About Us

“Power is the ability to define reality and have others respond to your definition as if it is theirs.” - Dr. Wade Nobles

         Burnett William (“Kwadwo”) Gallman, Jr. was born August 16, 1948 in Hartsville, South Carolina to A. Lenora Doyle Gallman (Hunter) (Maa Kheru) and Burnette William Gallman, Sr (Maa Kheru).

         His mother, a native of Gainesville, GA was an English and music teacher who graduated from Benedict College in Columbia, SC after having matriculated at Spelman College in Atlanta, GA, Morris College in Sumter, SC, Claflin College in Orangeburg, SC and South Carolina State College in Orangeburg, SC (now the South Carolina State University) during the summers. While at Spelman, she was taught piano by a teacher who was said to have been a student of the famous Polish pianist, Ignacy Paderewsky. She was a gifted natural musician with perfect pitch who was able to play music “by ear” as well as with musical scores. Kwadwo credits his mother with teaching him the value of music, the value of hard work, the love of family, and invaluable life skills.

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Kwadwo’s father, Burnette William Gallman, Sr., a Newberry, SC native was a school principal and graduate of the Colored Normal Industrial Agricultural and Mechanical College of South Carolina (now the South Carolina State University). He was on the first “line” of the Xi Psi Chapter of the Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, Inc at SC State in 1929. While at SC State, Gallman, Sr. was the student of Prof. Asa H. Gordon (Maa Kheru), a history and economics professor who wrote Sketches of Negro Life and History in South Carolina. Prof. Gordon also coached Gallman, Sr. on the college debate team. A major part of Kwadwo’s love for history was inherited from his father. Kwadwo’s Step-Father after his father’s transition was Bishop Lenist Hunter (Maa Kheru), a native of Hartsville, SC and Chief Apostle and General Overseer of The Church In The Lord Jesus Christ of the Apostolic Faith who taught him the value of analysis.

         Kwadwo’s maternal grandparents were Dr. Newton Alexander Doyle (Maa Kheru), son of formerly enslaved sharecroppers, a native of Seneca, SC and a 1906 graduate of the Leonard Medical School in Raleigh, NC who also contributed to his love of history and M. Ella Stokes Doyle, (Nana) (Maa Kheru), a native of Wilson, NC and a graduate of Shaw University with a major in Home Economics who modeled grit, perseverance, toughness and temerity.

         His paternal grandparents were George Johnson Gallman, Sr. (Maa Kheru) of Newberry, SC., son of a formerly enslaved father and a non-enslaved mother, a country teacher and graduate of Allen University and Mary Pratt Gallman (Maa Kheru), also of Newberry, a daughter of formerly enslaved parents who died very young from complications of childbirth.

         A genealogy buff, Burnie traced his paternal family to the Mbundu ethnic group in 18th century Angola.

         Burnett (Burnie or Kwadwo) is a 1966 graduate of Butler High School in Hartsville where he graduated as valedictorian and was a National Merit Scholar.  He attended Morehouse College in Atlanta, Georgia in 1966, took classes at Coker College in Hartsville, SC in 1968 and is a 1971 graduate of Benedict College in Columbia South Carolina (his major was Preprofessional Biology with a double minor in Chemistry and Mathematics) His education was partially financed by a band scholarship. At Benedict, he also served for a period as Student Band Director and performed with them at the parades of the Mardi Gras in New Orleans, LA.

         He has been married to the former Jo-Ann (Jodi) Dials of Hartsville, SC since December, 20, 1975 and they are the proud parents of one daughter, Khali, a published author, phone app developer, business consultant, certified web site developer, realtor and entrepreneur. Khali, his pride and joy, is a Cum Laude graduate of the School of Business and Industry at Florida A & M University in Tallahassee, Florida and holds an MBA degree from the Darla Moore School of Business at the University of South Carolina.

         After graduation from Benedict, he taught Science for a year at Butler Junior High School in Hartsville where he also served as assistant band director. He was accepted into the Hahnemann Medical College and Hospital (now the Drexel Medical University) in Philadelphia, PA where he served as chapter vice-president of the Student National Medical Association. He graduated from that institution in 1975. After his first year in medical school, he earned a summer fellowship in Community Psychiatry. Also, while in medical school, he along with several other pre-professional global majority students (medical, dental and veterinary) in the Philadelphia area started a Saturday Science Institute for elementary aged students to introduce the students to careers in science and healthcare. They also tutored the students.

