The Pan-African Reconciliation Project was founded in the summer of 2008 and exists to improve relations between black folks from the Caribbean and the Americas, and those from Continental Africa. It is funded by the Black Billionaires of America. The organization puts young black folks from all cultures in touch with mentors who will teach them the way forward. This happens at the college level, of course. Participating campuses include Morehouse College, Spelman College, Georgia State University, FAMU, Tuskegee University, Rice University and a few other big-name schools.
Sixteen years later, the PARP is still going strong. Generations of young black men and young black women from places like the United States of America, Haiti, Barbados, Saint Lucia, Cuba and Canada have gotten to know their counterparts in Nigeria, Somalia, Ethiopia, Ghana, South Africa, Brazil and other places. Khadija Okolie was among the first Nigerian students to come to America to be mentored by an African American academic as part of the PARP. After graduating from the University of Lagos, Khadija Okolie earned a Law degree from Emory University. She joined the law faculty at Georgia State University shortly after.
"Black sensuality for black men and black women is an ancient tradition which has been forgotten by our people because of puritanical Eurocentric patriarchy," said Dr. Khadija Okolie, professor emeritus at Georgia State University's School of Law. The six-foot-tall, dark-skinned and curvy African American woman smiled at her new apprentice Jaden Beauharnais. The brown-skinned and curly-haired young man had a lot to learn. Afrocentric thought is not easy for some to grasp after decades spent in the Eurocentric system of thought and education. Khadija does what she can to bring enlightenment to her people, though...
"Agreed," Jaden Beauharnais replied. Born in the environs of Atlanta, Georgia, to a Haitian immigrant father and a white mother, Jaden is quite handsome and brilliant. After graduating from Morehouse College, Jaden is studying Law at Georgia State University. Khadija Okolie, a professor of legal ethics at Georgia State University, has taken a personal interest in Jaden. The brother is curious about African culture and African women. Well, Khadija felt drawn to Jaden too. A mutually beneficial agreement was reached by these two parties.
"First, I must experience your ardor," Khadija said, and Jaden nodded. The two of them got it on, right in Khadija's office at the back of the Student Center Building in the Georgia State University campus. Lying on the desk, pants at her ankles and legs spread, Khadija rubbed her nipples as Jaden licked her pussy. The biracial stud was on his knees, with his handsome face buried between Khadija's thick dark thighs. Jaden has fucked white girls and black girls all over Metro Atlanta but he has never been with an authentic African immigrant woman before. Khadija Okolie, a native of Kano, Nigeria, is as authentic as they get...