Listen powerful reasoning with Rastafari elder Ras Flako Tafari. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7DnmomT2Cc0 Listen powerful reasoning w/Ras Flako Tafari, Autarchii , and Jr discussing the origins of the Rastafari movement. Ras Flako also speaks ...
Groundings With Dr. Jermaine McCalpin | B.H.N.T.D Ep. 3
Dr. Jermaine McCalpin is currently Chair of the African and African- American Studies Program at New Jersey City University. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=prgVG42LZ0o Listen powerful reasoning w/Dr. Jermaine McCalpin, Autarchii ,and Jr discussing t ...
3 Ways Parents Can Become Better Teachers During the Age of COVID-19
With the threat of another year under quarantine looming, parents must choose how to best support their sons and daughters in achieving all that we want for them. The key to this is all around us, because when the world becomes our classroom, we create lifelong learners equipped not just with knowledge, but the skills to apply it.
Groundings With Dr. Carolyn Cooper | B.H.N.T.D Ep. 2
Fulljoy reasoning with Dr. Carolyn Cooper where she discusses about the ‘Lasting Effects of Slavery on the Black Family’ and the discriminatory beauty standards in Jamaica.
REGGAE’S BLUES | Jamaica’s Abandonment of Its Indigenous Art Form
Do you know the current top ten selling reggae records in the U.S.? Well, just as I requested earlier, take a few moments and go online to find out what they are. Sure, there are reggae legends like Steel Pulse and Marcia Griffiths who are still going strong, and there are newer artists like Koffee who are making their mark. But, again, much like the blues chart, something else is going on. You have a number of musicians listed on the chart who are not from Trench Town (the birthplace of reggae music), not from Jamaica, not from the West Indies—they’re not even Black—and yet they are slowly becoming the face(s) of reggae music.
Myth Of The Angry Black Woman
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=apbZlroxIbo Baldhead and The Dread Podcast Ep.1 'Myth of the Angry Black Woman'
All Jamaicans Are Bilingual
Rastafari elder Ras Flako Tafari explains the impact of language in the Jamaican culture and the use of language as rebellion against colonialism. Flako are Jamaicans are bilingual not by choice but for political reasons.
Chanting Rastafari |Documentary
https://youtu.be/aYP_hfjrGf8 I NEVER KNEW TV is proud to present our first mini-doc exploring the Ugandan origins of Nyahbingi, influence of Queen Muhumusa on Rastafari, the spirituality of the Nyahbinghi, and Nyahbinghi's role in the inception of r ...
Serious Problems with Cables in City
The new common language will be more simple and regular than the existing European languages. It will be as simple as Occidental; in fact, it will be Occidental. To an English person, it will seem like simplified English, as a skeptical Cambridge friend o ...