         He credits much of the positive influences in his life to his

 “Village” in Hartsville: his parents, his family, his teachers, his Lawton Drive neighbors and the experiences and exposures at Butler High School and Mt. Calvary A.M.E. Church. The people in the community were almost always positive and supportive and made him feel that he could achieve anything. He also gives much appreciation to the special brotherhood with six other men that was developed more than 30 years ago (and still thrives today) and to the study groups in which he helped to organize.

         He completed his Internship and Residency training in Internal Medicine and Fellowship in Gastroenterology at the District of Columbia General Hospital in Washington DC where he also served a term as president of the House Staff Association. 

         He retired from the private practice of Internal Medicine and Gastroenterology in Columbia, SC after 39 years in partnership with Drs. Ronald L Johnson and D. Taundolyn Suber. He and Dr. Suber now work full time in the Gastroenterology department at the WJB Dorn Veteran’s Medical Center in Columbia. He has also worked with Advantage Medical Associates in Columbia serving individuals with opiate addiction.

         He is a past Vice-Chief and Chief of Internal Medicine at both the former Palmetto Health Richland Memorial Hospital and the Palmetto Health Baptist Medical Center (both of these institutions are now part of the Prisma Health System). He served as Co-Medical Director at the Ridgeway Health and Rehabilitation Center (formerly Tanglewood Nursing home) in Ridgeway, SC and also has worked at the Countrywood Nursing Center in Hopkins, SC.  He has served as contract physician for the Columbia Area Mental Health Center in Columbia, SC the Fairfield County Mental Health Center in Winnsboro, SC and at the Benedict College Student Health Center in Columbia, SC. He served as Medical Director and Co-Medical Director of CarePro Home Health and CarePro Hospice. He has been Co-Investigator for a grant that explored the impact that Faith Institutions have with screening colonoscopy.

         He has been a lecturer for Astra Zeneca Pharmaceutical Company and has lectured for Tap Pharmaceuticals and Eisai, Inc.

He has served in various leadership capacities in both the Palmetto Medical Dental and Pharmaceutical Association and the Congaree Medical, Dental, and Pharmaceutical Association. He is a past President of the Palmetto Medical, Dental and Pharmaceutical Association. He served as co-General Program chair of the Palmetto Medical, Dental and Pharmaceutical Association and is now Chairperson of the Past Presidents’ Council, a Council of Elders for that organization.

         He is a member of Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, Inc.  Sigma Pi Phi Fraternity and The National Association of Guardsmen.

         In 1988, he was “Omega Man of the Year” of the Alpha Beta Beta Chapter of the Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, Inc. in Hartsville, SC.

         In 1990, he was a member of the South Carolina State Advisory Committee for teaching Black History.

         In 1991, he was “Citizen of the Year” of the Omicron Phi Chapter of the Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, Inc. in Columbia, SC.

         In 1991, he received the Community Service Award from the Columbia Alumnae Chapter of the Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc, in Columbia, SC.

         In 1992, he received the Vision Award from Project Impact in Hartsville, SC.

         In 1996, he received the “Scroll of Honor” from the Omicron Phi Chapter of the Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, Inc in Columbia, SC.

         In 1997, he received the Adrenee’ Glover Freeman Community Service Award from the Columbia Business Network Association, in Columbia, SC.

         In 1997, he received the Affirmative Action Community Award from the University of South Carolina Black Faculty and Staff Association.

         In 1998, he was recipient of the Dr. Matilda A. Evans Award In recognition of contributions in the Advancement of Healthcare in the African American Community, presented by the Palmetto Health Alliance.

         He is a 1999 graduate of Leadership South Carolina.

         He was honored in 2013 by the Palmetto Medical Dental and Pharmaceutical Association as “Clinician of the Year.”

         He was honored with inclusion in the 2018 South Carolina African American History Calendar (he was August).

         He was awarded the Leon Love Lifetime Award in 2022 by the WeGoJa Foundation (formerly the South Carolina African American Heritage Foundation).

