reputation attracted an ideologically diverse membership base, such that ideological consensus within the party was difficult to derive, and differing perspectives within the party base often clashed conspicuously with those of its leadership.
www.itsabouttimebpp.com/



The group was founded on the principles of its Ten-Point Program, a document that called for "Land, Bread, Housing, Education, Clothing, Justice And Peace," as well as exemption from military service that would utilize African Americans to "fight and kill for other people of color in the world who, like Black people, are being victimized by the White racist government of America."


Link to RBG Full Historical Tour / Annoted Pictures Lecture


Related Current Events:

Chairman Fred & BPP Min of Culture Emory Douglas 6/12


Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket Chairman Fred Hampton Jr of the Prisoners of Conscience Committee will be having a open public discussion wit' Black Panther Party Minister of Culture Emory Douglas about revolutionary art, the counter-intelligence program, and the history and legacy of the Black Panther Party and how it relates to the work of the POCC today. This event will take place on Tuesday, June 12th at 7pm at the Black New World, 836 Pine St., in the Bottoms of West Oakland. No one will be turned away because of lack of funds.





For background study see:
Emory Douglas Revolutionary Art
Sorted by: Top Rated
Click to play video
Editable by Any Member
The COINTELPRO Papers



( Poster is hot to video )
( Book cover is hot to audio )

Click to enlarge and read

"prevent the rise of a black messiah," use of Jewish Defense League against, use of La Cosa Nostra against, cartoons, "Blackboard", Rabbi Kahane, William O'Neal, and numerous victims including: Southern Christian Leadership Conference, Revolutionary Action Movement, the Deacons for Defense and Justice, Congress of Racial Equality, SNCC, Nation of Islam, Poor People's Campaign, Republic of New Africa, US organization, Black Liberators, Martin Luther King, Malcolm X, Stokely Carmichael, H. "Rap" Brown, Elijah Muhammad, Maxwell Stanford, Dick Gregory, Huey Newton, David Hilliard, Ron Karenga, Charles Koen, Sylvester Bell, Bobby Seale, Eldridge Cleaver, Fred Hampton, Mark Clark, Geronimo Pratt, John William Washington, Richard Henry, Muhammed Kenyatta, Jeff Fort"...
Read More

Click here for RBG Presentation on
Cointelpro and the East Coast-West Coast Panther Split
Sorted by: Top Rated
  1
  2
  3
  4
  5
  6
  7
Editable by Any Member
The Maafa

A Kiswahili term for "Disaster" or "Terrible Occurrence".

This is the word that best describe the more than 500 hundred years of suffering of people of African descent through Slavery, Imperialism, Colonialism, Invasions and Exploitation. In this section you see pictures, here audio and watch videos that tell some of the story of our suffering.


It All Started with the Euorpean Holocaust of Afrikan Enslavement (The Maafa)The story of the trans-Atlantic slave trade and slavery in the New World is a story of European cruelty and African suffering. The barbarity of the slave trade is attested by the slavers themselves. For example, a Dutch slave trader on the West African cost in the 18th century wrote: “’The Invalides and the Maimed being thrown out . . . the remainder are numbred. . . . In the mean while a burning Iron, with the Arms or Name of the Companies, lyes in the Fire; with which ours are marked on the Breast. . . . I doubt not but this Trade seems very barbarous to you, but since it is followed by meer necessity it must go on; but we yet take all possible care that they are not burned too hard, especially the Women’" (qtd. in MacPherson).

RBG Extention:
RBG It All Started with Slave Ships: Feat.,Voices of Slavery & Photo-Story Mini-Lectures "Strange Fruit"

Reference Link Outs:

AFRICAN AMERICAN HOLOCAUST

The MAAFA (African Holocaust)

Mr. Dowling's Maafa Page

RBG Street Scholar "Black History"
Picture Collage Summaries Notepad
Sorted by: Top Rated
Click to play video
Editable by Any Member
Slide1-52.jpg picture by RBGStreetScholar
It's Light, Fast, Smart, Sharp and Black to the Future

"Mass media have played and will continue to play a crucial role in the way white Americans perceive African-Americans. As a result of the overwhelming media focus on crime, drug use, gang violence, and other forms of anti-social behavior among African-Americans, the media have fostered a distorted and pernicious public perception of African-Americans".

The Yale Political Quarterly / Read More

We offer this edutaining
video driven learning environment as a counter to mass media distortions and "white lies".
Sponsors
Editable by Any Member

http://www4.pictures.zimbio.com/mp/aWTmp9B9iRNl.jpg
 

Take stuff from this website with you 2go.


