How Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Kambon Removed Gandhi’s Statue — And What Afrikan Communities Can Learn From It

Removing a Gandhi statue from Afrikan soil is not a symbolic gesture — it is an act of Abibifahodie. Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon, Pan-Afrikan linguist and architect of Abibitumi, did exactly that. He worked directly and strategically to have Gandhi’s statue removed from the University of Ghana. This lecture documents every step of that process in precise, actionable detail.
Gandhi’s record of anti-Black thought, speech, and action is well-documented. However, many institutions continue to honor him on Afrikan land. Ɔbenfo Kambon refused to accept that reality. Instead, he launched a sustained campaign of interviews, articles, debates, and public presentations. As a result, he built undeniable public awareness. Furthermore, he collaborated with colleagues at the University of Ghana and within the broader community to create coordinated, lasting pressure.
A Step-by-Step Blueprint to Remove Gandhi Statue From Afrikan Institutions
This lecture is not theory — it is a living blueprint. Ɔbenfo Kambon walks you through specific timelines, strategies, and the exact actions he took. Most importantly, he shows that one committed Afrikan scholar can shift institutional culture. In addition, he demonstrates how community education becomes the engine of real change. Every tactic he used is transferable. Therefore, what happened at the University of Ghana can happen at institutions across the Afrikan world.
Abibitumi exists to equip Afrikan people with tools for liberation. This lecture embodies that mission completely. If you are a student, organizer, educator, or community builder, this presentation speaks directly to you. It proves that Abibifahodie is not waiting for permission — it is built through deliberate, organized, and unapologetic action. Watch this lecture, study it, and then move. Your community deserves the same victory. Get it here: Watch / Get it here — $15.00.
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