         He is past South Carolina State Coordinator and currently a member of the National Board of the Association for the Study of Classical African Civilizations (ASCAC).  He also serves as board member of the South Carolina Council for African American Studies (SCCAAS) and the Kemetic Institute for Health and Human Development (KIHHD). He is Board chair of the Organization of Afrikan Unity of South Carolina (OAU-SC), a Pan-Afrikan organization made up of Afrikan descendants from several Afrikan countries, several Caribbean nations and the United States. He is Interim Co-Director and interim board member of the Modjeska Simkins School, a school founded to teach the history of South Carolina that has been ignored, changed or glossed over in history books in the context of race, gender, and economic inequality. He is a member of N'COBRA (National Coalition of Blacks for Reparations in America), and has been a member of The Association of Black Psychologists. He is a member of the Newberry County (SC) Historical Society.

         He is a member of The National Association of Black Social Workers and served for four years as special advisor to the National President of that organization.  Since 2010, he has served as a Sage on the faculty of the Academy for African Centered Social Work (now renamed the Leonard G. Dunston African Centered Nea Onnim Circle), a graduate level school associated with the National Association of Black Social Workers.

         He is the organizer of the Catalyst Mbongi, a think tank made up of representatives from several like-minded activist organizations. He has served on the board of Our Community Organization and has served on the boards of the James R. Clark Memorial Sickle Cell Foundation and the Action Council for Cross Cultural Mental Health and Human Services.  He served as the Mid-Atlantic Regional Coordinator for the National Reparations Convention for African American Descendants of African Slaves. He is a member of the Universal Negro Improvement Association and African Communities League.

         In 1991, he presented a workshop at the First National People of Color Environmental Leadership Summit held in Washington, DC (actually Crystal City, VA) which was attended by more than 650 grassroots and national environmental activists and leaders from all 50 states and all over the world).

         Music has always been an extremely important part of his life from the age of three years when his mother began teaching him piano lessons.  During his teenage years, he earned extra money by playing piano for Sunday services at several churches in the Hartsville, SC area.  He also participated in a neighborhood ensemble, “The Gallman-Thompson Trio”, performing at churches and schools throughout South Carolina.  He served as Student Band Director for the award-winning Butler High School Marching Band and sang with the Butler High School Chorus. While in High School, he attended the Summer Music Institute at North Carolina A & T University where he earned 1st Chair playing the trumpet.  From Ninth to Twelfth grade, he ranked among the top thirty-two black high school trumpet players in segregated Black South Carolina, earning positions on two All-State jazz stage bands, the Junior All-State Band and the Senior All-State Band,

         While at Morehouse College in Atlanta, he participated in the Morehouse College Marching Band, The Atlanta University Chorus and the Internationally acclaimed Morehouse College Glee Club under the direction of the late Dr. Wendell Whalum (Maa Kheru). He performed with these groups in venues from New York, New Jersey and Connecticut to North Carolina, Tennessee, Mississippi and Texas. While with the Morehouse College Glee Club, he had the opportunity to meet the late Nigerian Master Drummer, Michael Babatunde Olatunji and he performed with the Morehouse Glee Club at the funeral of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

         He also performed with an R&B singing group made up of Morehouse students in Atlanta that called themselves, “The Fabulous Dynamics”. They performed at local venues and opened shows for such contemporary performers as Carla Thomas and Ben E. King. They also worked briefly with Major Lance and were offered an opportunity to work with the legendary Curtis Mayfield.

         When. his mother transitioned in 1987, he served briefly as director of the choir at his step-father’s church.

         He is a former part-time Instructor in African and African-American History at the Columbia Junior College (now South University) in Columbia, SC and has lectured both on medical topics and historical/cultural topics to professional, civic, community, religious, and educational groups over the United States and West Africa including several colleges and correctional institutions.  Some of these topics include:

