Description
Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon at Black History Month Summit 2026: 400 Years On — What Have We Learned? Black Legacy and
Africa’s Future: Memory, Identity and Power
100 YEARS OF BLACK HISTORY MONTH PANEL
What happens when the story of Black history is no longer limited to 1619?
In this unforgettable panel contribution from the Black History Month Summit 2026, Ɔbenfo (Professor) Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon brings historical clarity, linguistic precision, and unapologetic Black-centered analysis to the discussion on “400 Years On — What Have We Learned? Black Legacy and Africa’s Future: Memory, Identity and Power.” Rather than accepting the narrow framing of “400 years,” he demonstrates that Black history, Black struggle, and Black resistance long predate 1619 and must be understood on a far broader historical scale.
With the depth of a master linguist and the urgency of a nation-builder, Ɔbenfo Kambon walks listeners through key historical moments that expose the limitations of the popular “400 years” narrative. He shows why memory without accuracy becomes distortion, why identity without language becomes confusion, and why true power requires Black people to define themselves on their own terms.
This presentation also moves beyond theory into action. Ɔbenfo Kambon connects history to contemporary work through language teaching, job creation, interpretation, repatriation support, and institution building. He presents repatriation not as abstract sentiment, but as concrete restorative action — self-reparations carried out by Black people for Black people.
Throughout the panel, he calls for a return to our own conceptual frameworks, our own names, and our own responsibilities. From Kmt to contemporary African languages, he shows that Black identity is not a recent invention, but a deeply rooted historical reality. He also argues that the future must be built through Black unity, Black institutions, Black education, and Black-centered economic and cultural reconstruction.
In this product, you will encounter:
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Ɔbenfo Kambon’s dismantling of the false “400 years” framework
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Historical examples of Black resistance that predate 1619
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A powerful explanation of the relationship between memory, identity, and Black Power
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Insight into why language is central to self-definition and liberation
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A compelling case for repatriation as self-reparations
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Practical examples of institution building, education, and employment rooted in service to Black people
This is not just a panel appearance. It is a correction of the record, a call to serious study, and a challenge to move from confusion to clarity, from fragmentation to Black unity, and from passive remembrance to organized action.
Ideal for scholars, educators, students, organizers, and all those serious about Black history, Black identity, repatriation, and the future of Black people worldwide.
The event running order identifies this as the second panel, titled “400 Years On — What Have We Learned? Black Legacy and Africa’s Future: Memory, Identity and Power,” and lists Professor Obadele Kambon among the panel members.
Here is a slightly more sales-driven version if you want it punchier for WooCommerce:
What You Will Receive
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A private video link delivered upon purchase
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Full access to the panel featuring Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon
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One powerful session focused on memory, identity, and Black Power
Product Details
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Price: $20
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Format: Video link
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Delivery: Link sent upon purchase
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Runtime: Approximately 1 hour 40 minutes
Key Themes Covered
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Why the “400 years” framework is historically misleading
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Black history before 1619
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The relationship between memory, identity, and Black Power
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The importance of African languages in self-definition
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Repatriation as self-reparations
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Building real institutions for Black people in the present





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