AFROCENTRICITY, Its Value, Importance, and Necessity in the Liberation, Education and Transformation of people of African descent globally. It is imperative for the well being of the Black race. TCXPI is an African-Centered Online Educational Resource Service, and Personal Transformative Vehicle that seeks to Reclaim and Affirm African Heritage and Consciousness. It is nurtured through transformation, dedication, and commitment to the AFRICAN-CENTERED Self. "Know Thy Self" Imhotep
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Wednesday, February 20, 2019
A TCXPI Experience - One Africa Health Resort & Restaurant, Cape Coast, Ghana
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Friday, February 8, 2019
TCXPI It Is Written In Stone - Our True Black History
It is said that Africans/Blacks are the First people of earth.
When we think of Egypt, we think of the beginning of time. We think of the beginning of world and human civilization. We think of Ancient African civilization.
Research shows that Egyptians were people of North Africa, of Nubia and Kush.
Apparently, the impression given by some Western scholars that the African continent made little or no contributions to civilization, and that its people are naturally primitive has, unfortunately, become the basis of racial prejudice and negative perception directed against all people of African origin.
TCXPI will use the month of February to celebrate and honor Ancient African civilization and the ANKHcestors who contributed to World and Human civilization.
OUR TRUE BLACK HISTORY. https://www.facebook.com/tcxpikemet/ #ItIsWrittenInStone
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Tuesday, February 5, 2019
We Remember Dr. Carter G. Woodson and Black History Week/Month
The Father of Black History Month, Dr. Carter G. Woodson, was born in 1875 near New Canton, VA. He was the son of former slaves. In 1907, he obtained his BA degree from the University of Chicago. In 1912, he received his PhD from Harvard University.
In 1915, he and friends established the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History. A year later, the Journal of Negro History, began quarterly publication. In 1926,
Dr. Woodson proposed and launched the annual February observance of "Negro History Week," which became "Black History Month" in 1976. It is said that he chose February for the observance because February 12th was Abraham Lincoln’s birthday and February 14th was the accepted birthday of Frederick Douglass.
Dr. Woodson was the founder of Associated Publishers, the founder and editor of the Negro History Bulletin, and the author of more than 30 books. His best known publication is The Mis-Education of the Negro, originally published in 1933 and still pertinent today.
He died in 1950, but Dr. Woodson’s scholarly legacy goes on.
Dr. Woodson was the founder of Associated Publishers, the founder and editor of the Negro History Bulletin, and the author of more than 30 books. His best known publication is The Mis-Education of the Negro, originally published in 1933 and still pertinent today.
He died in 1950, but Dr. Woodson’s scholarly legacy goes on.
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DONATE TODAY! On This Day In TCXPI Black History
MAY WE CONTINUE TO PAY TRIBUTE AND HONOR TO OUR ANKH CESTORS, AND DISSEMINATE THEIR CONTRIBUTIONS TO OUR STORY!
Ways to donate:
GoFundMe - https://www.gofundme.com/tcxpi
Fundly - https://fundly.com/tcxpissp
US Mail - Inbox me for address
Cynthia Chinue X Cornelius, CEO and Founder
TCXPI - The Chinue X Project, Inc. - An AERS
For More Daily Black History, visit
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Friday, October 26, 2018
TCXPI Education Fund Campaign 2018
GREETINGS ALL!
I would like to start by saying to ALL who have donated in
the past, thANKH YOU for your support!
Your donations allowed The Chinue X Project, Inc. (TCXPI) to
have successful years in 2017 and 2018!
WITH YOUR DONATIONS, TCXPI was able to:
1.) Create a pilot Afrocentric Saturday School for
children/youth in Oakland, CA. (2016)
2.) Provide TWENTY backpacks to Oakland children and youth.
August 2017; and
3.) Visit Accra Ghana and volunteer with a school in the
village of Kpongunor. March 2018
ONCE AGAIN
TCXPI is asking for YOUR DONATIONS in sustaining and
maintaining our upcoming projects which include:
*TCXPI Black History Flashcards (2018-19)
*TCXPI Young Scholars Program (2019)
*TCXPI Backpack Giveaway (2019)
PLEASE GIVE WHAT YOU CAN!