1.      Rites of Passage / Manhood Training / Leadership Development

2.      Various Medical Topics (especially in Gastroenterology)

3.      Afrikan and Afrikan American History and Culture

4.      Environmental Racism

5.      Ancient Egypt

6.      Black Greek Letter Organizations

7.      The Afrikan Origin of Medical Science

8.      Mental Slavery in People of Afrikan Origin

9.      Biographies of Great Black Men and Women

10.     Aging

11.     Afrikan Centered Education

12.     Agnotology

13.     Epigenetics

14.     Motivational topics

15.     Racism in Medicine

16.     Historiography

17.     Mechanisms of Oppression

         He has written, self-published, edited and co-edited several books. He co-authored a critically acclaimed book on Rites of Passage with two other men (which is now in an expanded 2nd edition), and several essays and articles. The Rites of Passage book was based on a program developed by Dr. Gallman along with his brothers, the late Mr. Joe Benton (Maa Kheru) and Baba Derrick Jackson. They worked with many organizations, including the Children’s Defense Fund and most of their graduates are living productive lives, many having established their own programs working with young people. He is a co-author of a book describing why black organizations should be Afrikancentered along with Mr. Benton, Baba Jackson and Dr. Tanya Smith Brice.

         He has been blessed to be able to travel to Afrika on three separate occasions and study the history and culture “up-close”  . Two trips to Ghana were with the Doctors Leonard and Rosalind Jeffries and Professor James Small of the City College of New York, who have become friends and Jegnas to him. A third trip to Ghana and a trip to Egypt were with the Association for the Study of Classical African Civilizations with the Egyptian portion being guided by the late Egyptian scholar Dr. Jacob Carruthers (Maa Kheru) of the Center for Inner City Studies of Northeastern Illinois University in Chicago, IL.

         He was a member of Mbongi Association for Afrikan Transformation (M.A.A.T.), an Mbongi. organized by Dr. Asa Hilliard that included members (at various times) Dr. Kofi Oboafo (Leroy Ervin), Dr. Marimba Ani (who later assumed leadership), Baba Hannibal Afrik, Dr. Wade Nobles, Dr. Cheryl Dozier, Atty. Esmeralda Simmons, Dr. Thomas Parham, Dr. Kobi Kambon, Baba Obadele Williams, and Dr. Adelaide Sanford. They met in the Atlanta area several times, Washington, D.C., Selma, Alabama, Port Gibson, Mississippi and via conference call. One major accomplishment of this group was the publication of the book, To Be Afrikan, that was co-edited by Dr. Ani, Baba Obadele and Kwadwo Gallman. Kwadwo considers his involvement in M.A.A.T. as a major highlight of his life.

         He was an occasional contributor to The Black News, a newspaper in Columbia, SC. and is currently a regular contributor to The Community Times, a weekly newspaper based in Florence, SC. For more than twenty years he was a regular guest on The Urban Scene, a call-in program on WOIC (1230-AM) in Columbia, with host Don Frierson on every Thursday (from 12:00 to 1:00 PM) where they discussed topics related to African and African American History and Culture.  Dr. Gallman called in to do the show from Accra, Ghana in August, 1993.  The Urban Scene is no longer associated with WOIC since late 2001 but now can be heard at the same time on WGVC (620-AM) and Dr. Gallman is still an occasional guest. For a brief time, he and Mr. Frierson conducted a radio study group, discussing such books as Miseducation of the Negro by Carter G. Woodson.

         He has been a preceptor for Nurse Practitioners in training. Over the years, he provided a shadowing program for dozens of young people who were interested in careers in healthcare, allowing them to follow him around, observe his daily routine and work at his office.  He taught them history, heritage and self-pride during this period.  He is blessed and gratified to still have close relationships with many of these young people, most of whom have achieved tremendously. He takes great pride in the success of the young people that he has had the honor to influence over the years, several of which have earned doctoral degrees, many of which have earned Master’s Degrees and most of which are college graduates.  Three have graduated from medical school.

         He developed a short-lived survey course at Benedict College that was designed to acquaint students interested in careers in healthcare with the Afrikan origins of healthcare. He arranged for representatives of healthcare specialties to visit, lecture, answer questions and interact with the students.

         He has hosted a radio "infomercial" called The 4-1-1 on WLGO (1170-AM) that covered medical and historical/cultural topics several times daily.

         For several years, Dr. Gallman did a show on WWDM-FM, It’s Your Health, that started out as a 7:00 AM to 8:00 AM program in which listeners could call in with questions on medical topics.  Dr. Gallman often had guests who were medical specialists.  The show evolved into a format in which Dr. Gallman called in at 7:50 AM every Monday and gave a sixty to ninety second presentation on a medical topic.

