Dr. John Henrik Clarke, 83, a leading African American historian and scholar, died of a heart attack Thursday at St. Luke’s Hospital in New York. An activist as well as a scholar, Mr. Clarke was once a confidant of Malcolm X and an adviser to Kwame Nkrumah, the first president of Ghana. He was a leading proponent of the Afrocentric view of history and culture. Though he never graduated from high school, Mr. Clarke became an authority on African history and culture. He is perhaps best known as a leader in the development of curricula for African American studies
The DVDs
The Great Debate: Mary Lefkowitz
Notes of An Afrikan Revolution
Malcolm X
Role of The African Woman in History
Malcolm, Martin & Liberation
Islam & The Arabs
The Necessity of Returning to African Customs
African Spirituality before Europe
Columbus & Genocide
The African Holocaust
Origin & Impact of Racism
Africa: From Slavery to Colonialism
African Self Reliance
African Diary of South Carolina
Dialogue of Differences Ft. Cornell West
A Great and Mighty Walk
Africa in the 20th Century
At Feet of The GrandMasters
Mother MAAFA
Trans-Atlantic Trade
Black Athena Debate
The African in The U.S. 1915 – 1945
Lecture about Cheikh Anta Diop
The African in The U.S.1865 – 1895
The African in The U.S. 1963 – 1973
Civil Rights & Dream Deferred
Legacy of Marcus Garvey
Africa Time in Trouble Coming of The European
The Slave Trade
The African in The Making of America
Emancipation Reconstruction & Betrayal
African Radical Thinkers 19th & 20th Century
African Resistance Movements of The 19th Century
Slavery & Resistance The 1st Phase
The ZULU Wars
Africa Before Slavery
Black Business In The 21st Century
What is This Stuff called Islam
All of Dr. John H. Clarkes DVDs