ALL DONATIONS ARE APPRECIATED! thANKH you
Cynthia "Chinue X" Cornelius, Founder
The Chinue X Project, Inc. - A 501c3 non-profit Afrocentric
organization
Ways To Donate:
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Monday, June 18, 2018
Yemi Alade - Africa (Official Video) ft. Sauti Sol
NO WHERE BE LIKE AFRICA!
YOU HAVE NOT SEEN A....... HUSTLE.......STRONGER, MORE
POWERFUL, FIERCER than the HUSTLE OF GHANANIANS!
POWERFUL, FIERCER than the HUSTLE OF GHANANIANS!
THE HONORABLE KWAME KHRUMAH TAUGHT THEM WELL!
IT'S AN AFRICAN ONE!
AFRICA!
PLEASE, LISTEN...... LOVED ONES!
Whether YOU COME TO...
Break Dance, Shake Hands, MAKE PLANS!
Love, Squeeze, Listen, RUN!
IT IS THE BLOOD OF OUR BELOVED Ancestors!
The Love is LOVE!
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Wednesday, December 13, 2017
On This Day In TCXPI History - November 2017
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Thursday, November 16, 2017
TCXPI Education Fund
TCXPI Education Fund still needs your support.
THE CHILDREN NEED YOUR SUPPORT!
ABOUT TCXPI
The Chinue X Project, Inc, TCXPI, is an Afrocentric Educational Resource Service has been established a 501(c)3 non-profit that brings awareness, through facilitated education, to Black History. American History that continues to be omitted in the nation's educational system.
TCXPI is honored to introduce to young scholars and others who seek to learn, of the many contributions made by Black People since the beginning of time to World and Human Civilization.
TCXPI believes that when Black children are centered in education that reflects their heritage and culture they can hold a sense of Self-Pride. When a Black child is taught history that reflects who they are in this world - history that looks like them, that speaks like them, that moves like them, that is them, they begin to possess Self-Worth, Self-Love, and Self-Respect. With these qualities, I believe, a child will become eager to learn while viewing themselves in the learning process.
TCXPI PROJECTS:
TCXPI Afrocentric Young Scholars Program (2016)
TCXPI First Annual BackPack GiveAway (2017)
TCXPI Volunteer, Accra Ghana (2018)
TCXPI Black History Flashcards (2017-18)
TCXPI Young Scholar Program (2019)
thANKH you to ALL my diligent donors and supporters who have donated, some more than once, TCXPI will be going to the Motherland, Accra Ghana, from March 3 to April 4 for Ghana Independence Day.
While there I will be volunteering with Ghanaian children and youth.
PLEASE DONATE TO TCXPI to make this project a SUCCESS.
thANKH you
Cynthia Cornelius MA Ed., CEO and Founder
TCXPI - The Chinue X Project, Inc.
For the FB Fundraiser, click this link:
For other ways to donate to TCXPI, please click:
GoFund Me
PayPal
Please donate today!
#tcxpi
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Thursday, September 14, 2017
Rest In Peace Mr. Dick Gregory
Dick Gregory, comedian, actor, and civil rights activist, was born Richard Claxton Gregory in 1932 in St. Louis, Missouri. Gregory's father left the family when Gregory was a child forcing his mother, Lucille, a maid, to raise him and his five siblings. During his high school years Gregory joined the track team at Sumner High School and broke several school records. He consequently won a track scholarship to Southern Illinois University in 1951.
Around 1953, Gregory’s mother died and he left college. He was drafted into the Army, where he performed as a comedian and won his first talent show. Three years after leaving the Army, Gregory made his name as a comedian in Chicago nightclubs while living with his brother Presley. In 1959, he married Lillian Smith and together they had ten children.