         He has been interviewed several times on the award-winning program, The Job Man Caravan on the South Carolina Educational Television Network (the late Bill Terrell (Maa Kheru) and P.A. Bennett were the hosts).  He has also appeared as a guest on the program For the People hosted by his close friend, the late Listervelt Middleton (Maa Kheru).  This very important program was also seen on the South Carolina Educational Television Network. He has also participated in a panel discussion on Rites of Passage on the SCETV program Connections, hosted by P.A.  Bennett.

         He has hosted two “spots” on the internet station 99SmoothFM. “Your Health and Mine” gives information on health and “The Untold Truth” gives historical, cultural and civics information.

         He has also been interviewed, along with Prof. James Small, formerly of the City College of New York, on the public access television program Tet a Tet in New York City and has been interviewed on Ghana television in Accra, Ghana with other members of the ASCAC Board.    

         He is a past trustee of I. De Quincey Newman United Methodist Church in Columbia, SC and past Temple Council Chair of the Imani Temple #84 of the African American Catholic Congregation in Columbia, SC.  He is currently a member of the Council of Elders of the KRST Universal Temple in Columbia, SC.

         Burnett Kwadwo Gallman is an eternal student with many interests. As a physician, he is focused on the health and welfare of all humanity and especially eradicating racial health disparities. He is also focused on educating the public about the Afrikan origin of healthcare as well as exposing the inequities and racism in the history of healthcare in America. As an amateur historian, he has studied, taught, lectured, and written on topics as varied as ancient Kemetic (Egyptian) history and culture, medieval West Afrikan history, and the history and culture of AUSA (Afrikans from the United States of America) people.

As a science fiction buff, he has enjoyed reading the works of Walter Mosley, Isaac Asimov, Michael Harriot and Harlan Ellison and writing in the genre of Afro-futurism. As a former musician, he has amassed a large collection of vinyl albums, cassette tapes, and CDs of jazz, R & B, gospel, Afrikan music, Afrikan drumming, and European classical music which he listens to while performing his medical duties. As an amateur genealogist, as mentioned, he has researched his family history, tracing his paternal line to 18th century Angola. As a “race man”, he has studied, lectured, and written on such varied topics as Racism, Agnotology, Epigenetics, and Afrikan-centered Rites of Passage.

PUBLICATIONS

Gallman, Burnett W.  The Doyles in History.  Imhotep Enterprises, 1986

Galllman, Burnett W.  Gallman Ends Tenure.  The Hartsville Messenger, December 17, 1986, Hartsville, SC

Gallman, Burnett W.  Black-Owned Medical Facility DedicatedThe Hartsville Messenger, Hartsville, SC, December (, 1987

Gallman, Burnett W.  Blacks In America Made Contributions, Too.  The Hartsville Messenger, February 25, 1987, Hartsville, SC

Gallman, Burnett W., M.D.  From Africa to South Carolina:  A Brief Review of the Contributions of Africans and African Americans to Medicine.  The Journal of the South Carolina Medical Association, May, 1988

Gallman, Burnett W.  What is a Black Greek? Que-View,  Fall, 1988

Gallman, Burnett W.  Meet Alpha Beta Beta.  Que-View, Fall, 1988

Gallman, Burnett W.  Alpha Beta Beta Has Achievement Week Program, Que-View, Spring, 1989

Gallman, Burnett W.  An Afrocentric Look at Greek Letter Organizations, Que-View, Fall, 1989

Gallman, Burnett W.  Constipation. Columbia Black News, Columbia, SC, February, 1990

Gallman, Burnett W.  The History of the Red, Black, and Green Flag, African-American Events, Volume 1, Number 5, March, 1990

Gallman, Burnett W.  New Directions (Or Reclaiming the Origins) For Omega.  Que View April, 1990

Gallman, Burnett W.  An Appeal to My Brothers, African-American Events, Volume 1, Number 6, April, 1990

Gallman, Burnett W.  The Historical Elimination of the Legacy of Henry Highland Garnet, Habari Gani, Volume 1, Number 1, Autumn, 1990

