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100 Years of Black History Month: From Woodson’s Vision to What We Do Now
Ghana Citizenship Emergency Townhall & Press Conference meeting tomorrow 8:00 AM Eastern/1:00 PM GMT. Register at https://Abibitumi.com/BHM100 Historic Diasporan Leaders in Ghana just held a meeting to unite around our concerns about the new citizenship criteria. If you have considered moving to Africa, generally, Ghana specifically, have ever thought about restoring your birthright, or making alternate plans given the current climate in the US, UK etc, attend this meeting.
Diaspora Town Hall & Panel Discussion: What Does Citizenship in Africa Mean to Me?
A centennial moment demands clarity and action. Baba James Small unpacks the origins of Black History Month—from Nana Carter G. Woodson’s 1926 blueprint to today—and shows how Abibitumi families turn history into language, land, business, and organized power. Expect grounded guidance on culture-as-strategy, teaching our own, and aligning this month’s energy with DOOR, repatriation, and institution building all year. Come ready to move from celebration to implementation.
Featuring: Professor James Small, Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Kambon, Raswad Nkrabea, Kevoy Burton, Nana Akosua, and Kofi Brian Gray.
Date & Time: Sunday, February 1, 2026, • 8:00 AM EST / 1:00 PM GMT



Reno –
To witness Black Power in action. This was vital for me. I never even been in a town hall in the states. This made me hungry to be more involved in our community and be in those decision making rooms. We in war family..
Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé –
Greetings Reno! Thank you for sharing this—your hunger to be in those decision-making rooms is exactly the mindset shift we need across Abibiwiase. We’re glad the townhall helped spark deeper involvement and community responsibility. If there’s one thing that would’ve made it a 5-star experience for you, tell us—we’ll tighten it.
— Abibitumi Team | ABIBITUMI! ABIBIFAHODIE!
Bakari Kwadwo Ọbatayé –
Good to see Abibifoɔ come together to ensure that our return home and re-acclimation to Abibiman is a sensible, mutually beneficial process. Meda wo ase for including the on-line Abibifoɔ
Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé –
Greetings Bakari! Medaase for BlackKnowledging the importance of including online Abibifoɔ—our return home and re-acclimation must be sensible, organized, and mutually beneficial. We’re honored you built with the process and with the community. Forward together.
— Abibitumi Team | ABIBITUMI! ABIBIFAHODIE!