In 1960, Gregory accepted Hugh Hefner’s invitation to perform for a group of white Southerners at Chicago’s Playboy Lounge. The gig turned into a six-week commitment and he received positive reviews in national publications such as Time magazine. The job helped Gregory become one of the first black comedians to successfully perform in major all-white nightclubs. Through programs such as the Jack Paar Show, he became one of the first black comedians to break through to national white television audiences. His humor often addressed the contemporary issues of segregation and racism which were being brought to the national spotlight by the civil rights movement. During this time Gregory increasingly devoted his humor to the civil rights cause. Between 1961 and 1964 he released In Living Black and White, Dick Gregory Talks Turkey, The Two Sides of Dick Gregory, and Running for President.
In the early 1960s, Gregory befriended Civil Rights activist Medgar Evers and went to Mississippi to march for black voting rights. After Evers’ 1963 murder, Gregory gave up performing full-time to become more involved in the Civil Rights movement. He marched with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and other civil rights leaders. He flew to Moscow, USSR to protest Soviet treatment of black soldiers in 1964. In 1967, Gregory ran for mayor in Chicago, but lost to Richard J. Daley. He then organized a failed bid for the presidency in 1968.
In the early 1970s, Gregory expanded his focus to world hunger and healthy nutrition. He moved his family to Plymouth, Massachusetts where he became a vegetarian and started running marathons. Gregory also fasted to draw attention to national and international causes such as racial injustice, the war in Vietnam, world hunger, the treatment of Native Americans, and apartheid.
Over the next three decades, Gregory became a popular speaker on civil and human rights at universities and colleges. He hosted his own Washington D.C. radio show and wrote several books, including Nigger, Up From Nigger, No More Lies, and Callus on My Soul. He also developed and sold a diet drink. Late in life, he still performed comedy at St. Louis and New York clubs. His latest work is Dick Gregory 21st Century “State of the Union.”
Dick Gregory died of heart failure in Washington, D.C. on August 19, 2017. He was 84.
Source: BlackPast.org
Around 1953, Gregory’s mother died and he left college. He was drafted into the Army, where he performed as a comedian and won his first talent show. Three years after leaving the Army, Gregory made his name as a comedian in Chicago nightclubs while living with his brother Presley. In 1959, he married Lillian Smith and together they had ten children.
In 1960, Gregory accepted Hugh Hefner’s invitation to perform for a group of white Southerners at Chicago’s Playboy Lounge. The gig turned into a six-week commitment and he received positive reviews in national publications such as Time magazine. The job helped Gregory become one of the first black comedians to successfully perform in major all-white nightclubs. Through programs such as the Jack Paar Show, he became one of the first black comedians to break through to national white television audiences. His humor often addressed the contemporary issues of segregation and racism which were being brought to the national spotlight by the civil rights movement. During this time Gregory increasingly devoted his humor to the civil rights cause. Between 1961 and 1964 he released In Living Black and White, Dick Gregory Talks Turkey, The Two Sides of Dick Gregory, and Running for President.
In the early 1960s, Gregory befriended Civil Rights activist Medgar Evers and went to Mississippi to march for black voting rights. After Evers’ 1963 murder, Gregory gave up performing full-time to become more involved in the Civil Rights movement. He marched with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and other civil rights leaders. He flew to Moscow, USSR to protest Soviet treatment of black soldiers in 1964. In 1967, Gregory ran for mayor in Chicago, but lost to Richard J. Daley. He then organized a failed bid for the presidency in 1968.
In the early 1970s, Gregory expanded his focus to world hunger and healthy nutrition. He moved his family to Plymouth, Massachusetts where he became a vegetarian and started running marathons. Gregory also fasted to draw attention to national and international causes such as racial injustice, the war in Vietnam, world hunger, the treatment of Native Americans, and apartheid.
Over the next three decades, Gregory became a popular speaker on civil and human rights at universities and colleges. He hosted his own Washington D.C. radio show and wrote several books, including Nigger, Up From Nigger, No More Lies, and Callus on My Soul. He also developed and sold a diet drink. Late in life, he still performed comedy at St. Louis and New York clubs. His latest work is Dick Gregory 21st Century “State of the Union.”
Dick Gregory died of heart failure in Washington, D.C. on August 19, 2017. He was 84.
