

25 mins
The video explains the origins of Tamare / Afrikan Yoga and its deep historical connection to ancient Africa, long before the development of Indian yoga. The speaker describes Smi (Sema/Smai) as the ancient African science of breath, practiced by Wab priests across regions including Egypt, Sudan, Ethiopia, Uganda, and Rwanda. He emphasizes that Afrikan Yoga predates Kemetic (KMT) priesthood and is rooted in the elemental, flowing movements of farmers, fishermen, and people who lived close to the land. The lecture also traces how priesthood developed from these early earth‑based communities, how the name Tamare (“beloved land”) shifted to Kemet, and how invasions led African priesthoods to migrate into Arabia, China, and India—bringing their knowledge with them. The speaker argues that African influence shaped early Indian yogic traditions and highlights the presence of Africoid peoples in India and Pakistan as evidence of this long historical connection.