Gallman, Burnett W.  Black History is Important All Year Long.  The State, Sunday, January 27, 1991, Columbia, SC

Gallman, Burnett W.  Medical Meanderings.  Palmetto Medical, Dental, and Pharmaceutical Association:  Newsletter for Healthcare Professionals. Spring, 1991

Gallman, Burnett W.  The Importance of Africancentrism in Improving the Academic Performance of African American Students, The State of Black South Carolina 1990 (Editor:  Kenneth Campbell), Columbia Urban League, Spring,1991

Gallman, Burnett W.  The Power of Nineteenth Century Afrikans in America, Kemetic Echoes.: ASCAC South Carolina Newsletter, Fall 1992

Gallman, Burnett W.:  Environmental Racism and the Health of South Carolinians of African Origin, The State of Black South Carolina:  An Action Agenda for The Future, (Edited by Kenneth Campbell), Columbia Urban League, 1992-1993 Edition, Columbia, SC

Gallman, Burnett W. (Editor). Voices From AARI-SC:  Offerings on African Life, Columbia: Imhotep Enterprises, 1993

Gallman, Burnett W.  Innervisions:  Rx For Survival For People of African Origin, Imhotep Enterprises, Columbia, 1994

Gallman, Burnett W.  False Eurocentric Attacks Against Africancentric Curricula.  Serekh, Volume 5, Number 1 Promoting an AfricanWorld View, 1994, The Association for the Study of Classical African Civilizations, Los Angeles, CA

Gallman, Burnett W.  Afrikancentrism and Environmental Thoughts, All About Detroit, Volume 1, Number 28, April, 1994

Gallman, Burnett W. Jr, M.D.  Unleash the Potential of Black Greek-Letter Organizations.  Visions, Volume 2, Number 4, Summer/Fall, 1996

Gallman, Burnett W., M.D.  African Origins in Health Care and Medicine.  Visions.  Volume 4, Number 2, Winter, 1998

Benton, Joe, Derrick Jackson and Burnett Gallman. Project:  Sankofa!: A Rites of Passage Program:  Philosophy, Theory and Overview.  Columbia: Our Community Organization, 1998

Gallman, Burnett W.  The Shoulders We Stand On.  Columbia: Imhotep Enterprises. 1999

Gallman, Burnett "Kwadwo". Symbols:  To Know, Show, Feel, and Tell:  Or Using Our Stuff Instead of Other Peoples' Stuff.  Columbia: Imhotep Enterprises, 2001

Gallman, Burnett "Kwadwo". Asanti Twi:  A Brief Introduction to a Language of Ghana and Selected Aspects of Ghanaian History and Culture.  Columbia: Imhotep Enterprises, 2001

Gallman, Kwadwo and Marimba Ani and Larry Obadele Williams (Editors):  To Be African:  Essays by Africans in the Process of Sankofa:  Returning To Our Source Of Power.  Atlanta: M.A.A.T., 2002

Gallman, Burnett W. Martin Robison Delany: African American History Maker.  Black News, Columbia, SC, March 21-27, 2002

Gallman, Burnett W.  Congaree Medical, Dental and Pharmaceutical Association Holds Awards Ceremony.  Black News, Columbia, SC March 28-April 3, 2002

Gallman, Burnett Kwadwo (Editor). Contemporary Analyses of David Walker’s Appeal and Other Essays by Members of the Khun Anup/Walker Study Group of Krst Universal Temple.  Columbia: Krst Universal Temple, 2005

Gallman, Burnett Kwadwo.  Reparations:  Quick and Concise Considerations:  Brief, Topical, No-Frills Discussions of Aspects of Reparations, The Maafa, Racism/White Supremacy and White Privilege With References.  Columbia: Imhotep Enterprises, 2005

Kwadwo.  The Black Papers: To Be AfrikanColumbia: Imhotep-The Drum.  2008

Benton, Joe, Tanya Brice, Burnett Kwadwo Gallman, Derrick Jackson. Should Black Organizations and Institutions Be Afrikancentered?.  Columbia: Joint Ventures, 2014

