MWALIMU
To work in the spirit of Sankofa, we apply the teachings, guidance, and wisdom of all that have come before us, to advance the vision of Iya Adeniji, and African people of the Diaspora
Uraua Am Tehuti Khamau
Uraua Am Tehuti Khamau serves as the chief priest and paramount King of the Pennsylvania area of the Ausar Auset Society.
For the past 28 years, he has been responsible for the administration of classes and ceremonies for the African American community in Philadelphia, Trenton NJ and Pittsburgh Pa. With the assistance of the regions priesthood body he has officiated marriage, funerary and naming ceremonies and sponsored hundreds of uplifting community programs throughout this period.
Beginning his training in martial arts at age 16, Uraua has developed proficiency in Japanese Goju and later went on to found a Capoeira group in Philadelphia. His early exposure to breathing and meditation practices in these arts matured with his training in Taoist yoga, Qi Gong and Iron crotch Iron Shirt Qi Gong under the direction of the sage Ra Un Nefer Amen.
Professionally Uraua has 30 years of experience in business development focused on marketing retail sales and real estate. He has been instrumental in the founding of several Ausar Auset ventures including current retail operations of the Nile Cafe Vegan Restaurant and Nuwaters, an industrial scale water purification business. He also played a pivotal role in the acquisition of the 20.000 square foot complex in Philadelphia that serves as the groups headquarters and retail operation.
In addition to teaching weekly, Uraua provides personal and group counseling in the areas of spiritual development, relationships and business.
Dr. Huberta Jackson Lowman
Dr. Jackson-Lowman’s research examines the effects of the intersectionality of race, gender, class, and culture on the health, mental health, and relationships of women of Afrikan ancestry and explores the use of cultural strategies in the socialization of Black youth. An emerging area of research focuses on the use of cultural policy to reset standards and norms in troubled Black communities and foster a sense of agency and empowerment.
She and her husband, William Lowman, currently reside in Tallahassee, Florida. Both are former residents of Pittsburgh and were actively engaged in addressing social and political issues within the Black community, notably their involvement in the filing of a complaint against the Pittsburgh Public Schools with the Pennsylvania Human Relations Commission for failing to educate Black children. They have three children and five grandchildren.
Mukwae Wabei Siyolwe
As the artistic producing director of global posse productions, inc., she was a screenwriting fellow with Miramax Films for the Sundance Institute and Southern African Screenwriters Lab (SCRAWL), she is a pitching finalist at Sithengi Film and TV Market, South Africa. She writes her own blog and is a contributor to Afrikadaa, a Paris based journal of Afro art and design. Wade in the Water, a hybrid immersive film is her new work and is currently touring Yucatan, Mexico.
She is a producer on Two 1/2 years, a mixtape album about the spirit of Juneteenth with international and national jazz and hip hop musicians. Recipient of multiple grants, she recently was awarded the Heshima Lifetime Achievement Award for Cry Freedom from the Tazama Film Festival.
Dr. Anthony B. Mitchell, Sr.
His 36 years of institutional and community service include numerous national, statewide, and regional educational initiatives that aim to advance educational equity among historically marginalized and under-represented groups. Since 2006, he has served on the Equity Advisory Panel (EAP) to raise African American students’ achievement in the Pittsburgh Public Schools. Dr. Mitchell’s institutional leadership efforts have resulted in recognition by various local and national organizations. In May 2020, he received the Commitment to Community Service Award at Greater Allegheny, and, in 2017, the College of Education Alumni Society “Service to Penn State Award” and, in 2015, the Penn State Forum on Black Affairs (FOBA) “Humanitarian Service Award” for his leadership, extensive contributions and service to historically under-represented populations and diverse communities in Pennsylvania.
He is a graduate of Geneva College and holds a master’s degree in education from Penn State University and a doctorate in Administration and Leadership Studies (ALS) from the Indiana University of Pennsylvania.
Asar Imhhotep
Asar is a noted speaker and philosopher and is currently organizing efforts in a nation-wide venture titled The African-American Cultural Development Project—a national project aimed at creating a framework for an African-American culture which will help vitally stimulate the economic, political, scientific and cultural spheres of African-American life in the United States. He also aco-founder of Black Science Month (October), that highlights and encourages African achievement and advancement in the S.T.E.M. fields.