RBG Blueprint For Black Power Textbook Extracts and Video Education Primer

 

Extracts from Our Blueprint Textbook "The oppressed and downtrodden, having been traumatized by the abuse of power by their powerful oppressors, often comes to perceive power itself as inherently evil, as by nature corrupting and therefore as something to be eschewed, denied and renounced. The pursuit of power is viewed as unworthy of virtuous persons, and the desire to possess it as sinful. Therefore, many among the powerless and poor feel compelled to find in their powerlessness and... Access the Full Lesson

 




 
Designed, Written and Curated by
Marc Imhotep Cray, M.D.

RBG Street Scholar Multimedia Articles Library (Over 400 Publications to date)

THE  AFRIKAN CENTERED CURRICULUM

CLICK ME FOR RBG BLAKADEMICS GOALS




Firefox browser required to playback mp3s

mp3 playback instructions:

Right click on mp3 icon and open in new tab to keep this window open during playback. When the audio starts just click back on this tab. This way you will be able to continue browsing-reading while listening

( The RBG Learning Method)

Baba Amankwatia Baffour II
[Dr. Asa Grant Hilliard III]
22 August 1933 - 12 August 2007


WE THANK YOU BABA FOR THE CLASSIC AFRIKAN EDUCATION WORKS YOU GAVE US, FOR YOUR  UNYIELDING SCHOLARSHIP & CREATION OF SCHOLARS, AND YOUR DEEP LOVE FOR AFRIKAN PEOPLE, AND ALL THE FOND MEMORIES YOU LEFT US WITH.

 I PRAY THAT YOU WILL ACCEPT AND SMILE UPON THIS SMALL CONTRIBUTION I HAVE MADE TO KEEPING THE CIRCLE UNBROKEN . WE PROMISE TO CONTINUE TO  CARRY YOUR WORK FORWARD IN THIS ETERNAL NOW BY GIVING IT TO ANOTHER; ALL THE WAY TO THE YET TO BE BORN.
YOUR WILL TO BE LIVES IN ME.
ASE !


An Overview of Black History


Compiled & Edited by Phillip True, Jr.

Phillip True Jr., has spent many years studying with Dr. John Henrik Clarke, who also made contributions to this Historical Overview.

CONTENTS

·  Origin of Man

·  First Woman and Man

·  Human Migration

·  Nile Valley Civilization

·  African Civilization in Europe

·  African Civilization in Western Asia

·  African Presence in India

·  Crete and Phoenicia

·  Greece and Rome

·  Christianity

·  Africans in the Roman Empire

·  Columbus' Portfolio

·  Kingdoms in Inner Africa: Zimbabwe and Monopotapa

·  The Destruction of African Civilization

·  Religion and Science of the Africans

·  Egyptian Philosophy

·  African Economic Organization

·  Moors in Spain

·  Africans Away From Home

·  South America and the Caribbean

·  Early Years in the United States

·  Renewed Fight for Liberty

·  The Betrayal of the Reconstruction

·  Malcolm and Martin: Two Lives

·  Can African People Save Themselves?

http://globalgrind.com/Services/Handlers/UserAvatar.ashx?user=231f41a9-c2c0-4b1b-8cbf-c8e225256701&t=633715016933300000
Global Grind: "Engaging and Unique content for and by the hip hop community."

"Sometimes to most aggressively fight the enemy you must infiltrate and terrorize his camp"

CLICK ME
 





http://pic30.picturetrail.com/VOL1544/6650780/avatar96.jpg

 http://rbgnation.ning.com/

 Uhuru SaSa Means Freedom NOW
Hotep (Peace)
ME BE YOUR  AUTHOR and  HOST

In Pursuit of Academic Excellence:
Profile of a RBG Street Scholar


 RBG Wake Up Call:
On The Shoulders of Those Before Us
play Afrikan Percussion Battle Call

RBG Pearls of Wisdom
play Fanny Lou Hamer on Struggle
playFrederick Douglas on Struggle
play Paul Robeson on Struggle  



 