Source: BlackPast.org
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Tuesday, August 15, 2017
TCXPI Present Afrocentric Education and Its Importance: A Comprehensive Analysis
TCXPI Present Afrocentric Education and Its Importance: A Comprehensive Analysis
This comprehensive analysis examines the value and viability of Afrocentricity, Afrocentric and/or African Centered Education as alternatives to Eurocentric education, and critically analyzes the theoretical frameworks of Afrocentricity as pedagogy for children and youth.
It will seek to answer the following questions;
1.) Does Afrocentricity in children and youth shape their identity? 2.) Does Afrocentricity in children and youth shape their academic achievement?
3.)Does Afrocentricity in children and youth shape their development?
To purchase, please visit the CreateSpace eStore: https://www.createspace.com/7304149
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Tuesday, July 25, 2017
TCXPI First Annual Young Scholar BackPack Give-Away Fundraiser, Oakland, CA
PLEASE DONATE TODAY!
JUST A $5.00 DONATION IS ALL IT TAKES!
TCXPI First Annual Young Scholar BackPack Give-Away Fundraiser, Oakland, CA has begun.
GOAL: To assemble 20 backpacks filled with school supplies for give-away children K-5 in the Oakland, CA community.
If each person gives JUST $5.00, it will support our cause tremendously.
Please donate today!
CLICK Any of these links: Facebook Fundraiser, TCXPI Educational Fund 2017, PayPal
Help A Child Have A Fully Supplied BackPack!
#tcxpi
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Sunday, March 19, 2017
Rest In Peace Chuck Berry
On This Day In TCXPI History
Rest in Peace,
Chuck Berry, The Founding Father Of Rock n Roll.
Guitarist, singer, and songwriter Charles Edward Anderson “Chuck” Berry is considered a pioneer of rock and roll and a major influence on 20th century popular music. His songs such as “Johnny B. Goode” and “Roll Over Beethoven” are rock and roll standards.
Chuck Berry was born in St. Louis, Missouri on October 18, 1926 to a middle class family which included six siblings. His father Henry worked in a flour mill and his mother Martha was a college graduate. Chuck’s mother played piano and both she and his father were church singers instilling in their son an early interest in music.
Despite his middle class family background, Berry as a teenager joined two high school friends in committing a short string of armed robberies in Kansas City, Missouri. They were arrested and Berry was convicted and served three years in prison between 1944 and 1947.
Shortly after he was released Berry married Themetta Suggs. The couple had two children and Berry settled into family life while working at an automobile assembly plant in St. Louis and taking jobs as a carpenter with his father. In his free time Berry finally pursued an early fascination with guitar, taking lessons from Ira Harris, a local jazz guitarist.
By 1952 Berry was playing professional engagements in St. Louis clubs and eventually joined the St. John’s Trio, led by pianist Johnnie Johnson and including drummer Eddy Hardy. Berry incorporated elements of country into the trio’s sound but he also brought in blues songs, turning the trio into a prototype rock and roll band.
In 1955 Berry traveled to Chicago where he had a chance meeting with Muddy Waters and asked him for advice about getting to record. Waters sent him to see Leonard Chess at Chess Records who listened to Berry’s home recording of “Ida Mae,” a popular country tune. Chess immediately offered a recording session and on May 21, 1955 Chuck Berry recorded “Ida Mae” with reworked lyrics and a new title, “Maybelline.” Berry’s first recording, “Maybelline,” reached #1 on the Billboard R&B chart and sold over one million copies. By the late 1950s Berry was an established star with several hit records, film appearances, and a profitable touring schedule. In 1962, however, his career was derailed when Berry was convicted of violating the Mann Act for allegedly transporting an underage girl across state lines for immoral purposes, a charge that Berry still disputes.
After his release in 1963 Berry had a string of hits though none reached the popularity of his earlier recordings. By the 1970s he was primarily in demand for rock and roll revival shows where he played his past hits. In 1972 his live recording of the novelty pop song “My Ding-A-Ling” became his only #1 single on the U.S. pop charts. He continued touring but in 1979 his insistence in being paid in cash led to a third jail sentence of four months for tax evasion.
