One Black Voice are here!
One Black Voice Productions is proud to present the &
the .
Each set is based on my most beautiful and powerful photographs taken in Ghana,West Africa, and Egypt/Kemet.
Check out these meaningful photos below at Timbuktu African Imports at 512 South Ave. in Syracuse, or place your order through e-mail: oneblackvoice@aol.com. Greeting cards are sold in sets of 10 for $10. (Large photos below are the Afrikan Appreciation Series version, without writing on the front. Each card is approximately 5x7 inches, with space inside for your own personal messages to fit any occasion).
Please send your order in by e-mail. PayPal service is coming very soon. Thank you for your patience.
All photos by Jacque Kofi, One Black Voice
The Pyramids of Giza in Egypt, once called Kemet,
or, Land of the Blacks. / Kwanzaa version.
Hornblowers at Kwame Nkrumah Memorial Park in Accra, Ghana. / Kwanzaa version.
Statue of Kwame Nkrumah, Ghana's first / Kwanzaa version.
president and a leader in the Pan Afrikan movement.
Statue outside the Cairo Museum in Kemet/Egypt. / Kwanzaa version.
Art outside of the Kwame Nkrumah Museum in Accra, Ghana. / Kwanzaa version.
At Kokrobite Beach, Ghana. / Kwanzaa version.
Tongo is the home of the Gologo Festival, which is a harvest / A building at the Sirigu Women Organization of Pottery & Art (SWOPA),
celebration asking The God for the good rain to grow the crops / where more than 150 women joined to preserve culture, art and become entrepreneurs.
and feed the people and animals. Such ancient festivals in Afrika
form the basis for the modern Kwanzaa celebrations,
which have spread throughout the world. Kwanzaa version.
An example of the artistry at the Sirigu Women / In Kemet/Egypt, ancient artist drawings and wall
Organization of Pottery and Art (SWOPA) in / reliefs attest to the harvest celebrations of antiquity
Ghana. More than 150 women joined to create / and modern times that form the basis for the 7-day
a business venture that preserves and showcases / Kwanzaa celebration.
the area's culture. Afrikan Appreciation.
<FONTCOLOR=#FFFFFF>Thanks for visiting!