  1.   play Dr. Kambon- Opperssion of Liberation
  2.   play Afrikan Percussions Battle Call
  3.   play The Unknown Brother-What they Never Told You In History Class
  4.   play Dr. Ben-The African Origins of Western Civilization
  5.   play Dr Bobby Wright-Psychopathic Racial Personality 1
  6.   play Dr Bobby Wright-Psychopathic Racial Personality 2
  7.   play Dr Bobby Wright-White Psychopathology
  8.   play Mumia Abu-Jamal — MAJ on Conscious Music and Struggle
  9.   play Dr. Amari Baraka — Self Respect, Self Relience and Self Defense
  10.   play POCC — Fred Hampton Jr and Iman Jamil Al-Amin
  11.   play Mumia Abu-Jamal — A Rap Thing
  12.   play Raptivist Collab. — Mumia 911 (Diamond D Remix)
  13.   play Dr. Neely Fuller Jr. — White Genetic Annihilation ?
  14.   play NYOIL — Yall should all get lynched
  15.   play Dr. Neely Fuller Jr. — What Are White People Doing Now 
  16.  play Dr. Neely Fuller Jr. — White Supremacy





logo

A DEEP CUT ANALYSIS OF EUROPEAN (ARYAN AND SEMITIC) SCHOLARSHIP AND CULTURE (INCLUDING PHILOSOPHY, MYTHOLOGY AND RELIGION, POLITICS/GOVERNANCE, SOCIAL THEORY AND HISTORY, CURRENT EVENTS, EDUCATION AND ECONOMICS, LAW AND MEDICINE, MEDIA COMMUNICATIONS, CREATIVE PRODUCTIONS, ARTS AND HUMANITIES) DEMONSTRATES THAT THEY ALL SPEAK IN ONE VOICE, AND ALWAYS IN CONCERT WHEN IT COMES TO THOSE WITH THE ABILITY TO PRODUCE COLOR (MELANIN).  BUT, PRECISELY BECAUSE MELANIN IS MORE THAN A MATTER OF... Read Full Story

A  Quick Sneak Preview:


A) Melanocytes Structure

http://www.scf-online.com/english/issue22/images22/Illustration_Melanin_22_frontpage_e.jpg


B) Nerve Cell Structure

http://webanatomy.net/anatomy/multipolar_neuron.jpg


C) MELANINS STRUCTURE




D) MELANIN BIOSYNTHESIS



E) NEUROTRANSMITTER
(catacholamine)
BIOSYNTHESIS and DEGRADATION



Unfortunately we are unable to provide accessible alternative text for this. If you require assistance to access this image, please contact help@nature.com or the author

For now, just remember that both melanins and catacholamine neurotranmitters have the same tyrosine amino acid as their rate limiting precursor. I will build on this fact further along in the learning series.
If dopamine is depleted, such as in cocaine addiction, the body will attempt to replenish the dopamine by increasing its synthesis. That mean tyrosine will now be shunted away from melanin synthesis. So, in short, for those of us that have brain functions that are more dependent on neuromelanin (people of Afrikan descent), those areas will become compromised.


D) DISTRIBUTION OF MELANIN WORLDWIDE


File:Map of skin hue equi3.png

Also study this school's:

http://ak.buy.com/db_assets/large_images/206/30835206.jpg
1) RBG On The Role of Melanin In Our Afrikan Re-Education / ReAfrikanization Process

2) Black Child Development Under White Supremacy / Audio, Text and Video, The Honorable Dr. Amos Wilson

3) TOWARD UNDERSTANDING THE MELANIN, AFRI-ESSENCE, GOD-FORCE CONNECTION

4) MELANIN, NEGATIVE MUSIC AND THE DOPE GAME

5) AFRIKAN HEAL THYSELF:The Role of Melanin In Our Afrikan Re-Education / ReAfrikanization Process


RBG NALT

New Afrikan Leadership Training Center




WALK WITH ME INTO AFRICOLOGY:
 A NEW AFRIKAN GUIDING SYNOPSIS OF RBG COMMUNIVERSITY CULTURAL DEVELOPMENT, EDUCATION AND SOCIALIZATION

Listen Live


play Assata Shakur- We Can Win Our Struggle for Liberation


Eyes of the Rainbow:

The  Assata Shakur Documentary

From RBGStreetScholars Assata Channel on You Tube

http://www.youtube.com/user/TTDCWebBrotha


Classial Jazz


  1. play Nina Simone, Billie Holiday & Ella Fitzgerald - I Cried for You
  2. play Days Of Wine And Roses
  3. play Miles Davis - Kind of Blue - All Blues
  4. play Nina Simone - Falling In Love Again
  5. play Nina Simone - Please Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood (Kill Bill Soundtrack)
  6. play Charlie Parker, Miles Davis, Cannonball Adderly, Dizzy Gillespie, Art Blakey, Charlie Mingus - Toy (Adderley)
  7. play Charlie Parker - Salt Peanuts (With Charles Mingus, Bud Powell, Dizzy Gillespie, Max Roach)
  8. play Cannonball Adderley - Groovin' High (with Milt Jackson)
  9. play John Coltrane, Dizzy Gilespie, Thad Jones - All the Things You Are
  10. play John Coltraine - My Favorite Things
  11. play Billie Holiday - The Very Thought Of You

