You are using an outdated browser. Some features may not work correctly, and your experience will not be good. Update your browser

What ancient African myths can teach us about power and leadership today

Chinenye Egbuna Ikwuemesi


Organisation:
Afrodeities Institute
Regions:
England, Wales, Scotland
Notice Period:
Regular (more than one month's notice)
Type:
Professional
Fee:
Paid
Category:
Business
Updated:
14th March 2026

How ideas like Ma’at (balance and justice), Ifá (consequence) and Ubuntu (relationship) speak directly to modern questions of authority, corruption and responsibility, with vivid stories instead of dry theory.

Views: 7 | Enquiries: 0

About Chinenye Egbuna Ikwuemesi

Chinenye Egbuna Ikwuemesi spent 25 years transforming complex organisations. Then she went looking for older models, and found them exactly where history said there was nothing to find.

She is the author of "Nigerian Mythology: The Shadow Sky," "Meet the Orisas" and "The Girl Who Climbed the Tree," and the founder of the Afrodeities Institute, which treats African myths, philosophies and governance traditions as serious civilisational blueprints rather than colourful anedotes.

Her talks take audiences into worlds most of us were never taught existed. The Kemetic concept of Ma'at, a framework of cosmic balance and accountability that predates Greek philosophy by two thousand years. The Yoruba Ifa system, whose mathematical architecture is structurally identical to the binary logic underlying modern computing. The West African empire of Wagadu, whose priests engineered a memory system sophisticated enough to outlast civilisational collapse.

These are not origin stories dressed up as inspiration. They are working models with something urgent to say about how we build institutions, make decisions, think about AI, and decide whose knowledge counts. Audiences leave with a different map of the world in their heads, a new set of questions about the systems they inhabit, and consistently, a strong desire to keep talking long after the formal session ends.


Send a message to the speaker

If you are interested in this talk and wish to contact the speaker, please complete the following form:

 
Please provide your contact name
 
Please provide the name of your group
 
Your phone number so that the speaker can contact you
 
Your email address so that the speaker can contact you
 
Give details about the event, time of day and location
Prove you are human please.
Use the slider to drag the puzzle so that the top and bottom are aligned , or use an alternate text based challenge by clicking here.
Question: Is water wet?
 

Site Search

Search across all speakers, topics and tags. Put your search term in the box and press enter or hit search

Use quotes around exact multiple word searches, eg "winston churchill".