Search

Search Criteria

 
 
 
 

Products meeting the search criteria

Sort By:  
"A revolution is bloody. Revolution is hostile. Revolution knows no compromise. Revolution overturns and destroys everything that gets in its way...It’s based on land. A revolutionary wants land so he can set up his own nation, an independent nation...Revolution is based on land. Land is the basis of all independence. Land is the basis of freedom, justice, and equality." Malcolm X
$29.95
Metriz pwòp tèt ou se fwi konesans pwòp tèt ou. [Kreyòl ayisyen: Self-mastery is the fruit of self-knowledge.]
$12.95
ዝናኡ ስለ ዝሰኣነ፡ መንግስቲ ስኢኑ። [Tigrinya: He lost his reputation, so he lost his kingdom.]
$5.00
km Dd.tn mAat/Kem Djed.ten Maat [To Be Black, Speak You Maat]

Essays on Afrikan Liberation, Revolutionary Governance and Radical Macroeconomic Public Policy with a Translation of the Oldest Book in the World, the Instructions of Ptah-Hotep, the Ethical Axioms of Excellent Discourse & Afrikan Behavior by the Prime Minister & Chief Public Administrator of Kemet c. 1866 – 1891 KC [c. 2375 – 2350 BCE]

kmyt/Kemyt [Books of the Black Land]

AFRIKOLOGY PHILOSOPHY SERIES

Pan-Afrikan Ethics for Pan-Afrikan Public Policy & Public Administration, Volume I, Second Edition

Ambakisye Dukuzumurenyi, Ph.D. Public Policy Analysis

Accra, Ghana: University of New Timbuktu sbA Press, 2022. Pp. liii, 690. [PDF]

"A revolution is bloody. Revolution is hostile. Revolution knows no compromise. Revolution overturns and destroys everything that gets in its way...It’s based on land. A revolutionary wants land so he can set up his own nation, an independent nation...Revolution is based on land. Land is the basis of all independence. Land is the basis of freedom, justice, and equality." Malcolm X
$29.95
sAt nw rX iXt / Satch nu Rekh-Ikhet [The Scholar’s Libation]

sAt nw rX iXt/Satch nu Rekh-Ikhet [The Scholar’s Libation] is a Libation Ritual and Meditation text designed for the Revolutionary Afrikan Warrior Scholar and Afrikan Students. It’s intention is to inspire them with the Spirit of the Ancestors daily as they prepare to engage in the life processes of surviving, thriving, rebuilding and protecting the Global Afrikan community. As the Revolutionary Afrikan Warrior Scholars and Afrikan students engage in the process of revolutionary learning they must do so while commemorating and celebrating the glorious Ancestors. The acts of Revolutionary Afrikan Warrior Scholars and Afrikan Students also lay the foundation, prepare the way and set the example for the Beautyful Ones Not Yet Born. All this being carried out while they also arm themselves to avenge, ie, set right the injustices that the Ancestors suffered, restoring Maat and bringing balance to Global Afrikan life.

Umuntu ngumuntu ngabantu.

[isiZulu: A man is a person because of people. I am because we are.]

Mtu ni watu.

[Kiswahili: A Human being is Human beings.]

The Revolutionary Afrikan Warrior-Scholar is the Pan-Afrikan Community and the Pan-Afrikan Community is the Revolutionary Afrikan Warrior-Scholar!

Ambakisye Dukuzumurenyi, Ph.D. Public Policy Analysis

Accra, Ghana: University of New Timbuktu sbA Press, 2021. Pp. lxxxviii, 467. [PDF]

Metriz pwòp tèt ou se fwi konesans pwòp tèt ou. [Kreyòl ayisyen: Self-mastery is the fruit of self-knowledge.]
$12.95
Nubia and Abyssinia: Comprehending their Civil History, Antiquities, Arts, Religion, Literature, and Natural History

Nubia and Abyssinia: Comprehending their Civil History, Antiquities, Arts, Religion, Literature, and Natural History.

Reverend Michael Russell, LL.D. [1833] with a New Introduction by Ambakisye Dukuzumurenyi, Ph.D.

Accra, Ghana: University of New Timbuktu sbA Press, 2019. Pp. iv, 331. [PDF]

Originally published in 1833 for a select group of European clerics and scholars, this work written according to the Ancient Model of Historical writing expressed in copious detail the true nature and extent of the Afrikan Origin of Civilization. From the author:

“There is no country in the world more interesting to the antiquary and scholar than that which was known to the ancients as "Ethiopia above Egypt," the Nubia and Abyssinia of the present day. It was universally regarded by the poets and philosophers of Greece as the cradle of those arts which at a later period covered the kingdom of the Pharaohs with so many wonderful monuments, as also of those religious rites which, after being slightly modified by the priests of Thebes, were adopted by the ancestors of Homer and Virgil as the basis of their mythology. A description of this remarkable nation, therefore, became a necessary supplement to the "View of Ancient and Modern Egypt," which has been some time before the public. In tracing the connection of the primitive people who dwelt on the Upper Nile, with the inhabitants of Arabia and of the remoter east, I have availed myself of the latest information that could be derived from Continental authors, as well as from the volumes of such of our own travelers as have ascended above the Second Cataract. The work of Heeren on the Politics, Intercourse, and Trade of the Carthaginians, Ethiopians, and Egyptians, possesses considerable value, not less on account of the ingenious views which it unfolds, than for the happy application of ancient literature to the illustration and embellishment of the main hypothesis. The reader will be surprised at the extent and magnificence of the architectural remains of Nubia, which, in some instances, have been found to rival, and, in others, even to surpass the more celebrated buildings of Egypt. It will no longer be denied by anyone who has seen the splendid work of Gau, that the pattern or type of those stupendous erections, which continue to excite the admiration of the tourist at Karnac, Luxor, and Ghizeh, may be detected in the numerous monuments still visible between the site of the famed Meroe and the falls of Es Souan. The more learned among professional artists are now nearly unanimous in the opinion that the principles of architecture, as well as of religious belief, have descended from Ethiopia to Egypt; receiving improvement in their progress downward, till at length their triumph was completed at Diospolis, in the palace of Osymandias and the temple of Jupiter Amnion.”

This now forgotten work is here being reissued and made available by the University of New Timbuktu Seba Press for a Global Afrikan reading audience.

ዝናኡ ስለ ዝሰኣነ፡ መንግስቲ ስኢኑ። [Tigrinya: He lost his reputation, so he lost his kingdom.]
$5.00
Per Page      1 - 3 of 3
  • 1