One Africa Worldview
Burning Spear Media hosts a weekly news podcast that sums up pressing issues and the day's top headlines using the theory of African Internationalism. Discussing a range of topics with dynamic guests, such as Chairman Omali Yeshitela, Deputy Chair Ona Zené Yeshitela and so many more. A podcast that's more than a listening experience, it's a mobilizing discussion and call-to-action.
Burning Spear Media hosts a weekly news podcast that sums up pressing issues and the day's top headlines using the theory of African Internationalism. Discussing a range of topics with dynamic guests, such as Chairman Omali Yeshitela, Deputy Chair Ona Zené Yeshitela and so many more. A podcast that's more than a listening experience, it's a mobilizing discussion and call-to-action.
Episodes

Wednesday Mar 11, 2026
The Sounds of Africa: Blues and Soul - One Africa Worldview Ep. 34
Wednesday Mar 11, 2026
Wednesday Mar 11, 2026
Episode 34 of One Africa Worldview interviews Buddy Red and Mark Adams as we explore the deep African roots of Blues and Neo-Soul music. These musical traditions, now heard across the world, were born from the historical experience, creativity and resistance of African people. We speak with these two artists whose work continues that tradition today. Through music and conversation, we explore how African cultural expression became the foundation of global musical genres and how artists today continue to carry that legacy forward.

Thursday Mar 05, 2026
U.S. War on Iran - One Africa Worldview Ep. 33
Thursday Mar 05, 2026
Thursday Mar 05, 2026
Chairman Omali Yeshitela joins the One Africa Worldview podcast to give clarifying analysis on the colonizer’s latest attack on Iran and answer your questions. We can’t just protest colonial wars, we must build the anti-colonial movement for power in our own hands.

Tuesday Feb 24, 2026
Carrying the Torch of our African Martyrs - One Africa Worldview Ep. 32
Tuesday Feb 24, 2026
Tuesday Feb 24, 2026
The One Africa Worldview podcast recognizes February 21st as African Martyrs Day – a day of recognition for every African lost under colonialism, including those who actively fought for the freedom of our African people, at home and abroad. This episode features an exclusive interview with Tafarie Mugeri, Director of Organization for the African People’s Socialist Party’s Africa Region. Director Tafarie leads the work to build the Uhuru Movement across the Continent. In this interview, he discusses the significance of African Martyrs Day and how the Party forwards the legacy of the brave sisters and brothers that have paved the path for freedom in our lifetime.

Friday Feb 20, 2026
One Africa Worldview Podcast Ep 31
Friday Feb 20, 2026
Friday Feb 20, 2026
The One Africa Worldview podcast celebrates African history month by raising up the living, breathing history of the African Liberation Movement, reflected in the existence and work of the African People’s Socialist Party. Our Party was founded in 1972 by Chairman Omali Yeshitela, and co-founded by Lawrence Mann of the Black Rights Fighters and Katura Carey of the Gainesville Black Study Group, with the expressed mission to complete the Black Revolution of the 1960s. Walk with us through snippets of the living history of the Party and Uhuru Movement, forwarding the historic struggle for African freedom. Plus, Whirlwind Weekly talks the Sebokeng 14, and For the Culture looks at Bad Bunny’s Superbowl performance.

Thursday Feb 12, 2026
Uhuru 3 Legal Wins, the People vs ICE and Epstein - One Africa Worldview Ep. 30
Thursday Feb 12, 2026
Thursday Feb 12, 2026
Hosts Dr. Mariah and Solyana Bekele of The One Africa Worldview podcast are back with season 4 – all new episodes, summing up the world situation through the African Internationalist perspective. Episode 30 provides updates on the case of the Uhuru 3, analysis on Minneapolis and the struggles with ICE, Epstein files and more with special guest, our leadership, Chairman Omali Yeshitela!

