The Black Origins of Writing: What They Never Taught You About Kmtyw and Literature

Black origins of writing

The Black origins of writing stretch back to the genius of the Kmtyw — the ancient Black people of Kemet. Yet this truth has been buried, distorted, and deliberately erased from mainstream education. As a result, millions of Afrikan people worldwide have been cut off from their own intellectual and cultural legacy. That ends here.

Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon — world-renowned Pan-Afrikan linguist and founder of Abibitumi — has dedicated his life’s work to reclaiming these truths. In this essential lecture, he dismantles the myths that have colonized our understanding of history. Furthermore, he walks us through the Kmtyw origins of literature, identity, and writing systems — including the sacred mdw nTr. His scholarship is precise, powerful, and unapologetically rooted in Abibifahodie. Every slide, every argument, every source serves our liberation.

Why Reclaiming the Black Origins of Writing Matters for Afrikan Liberation

Knowledge of self is the foundation of liberation. When Afrikan people understand that writing, literature, and intellectual tradition began with us, something powerful shifts. In addition, that shift moves us from consuming others’ narratives to building our own. Ɔbenfo Kambon does not simply present history — he arms us with it. This lecture is not passive learning. It is strategic, transformative, and community-centered education designed for Afrikan people globally. Most importantly, it connects our ancient past directly to our present struggle for Abibifahodie.

This exclusive Abibitumi lecture includes full video access and downloadable slides — all for just $20. Whether you are a student, educator, parent, or community builder, this presentation belongs in your arsenal. Therefore, do not wait to access knowledge that was always rightfully yours. Watch it, study it, and share it with your people.

👉 Watch / Get it here: Reclaiming the Black Origins of Writing, Identity & Literary Tradition — Abibitumi.com

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