Gallman, Kwadwo. To Be Human: The Conflict Continues. Columbia, SC, 2020

Gallman, Burnett Kwadwo. Sankofa University: Studying African-Centered History and Culture. Columbia: Imhotep-The Drum, 2020

Gallman, Burnett W “Kwadwo”. The Lies Continue: The Assault on Truth: On Critical Race theory: The Original Identity Theft. The Community Times. Volume 35, Number 1, January 6-12, 2022

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. Are Afrikan Americans Oppressed? The Community Times, Volume 35, Number 2, January 13-19, 2022

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. Let’s talk About Ignorance. The Community Times. Volume 35, Number 3, January 20-26, 2022

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. Curing our Amnesia. The Community Times. Volume 35, Number 4, January 27-February 2,2022

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. Words to Think More About. The Community Times. Volume 35, Number 5, February 3-9, 2022

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. Let’s Tell the Truth About Afrika. The Community Times. Volume 35, Number 6, February 10-16, 2022

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. Politics, Politicians and AUSA. The Community Times. Volume 35, Number 7, February 17-23, 2022

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. The “R” Word. The Community Times. Volume 35, Number 8, February 25, 2022

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. The Same Old Debate. The Community Times. Volume 25, Number 9, March 3-9, 2022

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. Colorectal Cancer (CRC) in Afrikan Americans. The Community Times, Volume 35, Number 10, March 10-16, 2022

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. Ego Starvation and Arrogance. The Community Times, Volume 35, Number 12, March 17-23, 2022

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. Just What Is Pan-Afrikanism?. The Community Times, Volume 35, Number 13, March 24-30, 2022

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. What is the Difference Between Slavery and Colonialism?. The Community Times, Volume 35, Number 14, March 31-April 6, 2022

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. Black Women. The Community Times, Volume 35, Number 15, April 7-13, 2022

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. Who Writes History...and Why?. The Community Times, Volume 35, Number 16, April 14-20, 2022

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. GERD or Acid Reflux?. The Community Times, Volume 35, Number 17, April 21-27, 2022

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. Our Champions: Martin Robison Delany. The Community Times, Volume 35, Number 18, April 28-May 4, 2022

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. Environmental Racism. The Community Times, Volume 35, Number 19, May 5-11, 2022

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. Dreaming of a Pan-Afrikan World. The Community Times, Volume 35, Number 20, May 12-18, 2022

Gallman, Burnett. Critical Race Theory: Fact vs. Fiction. The Minority Eye: Our Lives Through Our Eyes. The Mid-Week Newslink-A Community Newswire. April 18, 2022

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. Playing Hard to Get. The Community Times, Volume 35, Number 21, May 19-25, 2022

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. AUSA and the Police. The Community Times, Volume 35, Number 22, May 26-June 1, 2022

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. Another Medical Silent Killer. The Community Times, Volume 35, Number 23, June 2-8, 2022

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. Giving Up Our Institutions. The Community Times, Volume 35, Number 23, June 9-15, 2022

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. Knowledge and Violence. The Community Times, Volume 35, Number 24, June 16-22, 2022

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. Race and the Crimes Bill. The Community Times, Volume 35, Number 25, June 23-29, 2022

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. What is Juneteenth?. The Community Times, Volume 36, Number 26, June 30-July 6, 202 

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. Eugenics: The Nasty Gift that Keeps on Giving. The Community Times, Volume 36, Number 27, July 7-13, 2022

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”.Pronoun Trouble. The Community Times, Volume 36, Number 29, July 21-27, 2022

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. The Hypocrisy of Racism, Or Racial Schizophrenia. The Community Times, Volume 36, Number 30, July 18-August 3, 2022

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. The Power of Words and Labels: Psychological Stereotypes. The Community Times, Volume 36, Number 31, August  4-10, 2022

Benton, Joe, Derrick Jackson and Burnett Gallman. Project:  Sankofa!: A Rites of Passage Program:  Philosophy, Theory and Overview: Expanded Second Edition.  Columbia: Our Community Organization, 2022

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. Creating “The Other”: Us vs. Them. The Community Times, Volume 36, Number 33, August  18-24, 2022

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. Messaging, Entertainment and Stereotypes. The Community Times, Volume 36, Number 34, August  25-31, 2022

