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To read Na'im Akbar is to know someone in a love affair with Black people. The basis for understanding the world is in self-definition, not vice-versa, and he defines the African concept of self as a legitimate tenet of African Deep Thought, which is a basis for undoing (mis)education.
He presents a compelling argument that achieves two crucial objectives. One, he explains what effective education is. Two, he offers a workable processes anyone can use to free the mind so that the behavior can be trained to follow.
Reading "Know Thy Self" is like being in the hands of a meticulous brain surgeon, painstakingly working to restore a mind to health. Dr. Akbar provides tools, and processes, to gauge the influence (mis)education has on individual behavior, community advancement, and the relationship between the two.
Dr. Akbar reveals the role of values, traditions and the legacy of competence conveyed by any educational system promoting the advancement of a people. He shows the inherent limitations that should occur, and will occur, under the influence of values, traditions and competencies alien to an African definition of self, worldview and interest.
Soul is at the core of African self-concept and reality, not ego as the European model of reality espouses. The separation of soul, or Spirit, from the self does not occur in the African concept of self.
This organic totality stems back to Nile Valley Civilization and the foundation of human civilization in Africa. Dr.
... Read more ›As a teacher of middle school students, I frquently observe that African-American students lack a working knowledge of their history beyond the figures of Dr. Martin L. King, Malcolm X and other popularized black figures. There are others that paved the way, such as Aesop, Hannibal, Cleopatra, Zenobi, and Askia the Great that our students need to know. For it is through the accomplishments of the above and others that will too pave the way for them.
This text along with other text written by African-American authors will guide our needs for developing, building and maintaining an education system of excellence based on truth, rather than mistruths. In short, I strongly recommend this book as a must read and as a keeper to be freely shared with all who are passionately concerned about giving African American children the upward mobility desired to sufficiently compete in this ever changing global world.