Establish and Utilise Special Places For Your Empowerment – Community Power Development

  • By kwende ukaidi
  • 19 Mar, 2024

Celebrating Focal Places of Empowerment

Throughout their natural norm of self-determined life and flourishing, Afrikan souls have inherently been a powerful community. These souls carried mainstay powerfulness from age-to-age in the areas of spirituality, governance, education, economics, security and their communications media of the day. The results of Afrikan power being exercised were both upright, clear and superlative with the establishment of the greatest and most enduring civilisations ever to exist. Of course, self-determined development was key for such grand results to be realised with special places of energising, cultivation and learning established and utilised for the continual ascension of this primary people of creation.

Fast-forward to more recent times, are Afrikan souls rightfully equipped with community power in the now? More focally, do Afrikan souls take the necessary steps to develop and secure community power for themselves in the contemporary world?

Firstly, some semblance of meaning may be useful port-of-call to even broach this crucial subject matter. According to a mainstream contemporary source community power is described in the following way:  

“Power in a community is the ability to affect the decision-making process and use of resources, both public and private within a community or watershed group. Power is simply the capacity to bring about change. It is the energy that gets things done”.

Applying a few key adjustments to the description given to reflect the specific focus on Afrikan souls, one may arrive at the following:

“Power in the Afrikan community is the ability to affect the decision-making processes and use of resources, both public and private that impact Afrikan life. Afrikan community power is simply the capacity to bring about progressive transformation for the betterment and security of Afrikan souls. It is the energy that gets done what is necessary for upright and continued Afrikan ascension”.

Unfortunately, in a state of interruption and disruption, the destructive impositions of others that mean the Afrikan ill represent the oppositional categories to Afrikan powerfulness. Simply put, others of ill can work persistently to render Afrikan souls powerless at best. Indeed, if others of ill were to have their way power would exclusively rest with them with dire results for Afrikan life.

Despite the challenges, it is only Afrikan souls that can develop community power for themselves. Community power for this soul people has its own energising components in: the power generated from the Afrikan person; the power generated from the harmonious and complementary Afrikan male-female union; and, the power generated from the Afrikan family. At each level the functional areas of spirituality, governance, education, economics, security and media for Afrikan ascension are key focal areas for development. Indeed, the Afrikan can – and surely must – cultivate themselves from whatever station, level or status in this regard.  It matters not whether the Afrikan is here, there or elsewhere Afrikan community power is essential phenomenon with its special places of development determined by Afrikan souls established and utilised. After all, civilisation is not of happenstance.

The Observance of Kimungu Madhabahuni is a time to celebrate spiritual focal space and is an important period with the cultural calendar of the Universal Royal Afrikan Nation. The Universal Royal Afrikan Nation (URAN) is an Afrikan-centred spiritual and cultural mission for ascendancy that embodies living spiritually and culturally rooted life. To find out more about URAN and its spiritual-cultural mission for liberty and nationhood click here. The exquisite URAN pendant can be obtained online by clicking here.

In his capacity as an Afrikan-centred spiritual cultural practitioner this author is available for further learning in this regard and also for the carrying out of ceremonies such as naming and name reclamation. For details please click here.

Afrikan World Studies programmes are an important forms of study in understanding the Afrikan experience. There are a range of subjects covered on these programmes including History, Creative Production, Psychology and Religion. To find out more about these learning programmes please click here. For the video promo for these learning programmes click here.

At nominal cost, also consider acquisition of an a4 laminate poster of articulations by this author when visiting the Yemanja-O establishment to enrol, consult, learn, gather or otherwise.

Also, visit www.u-ran.org for links to Afrikan liberation Love radio programme on Universal Royal Afrikan Radio online