Healing Through Sound: The Sacred Music of the Moosi People of Northern Ghana


The Afrikan musician as healer is not a metaphor — it is a living, breathing reality rooted in ancient tradition. Across the continent, sound has always served as medicine. Furthermore, no community demonstrates this truth more powerfully than the Moosi people of Northern Ghana. Their music carries spiritual technology that the world desperately needs today.
Understanding the Afrikan Musician as Healer Through Moosi Tradition
In this compelling Abibitumi Exclusive Seminar, presenter Sumah Bila Iddrisu opens a sacred door into Moosi musical culture. He comes from a family of Master musicians, Djeli, and herdsmen spanning Burkina Faso and Northern Ghana. In addition, Sumah speaks seven Afrikan languages and builds his own indigenous West African instruments by hand. As a result, his knowledge is not secondhand — it is inherited, embodied, and alive.
Sumah has performed his indigenous healing music across the globe — from Venezuela to Nigeria, Belgium to Greece. However, this lecture brings that wisdom directly into your home and community. Most importantly, it reconnects Afrikan people to a tradition of sonic healing that colonialism worked hard to erase. Every note, every rhythm, every instrument carries purpose beyond entertainment. Sound, in this tradition, restores balance. It heals the body. It aligns the spirit.
Abibifahodie — Afrikan liberation — demands that we reclaim every dimension of our culture. That includes music. That includes healing. That includes the deep knowledge systems our elders preserved through song and rhythm. This recording is a powerful resource for scholars, students, community healers, and parents raising liberated Afrikan children. Furthermore, it is priced at just $10 — making this irreplaceable knowledge accessible to our people everywhere. Do not let this pass you by.
Watch this transformative lecture now and support the Abibitumi mission of Pan-Afrikan education and liberation. 👉 Get it here — Stream the Recording for $10
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