The pioneers of Black scholarship (including Edward Blyden, Rufus Perry, W. E. B. DuBois, Carter G. Woodson, Arthur Schomburg, J. A. Rogers, John Bruce, Hubert Henry Harrison, John Jackson, Dr. Ben-Jochannan, Chancelor Williams, John Henrik Clark and Asa Hilliard, III) wrote about the positive side of blackness in a society that uses that color as a symbol for evil. They dug deep into the history of Black people, past the hype, to find diamonds of ingenuity buried beneath boulders of racism and found pearls of wisdom from seas of Black antiquity. With an inner compass of truth, they mapped out our pathways through the calcified lies of the stereotype, and illuminated Black elevator shafts of spirit.Prominent social psychologist Wade W. Nobles has dedicated his life to probing, dissecting and analyzing a single question, “What is Black psychology?” Seeking the Sakhu: Foundational Writings for an African Psychology represents Dr. Nobles’ commitment to the reclamation, reformation, and restoration of the African mind. Noble provides solutions for building healthy Black families and for empowering the African self. Seeking the Sakhuis for those searching for answers to the spiritual and psychological challenges that Africans face all over the world.In Seeking the Sakhu: Foundamental Writings for an African Psychology, Dr. Wade NoblesĀ guides us to portals in our low ceiling of reality. ItĀ is the lost-and-found of the African self.