Luv Ballads
  1. play  Escorts — I Loved And I Lost
  2. play Dramatics - — Just Shopping
  3. play  Rachelle Ferrell - — Welcome To My Love
  4. play  I'll Be Sweeter Tomorrow — Escorts
  5. play  Bloodstone — We Go A Long Way Back
  6. play  Bloodstone - — This Must Be Heaven
  7. play  Bobby Womack — A Woman's Got to Have It

http://api.ning.com/files/k3g9jrXKpmltFbIsEWG2hjtupwbiApHIG8h-Az8dF04WRy2v4jD72TEonmANHvtVTFguw09gaID0PKnsUVWohkfIqXF7RWop/rbgluv.jpg
http://gickr.com/results/anim_0a3441e7-b642-c6b4-3539-92508bee45af.gif


"REAL HIP HOP
MY MAN"
http://www.guerrillafunk.com/press/rebirthofanation.jpg

http://www.guerrillafunk.com/images/hardtruthsoldiers/hts.jpg

 

 

AVAILABLE NOW!
Featuring Paris, Dead Prez, Kam, MC Ren, Immortal Technique and The Conscious Daughters



 RBG Active Asafo:

asafomma.jpg (40669 bytes)





RBGz Learning Tools and
 Study Resource Extension:


RBGToolbarBannerVertical.gif RBG Toolbar Banner picture by RBGStreetScholar http://rbg4lifedutainment.ourtoolbar.com/Home/

The image “http://www1.pictures.zimbio.com/img/64a7/KingOfAllBlackPeople/17m.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

Photobucket

 

The image “http://www.studygs.net/images/1logofinal2.gif” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

Photobucket

Photobucket

 




Partner/ Companion College


 

RBG Pantha4Lif OG BPP Classroom commented on RBG Street Scholar's Classroom's blog post '"The Zeitgeist Movement Addenum and Venus Project : " More Futuristic White Supremacy or Something to Draw Lessons From ?"'  
From rbgnation.ning.com ()
More perspectives...
Sirius09 commented on RBG Street Scholar's Classroom's blog post 'IVMS-H1N1 Swine Flu 2009 Virus and Vaccination Presentation-Medical, Historical, Social, Political, Economic and Cultural Considerations'I have no intention of voluntarily getting a swine flu shot or any other kind of shot. I had read some where that if "the epidemic" gets really bad, they will force people to take them. The Military will be used in this case. It appears we don...  
From rbgnation.ning.com ()
More perspectives...
Sirius09 replied to RBG Street Scholar's Classroom's discussion 'Fall of the Republic: The Presidency of Barack Obama (A New Alex Jones Documentary)'Dr. Young, great comments. I agree with you very much. Also, Bro. Robert X your comments are right on time. It does my heart good to see these whites suffering. This racist, imperialistic society benefitted them and their ancestors for centuries. ...  
From rbgnation.ning.com ()
More perspectives...
boom_ona commented on RBG Street Scholar's Classroom's blog post '"The Zeitgeist Movement : " More Futuristic White Supremacy or Something to Draw Lessons From ?"'It's funny how one of their own is now saying "auch". Since i still beer the pains from mental and physical slavery in my blood i will always question any "white man" initiative. I however feel sad we still struggle to do something tangible about ...  
From rbgnation.ning.com ()
More perspectives...
Mic Reality commented on RBG Street Scholar's Classroom's blog post '"The Zeitgeist Movement : " More Futuristic White Supremacy or Something to Draw Lessons From ?"'My only problem with this is that the ideas presented here are nothing new - modern technology sits on the foundation of collective human knowledge that had been evolving uninterrupted for 10s of thousands of years until the present era. Modern te...  
From rbgnation.ning.com ()
More perspectives...
Brazil's ghettos are poverty stricken and violent. But there are people fighting against the odds to turn things around for the poor children of Rio de Janeiro. Among them is an unusual apostle: a Rio socialite who founded a school for slum-dwelling children and views education as an equalizer.  
From npr.org ()
More perspectives...
One of the greatest theorists, analysts and critics of colonialism was the late Martinican psychiatrist Frantz Fanon, but Dr. Fanon's work dwelled on the crises of colonialism in Africa. We like to think that colonialism was a problem of yesteryear -- the '60's, '70's and early '80's. It's history -- right?  
From indybay.org ()
More perspectives...
Editable by Any Member