Thursday Feb 27, 2025
While they say cut DEI, we say build Black Community Control of Education
Thursday Feb 27, 2025
Thursday Feb 27, 2025
In this episode of Black Power Talks, we explore “Black Education and the Struggle for Anti-Colonial Free Speech.”
Upon his return to office, United States President Donald J. Trump amplified the attacks against Diversity, Equity and Inclusion initiatives. His administration has renamed institutions for confederate figures and overturned previous diversity initiatives inside government employment. President Trump has threatened to withhold federal funding from educational institutions with DEI programming. This is the fourth and most intense wave of attacks against African-led education initiatives in recent years.
As DEI initiatives, Critical Race Theory and Black Studies come under attack, today’s guests agree the solution is to build power in the hands of the African community, to struggle for Black Community Control of Education. The speakers make the appeal for African students, intellectuals and culture workers to become African working class intellectuals; to actively use their knowledge and intellectual abilities to challenge colonial capitalism. The martyred Black Studies scholar Walter Rodney defined this as the process of being “grounded” and called such people “guerilla intellectuals.”
On this episode, we are joined by:
Chairman Omali Yeshitela of the African People’s Socialist Party
Betty Davis, Chair of the Black is Back Coalition Education Working Group. Sister Betty is a veteran of the Ocean Hill Brownsville struggle.
Dr. Charisse Burden-Stelly Associate Professor of History at Wayne State University, author of Black Scare/Red Scare: Theorizing Capitalist Racism in the United States
Dr. Robin Kelley, Professor of History at UCLA author of many books including Freedom Dreams: The Black Radical Imagination, Race Rebels and Our History Has Always Been Contraband
Dr. Yusef Doucet, poet, english professor co-leader of the JOKO Collective
This episode is the outgrowth a June 2024 webinar that was co-sponsored by the Hands Off Uhuru Fightback Coalition and the Black is Back Coalition for Social Justice, Peace and Reparations and co-hosted by myself, Dr. Matsemela Odom and Mwezi Odom, Secretary General of the African People’s Socialist Party and Chair of the Hands Off Uhuru Fight Back Coalition.
The complete webinar can be found at The Burning Spear TV Youtube Page.
Black Power Talks is produced by WBPU 96.3 FM "Black Power 96" in St. Petersburg, Florida.

Wednesday Feb 12, 2025
Wednesday Feb 12, 2025
In 1982, the African People’s Socialist Party formed the African National Reparations Organization (ANRO). ANRO was the first mass organization created to forward the reparations struggle and make reparations a household topic. ANRO’s reach was wide and even garnered the support of people like Michael Jackson who signed an ANRO certificate demanding reparations. ANRO held twelve successive reparations tribunals. The most recent reparations tribunal was in 2003.
The Party and ANRO succeeded. The reparations struggle moved from being solely a legislative and legal conversation. The Reparations struggle has been taken up by the masses of African people in the US, and other parts of the African world.
Still, amidst these significant advances in the reparations struggle, Reparations activists have been targeted by the United States government for their work. On July 29, 2022, the Uhuru Movement was attacked by the US government for their reparations work amidst slanderous claims that attribute the movement’s 40-plus years of leadership in the struggle for reparations to quote malign russian influence unquote. WEB Du Bois, Paul Robeson and others suffered the same accusations.
The same city governments of St. Petersburg, Florida and St. Louis, Missouri that have made news in the past years for their support for reparations plans also had their local police forces participate in these attacks.
In today’s episode, we explore current conversations on Reparations amongst African Internationalist educators with excerpts from the
panel discussion “Reparations: Examining The Necessity of Reparations and Efforts To Heal A Political Genocide” as part of the National Conference of Black Political Scientists 2023 Annual Meeting.
In this panel discussion, Dr. Matsemela Odom is joined Dr. Tiffany Caesar of San Francisco State University and Dr. Martin Boston of Sacramento State University. Both are previous guest on Black Power Talks.
Dr. Boston is the co-editor of the Third World Thematics Special Issue The Movement Resonated Deep in my Soul: New Perspectives and Pathways to International Research of South African Social Movements Past and Present. Dr. Matsemela and Dr. Caesar are contributors to this special volume.
Black Power Talks is produced by WBPU 96.3 FM "Black Power 96" in St. Petersburg, Florida. It is hosted by Dr. Matsemela Odom and Solyana Bekele, bringing an African Internationalist perspective to the important issues of our world.