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”.  What in the World is Ebonics?. The Community Times, Volume 36, Number 35, September 1-7, 2022

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. Why Vote? The Community Times, Volume 36, Number 36, September 8-14, 2022

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. What is the Replacement Theory? The Community Times, Volume 36, Number 37, September 15-21, 2022

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. AUSA Have More Than One Culture The Community Times, Volume 36, Number 38, September 22-28, 2022

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. More Stereotypes The Community Times, Volume 36, Number 39, September 29-October 5, 2022

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. Who Were Afrikans Before Contact With European Enslavement The Community Times, Volume 36, Number 40, October 6-12, 2022

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. Afrikan Deep Thought, Part 1. The Community Times, Volume 36, Number 41 October 13-19, 2022

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. Afrikan Deep Thought, Part 2. The Community Times, Volume 36, Number 42 October 20-26, 2022

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. The Robesons: Malignant Governmental Pettiness. The Community Times, Volume 36, Number 42 October 27-November 3, 2022

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. Seize the Moment! Your Grandchildren’s Grandchildren’s Lives May Be Improved By Your Actions. The Community Times, Volume 36, Number 44, November 3-9, 2022

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”.What Is A Maroon?. The Community Times, Volume 36, Number 44, November 3-9, 2022

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”.What Is A Maroon?. The Community Times, Volume 36, Number 44, November 3-9, 2022

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. Deceptive Words. The Community Times, Volume 37, Number 1-7, December 1-7, 2022

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. Elitism Among the Oppressed. The Community Times, Volume 36, Number 48, December 8-14, 2022

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. Stereotypes, Capitalism and Culture Thieves: Profiting from AUSA. The Community Times, Volume 36, Number 48, December 15-21, 2022

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”.The Black Family: Let’s You and Her Fight. The Community Times, Volume 36, Number 51, December 22-28, 2022

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. Deceptive Words. The Community Times, Volume 36, Number 52, December 29, 2022-January 4, 2023

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. More Deceptive Words. The Community Times, Volume 37, Number 1, January 5-11, 2023

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. More Stereotypes, Capitalism and Culture Thieves: Profiting from AUSA. The Community Times, Volume 37, Number 2, January 12-18, 2023

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. The Chevalier de Saint-Georges. The Community Times, Volume 37, Number 3, January 19-25, 2023

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. Entertainment: Pleasure, Propaganda and Distraction. The Community Times, Volume 37, Number 4, January 26-Febtuary 1, 2023

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. Socialization and Education or Indoctrination for Assimilation. The Community Times, Volume 37, Number 5, February 2-8, 2023

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. Making a Slave, Part One. The Community Times, Volume 37, Number 6, February 9-15, 2023

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. Making a Slave, Part Two. The Community Times, Volume 37, Number 7, February 16-22, 2023

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. Are AUSA Paranoid?. The Community Times, Volume 37, Number 8, February 23-March 1, 2023

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. About White Supremacy. The Community Times, Volume 37, Number 9, March 2-8, 2023

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. Deceptive Words. The Community Times, Volume 37, Number 10, March 9-15, 2023

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. Bacon’s Rebellion and Whiteness. The Community Times, Volume 37, Number 11, March 16-22, 2023

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. Problems and Solutions: Identty, Purpose and Direction. The Community Times, Volume 37, Number 12, March 23-29, 2023

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. Dr. Matilda Arabella Evans. The Community Times, Volume 37, Number 15, April 13-19, 2023

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. Double Standards. The Community Times, Volume 37, Number 16, April 20-26, 2023

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. History is More Important Than Ever to AUSA. The Community Times, Volume 37, Number 19, May 11-17, 2023

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. Some White Folks are Afraid of Equity. The Community Times, Volume 37, Number 20, May 18-24, 2023

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. Making White People Comfortable. The Community Times, Volume 37, Number 22, June 1-7, 2023

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. Thoughts. on Being “Woke”. The Community Times, Volume 37, Number 23, June 8-14, 2023

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. That “Minority” Thing. The Community Times, Volume 37, Number 24, June 15-21

Gallman, Burnett W. “Kwadwo”. The. Intergenerational Transmission of Knowledge. The Community Times, Volume 37, Number 25, June 22-28