Image Hosted by ImageShack.us


"African Centered Collaborative Networked Learning ( ACCNL )" 

                
My Photo

Abayomi Azikiwe
The Pan-African News Wire is an international electronic press service designed to foster intelligent discussion on the affairs of African people throughout the continent and the world. The press agency was founded in January of 1998 and has published hundreds of articles and dispatches in newpapers, magazines, journals and websites throughout the world. The PANW represents the only daily international news source on pan-african and global affairs.

The 6th Annual Detroit Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Rally & March


The 6th Annual Detroit Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Rally & March
Click on Photo for Leaflet---Keynote Speaker: Gloria Aneb House Spoke at Central United Church for MLK Day on Jan. 19, 2009


Miriam Makeba, Known Widely as 'Mama Africa' Joined the Ancestors on November 9, 2008 in Italy


Miriam Makeba, Known Widely as \
Makeba in Photograph During the 1950s With the Manhattan Brothers in South Africa


Miriam Makeba is Known as 'Mama Africa'

Detroit Rallied to Free Mumia Abu-Jamal, the MOVE 9 & All Political Prisoners, December 3


Detroit Rallied to Free Mumia Abu-Jamal, the MOVE 9 & All Political Prisoners, December 3
This Meeting Was Held at the MECAWI Office, Detroit, 7:00pm

Africa & World News Page

Africa Daily

A Detroit Demonstration Protested Threats Against Iran on Aug. 1 at Hart Plaza, Downtown

Demonstration At the Mortgage Bankers Association Annual Policy Summit, April 16 in Washington, DC


Demonstration At the Mortgage Bankers Association Annual Policy Summit, April 16 in Washington, DC
A Moratorium Now! Coalition Supports the Passage of Senate Bill 1306 Which Would Grant a Two-Year Moratorium on Foreclosures in Michigan


Demonstration at Bank of America on Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Haitian People Respond to Rising Food Prices

Abayomi Azikiwe Speaking in An Interview on the Significance of the Barack Obama Presidency


Abayomi Azikiwe Speaking in An Interview on the Significance of the Barack Obama Presidency
Abayomi Azikiwe, Editor of the Pan-African News Wire

Franco, 1938-1989, the grand master of pan-african music

MECAWI Demonstration Held Against the Fifth Anniversary of the Iraq Occupation on March 15


MECAWI Demonstration Held Against the Fifth Anniversary of the Iraq Occupation on March 15
Pan-African News Wire Covering the March 15 Action in Downtown Detroit

End the Occupations of Iraq, Afghanistan and Palestine on March 15, Noon, Downtown Detroit

Read the Works of Pan-Africanist and Socialist Scholar/Activist W.E.B. DuBois

A Conference on Imperialism in Africa Was Held on Feb. 23, 2008 Sponsored by MECAWI


A Conference on Imperialism in Africa Was Held on Feb. 23, 2008 Sponsored by MECAWI
The Conference Commemorated the 140th Birthday of W.E.B. DuBois (1868-1963): Pictured Above With Dr. Kwame Nkrumah and Madame Fathia in 1963

Abayomi Azikiwe, Pan-African News Wire Editor


Abayomi Azikiwe, Pan-African News Wire Editor
PANW Editor Speaking at the Dr. Charles H. Wright Museum of African-American History, April 5, 2008

El Hajj Malik Shabazz (Malcolm X) Archives

Anna Julia haywood Cooper, Educator, Activist & Historian

Abayomi Azikiwe Speaks on the 40th Anniversary of the 1967 Detroit Rebellion


Abayomi Azikiwe Speaks on the 40th Anniversary of the 1967 Detroit Rebellion
Abayomi Azikiwe, Editor of the Pan-African News Wire, July 21, 2007

To Read The Series Published in Workers World on the 1967 Rebellion Just Click on the Links Below

Jimi Hendrix is Considered the Greatest Guitarist of the 20th Century

Classic Blues Music on Video


Classic Blues Music on Video
Click on the Photo of Willie Dixon, Muddy Waters and Buddy Guy to See a Classic Blues Video

Legendary Blues Man Son House


Legendary Blues Man Son House
Click on This Photo of Son House to See Him Performing the Classic "Death Letter"

Aretha Franklin Pictured Performing at the Obama Inauguration on January 20, 2009


Aretha Franklin Pictured Performing at the Obama Inauguration on January 20, 2009
Aretha Franklin From Detroit

Aretha Franklin is One of the Great Artists to Emerge During the 1960s. Click on Links Below

A Tribute to John & Alice Coltrane



Just Click on This Image and Watch The John Coltrane Quartet Playing "Alabama".