Wednesday Dec 25, 2024
The Colonial Origins of the Santa Clause Myth
Wednesday Dec 25, 2024
Wednesday Dec 25, 2024
On this episode of Black Power Talks, we learn about the colonial origins of Santa Claus, also known as Sinter Klaas or St. Nick, the patron saint of shipping.
Colonial ideology purports the Christmas holiday to be a celebration of the birth of Jesus. In fact, the Christmas holiday season is centered around the obsessive pursuit and aspiration to purchase gxifts, central to this is the Santa Claus Myth.
The Santa Claus myth has its origins in Dutch traditions surrounding the characters Sinter Klass and Zwarte Piet, Black Pete in English. These traditions are celebrated in the Netherlands, also known as Holland, the Dutch-speaking part of Belgium, and throughout the colonial Dutch world with blackface festivals. Africans have organized organized a serious pushback against these festivals, yet they persist.
To help us understand the colonial-capitalist contradictions of the holiday season and the colonial origins of Santa Claus, we share clips from Chairman Omali Yeshitela. The first clip is an excerpt from a conversation between Chairman Omali Yeshitela and Peggy Burke of the Global Afrikan Congress, speaking direct from Amsterdam that took place on November 28th, 2004.
The second clip is an excerpt from a presentation given by Chairman Omali 2 weeks later, on December 19th, 2004, to the regular Sunday community meeting at the Uhuru House in St. Petersburg, Florida.
Black Power Talks is produced by WBPU 96.3 FM "Black Power 96" in St. Petersburg, Florida. It is hosted by Dr. Matsemela Odom and Kondji Mlimwengu, bringing an African Internationalist perspective to the important issues of our world.

Sunday Aug 11, 2024
Black August and slavery inside U.S. prisons
Sunday Aug 11, 2024
Sunday Aug 11, 2024
Black August is a month of remembrance and resistance dedicated to our African warriors imprisoned for their heroic stance fighting for African liberation.
It's also a month-long salute to the African liberation struggle, recognizing such historic milestones as the Haitian Revolution, the birth of Marcus Garvey, and the deaths of Jonathan Jackson and George Jackson.
The roots of Black August are in the uprisings and rebellions of African freedom fighters who were imprisoned as a result of their political activity during the height of the Black Power Movement of the 1960s.
The tradition of recognizing Black August was initiated in the 1970s by incarcerated Africans in California in observance of the death of George Jackson.
Some of our African freedom fighters such as Jalil Muntaqim, Janine Africa, Janet Africa, Mike Africa Sr., Charles Africa and Sundiata Acoli have been released from captivity. Sundiata and Muntaqim both spent almost 50 years behind bars. Some of our political prisoners were released only when they were critically ill and then died shortly after. Many more remain in prison.
Today, we have a guest from behind enemy lines. Comrade Makandal Cinque is a regular contributor to The Burning Spear newspaper, a monthly Black Power journal in its 54th year of publication.
We discuss his recent article, "U.S. colonial prisons: the present day sale and trade of Africans.” We talk about the history of African slavery and the practice of forced labor inside U.S. prisons today. Support The Burning Spear newspaper's Mafundi Lake Sponsor-a-Prisoner program at theburningspear.com/donate
Black Power Talks is produced by WBPU 96.3 FM "Black Power 96" in St. Petersburg, Florida. This episode was hosted by Dr. Matsemela Odom and Solyana Bekele, bringing an African Internationalist perspective to the important issues of our world.

Thursday Jun 20, 2024
Thursday Jun 20, 2024
June is Black Music Month. On this episode of Black Power Talks, we uplift Miriam Makeba. Miriam Makeba’s music played an important role in the African Revolution by building bridges across the colonial borders that divide African people.
We discussed the role of Makeba's music and feature three of her songs: "Into Yam", "Pata Pata", and "Malcom X." We talk about the importance of her appearance in the film Come Back Africa (1959) and the importance of the 1960 Sharpeville Massacre in her own political transformation. Makeba had two uncles killed in the massacre. As Makeba appeared on the international stage. We discuss her shifts from the New African Movement and SophiaTown Renaissance to her All-African and anti-colonial position.
On this episode, we are joined by Dr. Martin L. Boston, assistant professor of Pan-AfricanStudies and Ethnic Studies at California State University Sacramento. Dr. Boston is the author of the doctoral thesis, “Be(Long)ing: New Africanism & South African Cultural Producers Confronting State Repression in an Era of Exile" and other recent articles on culture and the antiapartheid movement.
Black Power Talks is produced by WBPU 96.3 FM "Black Power 96" in St. Petersburg, Florida. It is hosted by Dr. Matsemela Odom, Kondji Mlimwengu and Solyana Bekele, bringing an African Internationalist perspective to the important issues of our world.