In 1986 Berry became one of the first musicians to be inducted into The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. He is also listed as 5th in Rolling Stone magazine’s 2004 list of The Greatest Artists of All Time and 7th on the list of Rolling Stone’s 100 Greatest Guitarists. Now in his late 80s, Chuck Berry continues to play occasional concerts around the globe.
Source:
BlackPast.org
http://www.blackpast.org/aah/berry-charles-edward-anderson-chuck-1926
(Accessed on 03/17/2017)
For more TCXPI, visit:
http://tcxpi.org/
http://www.tcxpissp.com/
https://www.facebook.com/TCXPIHistory https://www.facebook.com/TCXPI?ref=hl
https://www.facebook.com/TheMediaAndTheBlackCommunityTcxpi?ref=hl
#tcxpi
#otd
#DailyBlackHistoryFacts
#OnThisDayInTCXPIHistory
Chuck Berry, The Founding Father Of Rock n Roll.
Guitarist, singer, and songwriter Charles Edward Anderson “Chuck” Berry is considered a pioneer of rock and roll and a major influence on 20th century popular music. His songs such as “Johnny B. Goode” and “Roll Over Beethoven” are rock and roll standards.
Chuck Berry was born in St. Louis, Missouri on October 18, 1926 to a middle class family which included six siblings. His father Henry worked in a flour mill and his mother Martha was a college graduate. Chuck’s mother played piano and both she and his father were church singers instilling in their son an early interest in music.
Despite his middle class family background, Berry as a teenager joined two high school friends in committing a short string of armed robberies in Kansas City, Missouri. They were arrested and Berry was convicted and served three years in prison between 1944 and 1947.
Shortly after he was released Berry married Themetta Suggs. The couple had two children and Berry settled into family life while working at an automobile assembly plant in St. Louis and taking jobs as a carpenter with his father. In his free time Berry finally pursued an early fascination with guitar, taking lessons from Ira Harris, a local jazz guitarist.
By 1952 Berry was playing professional engagements in St. Louis clubs and eventually joined the St. John’s Trio, led by pianist Johnnie Johnson and including drummer Eddy Hardy. Berry incorporated elements of country into the trio’s sound but he also brought in blues songs, turning the trio into a prototype rock and roll band.
In 1955 Berry traveled to Chicago where he had a chance meeting with Muddy Waters and asked him for advice about getting to record. Waters sent him to see Leonard Chess at Chess Records who listened to Berry’s home recording of “Ida Mae,” a popular country tune. Chess immediately offered a recording session and on May 21, 1955 Chuck Berry recorded “Ida Mae” with reworked lyrics and a new title, “Maybelline.” Berry’s first recording, “Maybelline,” reached #1 on the Billboard R&B chart and sold over one million copies. By the late 1950s Berry was an established star with several hit records, film appearances, and a profitable touring schedule. In 1962, however, his career was derailed when Berry was convicted of violating the Mann Act for allegedly transporting an underage girl across state lines for immoral purposes, a charge that Berry still disputes.
After his release in 1963 Berry had a string of hits though none reached the popularity of his earlier recordings. By the 1970s he was primarily in demand for rock and roll revival shows where he played his past hits. In 1972 his live recording of the novelty pop song “My Ding-A-Ling” became his only #1 single on the U.S. pop charts. He continued touring but in 1979 his insistence in being paid in cash led to a third jail sentence of four months for tax evasion.
In 1986 Berry became one of the first musicians to be inducted into The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. He is also listed as 5th in Rolling Stone magazine’s 2004 list of The Greatest Artists of All Time and 7th on the list of Rolling Stone’s 100 Greatest Guitarists. Now in his late 80s, Chuck Berry continues to play occasional concerts around the globe.
Source:
BlackPast.org
http://www.blackpast.org/aah/berry-charles-edward-anderson-chuck-1926
(Accessed on 03/17/2017)
For more TCXPI, visit:
http://tcxpi.org/
http://www.tcxpissp.com/
https://www.facebook.com/TCXPIHistory https://www.facebook.com/TCXPI?ref=hl
https://www.facebook.com/TheMediaAndTheBlackCommunityTcxpi?ref=hl
#tcxpi
#otd
#DailyBlackHistoryFacts
#OnThisDayInTCXPIHistory
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