
Rescuing our children
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Reshaping Ourselves
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Molding a Powerful future
Now Available for Adults!
Due to the overwhelming response from our community, we’ve made our EOTT (Each One Teach Ten) courses available for adults who are ready to learn!
Courses will be released on a monthly basis, allowing you to continue building your knowledge step by step.
Once you select your option, you’ll receive immediate access to our exclusive Each One Teach Ten Worldwide Community, along with two live classes each month led by our course creator, Wekesa Madimoyo, and fellow participants on the journey with you.
Due to the overwhelming response from our community, we’ve made our EOTT (Each One Teach Ten) courses available for adults who are ready to learn in their own pace and time!
Courses will be released on a monthly basis, allowing you to continue building your knowledge step by step.
Once you select your option, you’ll receive immediate access to our exclusive Each One Teach Ten Worldwide Community, along with two live discussion sessions each month led by our course creator, Baba Wekesa Madimoyo, and fellow participants on the journey with you.

We are all being affected by the anti-Afrikan movement in the US. Our youth are affected the most, and in ways that we see the least. Their natural inclination to dream of a powerful, protected community is twisted by fear into dreams of viral videos, billionaire domination, false bravado, apathy, or even suicide.
EOTT doesn't let this go unchecked.
Each course is an elixir of healing content, methodology, exercises, evaluations,, and community demonstrations.
All courses are vehicles for culture and mission-based critical thinking, authentic emotions and discussion.
Our courses are now available for adult learning too

"Why didn't we fight back?" After this course, they'll never ask that again. This is a war studies course focusing on the conduct, consequences, strategies, and effects of our 300-years of military action against oppressors. Effective fighting today and tomorrow, depend on learning from yesterday's fighting stories.

Hers is also US History 1822-1913. Her white biographers lied - the gun was never for us! She fought for us. Now, she needs us to fight for her. It is a war for our memory, her story. Movies and biographies guided by racist scripts like MSO, UBO, etc. distort her story, our stories, our personalities, and power?

Economic Nationalism: Tulsa's Black Wall Street. How did we build, sustain and defend it against invasion? How did we build under duress? Why did we support each other? Who was the teenager we refused to abandon? What was "The Afrikan Blood Brotherhood?" How do we tell a story about our loss in ways that inspire and empower us today?

Using Melanin to heal the teaching of science, and using the science of melanin to heal our bodies! Why does melanin accompany wound healing and all births? It's in your heart, too. What does it do there?

"I'm just not good at math." Enhancing math skills by healing the induced alienation of our people from math (the subject) or from our people. Sankofa Math reconnects us with our math genius in practical and esoteric terms.

What biology and chemistry knowledge is required to activate our self-healing power and therapy to thwart the 7 major diseases that kill Afrikan Americans yearly? Most students have family members under attack.This provides extra incentive to research and apply their learning to critique current remedies.

Binding family across the generations. You know the power of culture and "Folklore." Now, learn the power of family-lore to heal and empower. Students become interviewers, and oral and written tellers of their family lore. They create games, contests, and, most importantly, connection and appreciation.

We're not a broken people and have no broken families; we only have broken stories. When we heal our stories, our stories heal us. Forget D. P. Moynihan's "blame the victim" strategy. Also, forget those who lure us into the Trauma Trap. We use our ancient storytelling skills and cultural insights to heal, instruct, and extend our power.

Inspired by Ayi Kwei Armah's characters, Araba Jesiwa, Domfo, and Densu from his novel - The Healers. We study the healing process of Araba Jesiwa and how we may use it to heal from the wounds of oppression. It starts with purging the falsehood from the abused self and ends with the conception and birth of a new Afrikan.
EOTT stands for Each One Teach Ten.
It is a structured educational movement designed to expand learning beyond institutions and into families, homes, workplaces, and community circles.
For over 27 years, AYA Educational Institute (ayaed.com) has developed African-Centered education that nurtures scholarship, identity, and social responsibility across the African diaspora.
Using the Warrior–Healer–Builder social technology, EOTT redefines education as a living system of:
Benefits you get when joining
Second thing you get instant access to
Third thing you get as a bonus today

We all are being affected by the anti-Afrikan movement in the US. Our youth are being effected the most, and in ways that we see the least. In the past, youth fears mixed with anger would spill out in protests proding adults to action. Today their fears morph into viral videos, billionaire dreams, bravado, apathy, or even suicide.
We can't let this go unchecked.
While we adults protest - in our various ways - for policy changes, we must provide something transformative now! We must create a new or renewed education for freedom and sovereignty given the current form of oppression.
We don't need a new definition. Barbara Sizemore, Amos Wilson, Asa Hilliard, John Henry Clarke, Kwame Toure, Carter G, and countless others have provided that. We need an independent delivery process that transforms all it touches.
We need mini freedom schools and safe places to reshape ourselves and nurture future warriors, healers and builders for our people and the world - in that order.

If your intention is to enroll a child or young person, EOTT provides dedicated Mini-Freedom School programs designed specifically for Afrikan-Centered learning.
These programs include:
Age-appropriate Afrikan Centered Currculum
Trained educational support specialists
Family integration activities
Weekly guided group sessions

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