Bridging the gaps between Africans in the diaspora
Education, Culture & Community Building
Bridging the gaps between Africans in the diaspora
Education, Culture & Community Building
Education, Culture & Community Building
Education, Culture & Community Building
Join us for our annual Kwanzaa Chess & Ghanapoly Tournament at Cape Coast Castle
Tuesday, December 27th at 1 pm
Ages 10 & Up Prizes and Food for Participants
For more info or to participate:
George: +233 24 806 6191
email: kibibi@theaim.com
Mentorship programs include:
AIM Chess Club
AIM Reading Club
Carpentry Workshops
Math for Success
Graphics & Technology for Business
AIM Academy has developed a complete Kwanzaa Curriculum especially for Homeschoolers. This Kwanzaa bundle includes a PowerPoint with the full explanation of Kwanzaa and how to celebrate it. The presentation also includes videos, Q&A, and a bulletin board activity. To complement the lesson there is a coloring and activity book that follows the lesson.
Photocopies of the bulletin board activity, coloring book activities, and the coloring pages will need to be photo copied for classroom purposes.
Crochet Your Own Liberation Scarf
This is a beginner's crochet class for the whole family.
You will learn everything from the very beginning including:
choosing yarn, tools needed to crochet, slip knot, chain stitch,
single crochet, changing colors, tassels, and finishing off your scarf.
Too often, history portrays slavery in America in a light that lessens the reality of the African Holocaust. It paints a picture of European compassion that freed slaves, omits serious facts about slavery and lists outright lies and distortions that prevent all Americans from actually dealing with this horrible time in its past. TRUTH could very well be the spark that heals America of the race problem.
The daughter of the Egyptian sun deity Ra and the wife of the moon diety Thoth, she served as the spirit of justice to the Egyptians. She decided whether a person would successfully reach the afterlife by weighing their soul against her feather of truth, and was the personification of the cosmic order and a representation of stability in the universe.
While the Kwanzaa celebration saw a boom during the Black Power movement of the '60s, by the 1990s it was on the downtrend. Younger people may have mixed experiences, with some not celebrating the holiday simply because they've never been exposed it. However, as racial aggression intensifies against African people, many are finding their way back to Kwanzaa as a perspective of making stronger their bravery against such oppression.
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