Bob Marley, the Reggae Legend, Advanced the Struggle for Pan-Africanism






Bob Marley's 64th Birthday is Feb. 6, 2009

The Cuban Daily Newspaper Covering the World

Assata Shakur Speaks for the Liberation of the People

The Jericho Movement Calls For a General Amnesty for All US Political Prisoners

The Commemorative Archives of the Black Panther Party

Ruth Brown, Legendary Rhythm & Blues Artist, Actress, Joins the Ancestors

The Legacy of Blues Women From Mamie Smith Forward

Kwame Nkrumah: Pan-Africanist Founder of Modern Africa

The Bibliography of Dr. Kwame Nkrumah





Mbilia Bel Is One of the Great Legends of African Music

Pan-African Music From All Over the Continent

Toronto's Community Radio, CKLN.FM, 88.1



Just Click on This Image to View Abayomi Azikiwe Speaking at the National Conference on "The New Situation in the U.S. & The World" in NYC, November 15, 2008.

WBIA, 99.5, Pacifica Radio, New York City

The Zimbabwe Herald

MECAWI

Pan-African Parliament

Free Mumia Abu-Jamal

African National Congress

African Union

Aljazeera News Service

Caribbean Newspapers

Sorted by: Top Rated

RBG Street Scholar Rules Of Engagement 5

RBG Street Scholar Rules Of Engagement 5

Sorted by: Top Rated

Call and Response Affirmation # 7

Call and Response Affirmation # 7

Sorted by: Top Rated

What Is Black Oppression In Amerikkka # 7

What  Is Black Oppression In Amerikkka # 7

Sorted by: Top Rated

RBG Street Scholar: Martin LSliuther King Jr. de # 3

RBG Street Scholar: Martin LSliuther King Jr. de # 3

Sorted by: Top Rated

Black Power/Liberation Movement Screen Shot # 22

Black Power/Liberation Movement Screen Shot # 22

Sorted by: Top Rated

Decolonizing The Afrikan Mind Screen Shot # 7

Decolonizing The Afrikan Mind Screen Shot # 7

Sorted by: Top Rated

Tribute to an Afrikan Knig: Marcus Garvey # 1

Click to Enlarge and Read

Tribute to an Afrikan Knig: Marcus Garvey # 1

Sorted by: Top Rated

Duty Of The Blackman # 14

Duty Of The Blackman # 14

Sorted by: Top Rated

Minister Malcolm Teaches Slide # 10

Minister Malcolm Teaches Slide # 10

Sorted by: Top Rated

Historical Tour of the Original BPP # 5

A sequenced presentation (1-26)

Historical Tour of the Original BPP # 5

Sorted by: Top Rated

RBG New Afrikan Freedom Fighters # 4

RBG New Afrikan  Freedom Fighters  # 4

Sorted by: Top Rated

A History of Jazz # 1

A sequenced presentation (1-20) CLICK FOR FULL SCREEN VIEW

A History of Jazz # 1

Sorted by: Top Rated
Click to play video
Sorted by: Top Rated
  1
  2
  3
  4
  5
  6
  7
Sorted by: Top Rated

Hardest Hip Hop Interviews Online #45

See thaFormula in Creative Productions LinkRoll

Hardest Hip Hop Interviews Online #45

Sorted by: Top Rated
Click to play video
Sorted by: Top Rated
Click to play video
Sorted by: Top Rated
Click to play video
Sorted by: Top Rated
Click to play video
Sorted by: Top Rated
Click to play video
Sorted by: Top Rated
  1
  2
  4
  5
  6
Sorted by: Top Rated
  1
  2
  3
  5
  7
Editable by Any Member
RBG 4 Life Posters / Flyers
Simply click on a poster to enlarge and save to your hard drive/print
Afrikan Percussions SlideShow

From: RBG Street Scholar












































































More From Zimbio
Copyright © 2009 - Zimbio, Inc. Some rights reserved.