• Food is a Memory
    Apr 28 2026

    Food is more than something you eat—it’s history, identity, and connection. In this episode of Sankofa Sessions, guest moderator Katina Moss sits down with Duron Chevis and Chef Tye Hall for Food is a Memory, a rich conversation about how cuisine carries the stories of the African diaspora across generations and borders. From ancestral roots to modern kitchens, they explore how flavors, ingredients, and traditions preserve culture, spark nostalgia, and keep heritage alive.

    This episode goes beyond the plate, digging into the emotional and cultural power of food—how it connects us to where we come from and shapes where we’re going.

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    31 mins
  • Unlearning the Divide
    Apr 27 2026

    In this episode of Sankofa Sessions, Kofi Annan leads a thought-provoking conversation with Dr. Yawende Austin, Professor Bobby, SegeBami, and Bill McGee in Unlearning the Divide. Together, they take a hard look at the systems, stories, and lived experiences that have shaped division across communities in the African diaspora and beyond. This isn’t surface-level talk—it's an honest, necessary dialogue about how separation is learned, internalized, and reinforced over time.

    Each panelist brings a unique perspective, challenging assumptions and offering insight into what it really takes to move toward unity, understanding, and collective progress. This conversation pushes viewers to rethink what they’ve been taught and consider how we actively unlearn division in our own lives and communities.

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    41 mins
  • Shades of Us: Confronting Colorism in the Black Community
    Apr 7 2026

    This episode takes a hard look at colorism—one of the most persistent and uncomfortable issues within the Black community. Joined by DEI specialist Shareem Annan, who brings over 20 years of experience in diversity, equity, and inclusion work, the conversation digs into how skin tone has shaped identity, access, and perception both historically and today.

    From beauty standards and media representation to workplace dynamics and personal relationships, we unpack the subtle—and not so subtle—ways colorism continues to show up in our lives. Shareem offers both professional insight and real-world perspective on how these biases are formed, reinforced, and, more importantly, how they can be challenged.

    It’s an honest, necessary conversation about what it will take to confront colorism within our own community—and move toward something more unified, aware, and intentional.

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    52 mins
  • The Cost of Fitting In: Code-Switching Unpacked
    Mar 20 2026

    This episode is just the two Kofis going all the way in on code-switching—no guest, no filter.

    They break down what code-switching really is, when it starts, and why so many Black professionals feel like it’s the unspoken rule for survival. One side sees it as strategy—a necessary tool to navigate power, access opportunity, and move effectively across spaces. The other questions the cost: What are you giving up every time you adjust your voice, your tone, your presence?

    From corporate boardrooms to everyday interactions, they unpack whether code-switching is intelligence in action—or a quiet form of cultural compromise. And more importantly: is this something we should accept, resist, or outgrow entirely?

    If you’ve ever felt like you had to become a different version of yourself just to be heard, this conversation is going to hit.

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    39 mins
  • Sovereignty vs. Democracy: The Traoré Debate
    Mar 2 2026

    Across Africa and the diaspora, Ibrahim Traoré is being celebrated as a symbol of resistance against Western dominance. But beyond the symbolism, what is actually happening inside Burkina Faso? Has security improved? Is the economy stabilizing? And what does his break with ECOWAS mean for the region’s future? This episode moves past the hype to explore whether this moment represents genuine self-determination — or a risky detour away from democratic accountability.

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    59 mins
  • Black Beyond Borders: The Afro-Latino Story They Don’t Teach
    Feb 18 2026

    What happens when Africa meets Latin America—and then collides with the United States?

    In this episode, we sit down with Edalio—Afro-Latino cultural leader, musician, educator, and co-founder of Capiku Cultural Center—to unpack the overlooked history and lived reality of Africans in Latin America.

    From the transatlantic slave trade to Puerto Rico’s African roots… from colorism and identity politics to music, dance, and resistance… we examine how Blackness shows up differently across borders—and why it still matters today.

    Edalio shares his journey growing up in Puerto Rico and Philadelphia, navigating what it means to be both Black and Latino, and building cultural space right here in Petersburg. This conversation doesn’t romanticize culture—it gets honest about anti-Blackness, invisibility, solidarity, and the power of reclaiming heritage.

    If you think you understand the African diaspora, this episode will stretch you.

    Because Blackness doesn’t stop at English. And history didn’t end at the U.S. shoreline.

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    1 hr and 1 min
  • Raising the Next Generation: Culture, Identity, and Black Fatherhood
    Feb 10 2026

    Here’s a YouTube-ready description that’s real, grounded, and doesn’t fluff it up:

    What does it actually look like to pass culture on to your kids in America?

    In this episode of Sankofa Sessions, hosts Kofi Annan and Kofi Adih sit down with their sons for a rare, honest conversation about identity, heritage, and the responsibility of raising culturally grounded Black children in a society that often pushes assimilation over remembrance.

    Both hosts come from mixed-heritage households—Caribbean, African, and African American—and they don’t just talk about culture, they talk with the next generation. From language and food to values, traditions, and the moments where culture gets tested, this episode explores what sticks, what gets lost, and what has to be taught on purpose.

    This isn’t a polished “parenting tips” episode. It’s a real family conversation about:

    • How kids experience culture differently than their parents
    • What traditions matter—and why
    • The tension between fitting in and staying rooted
    • What the next generation actually remembers (and what they don’t)

    If you’re raising kids, thinking about legacy, or wondering how culture survives beyond one generation, this conversation is for you.

    Culture doesn’t pass itself on. Someone has to choose it.

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    52 mins
  • Hip Hop at 50: Culture, Capitalism, and Consequences
    Jan 26 2026

    Fifty years after its birth in the Bronx, Hip Hop has become a global force—shaping fashion, language, politics, and identity across the African diaspora. But with that influence comes a hard question: has Hip Hop—and the musical cultures it has influenced—become a net negative for the Black community?

    In this episode of Sankofa Sessions, hosts Kofi Annan and Kofi Adih are joined by Sudan, aka One True Poet—DJ, artist, and cultural curator—for a candid, intergenerational conversation about where Black music is headed and who’s really steering it.

    Together, they examine how the commercialization of Hip Hop mirrors similar trends in Dancehall, Afrobeats, Amapiano, and other diasporic sounds—from algorithm-driven hits and corporate gatekeeping to shifting values around money, masculinity, gender, and power.

    Is today’s music simply reflecting lived reality, or reinforcing harmful narratives?
    Do DJs and artists have a responsibility beyond the crowd and the check?
    And as Black music goes global, what parts of the culture are being elevated—and what parts are being erased?

    This episode doesn’t offer easy answers. It offers necessary questions about art, accountability, ownership, and the future of Black culture across the diaspora.

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    1 hr and 17 mins