The National Black Council Of Elders:
The Ancestral Wisdom Guiding
The Hundred Year Plan
Under the Guidance of Chief and Presiding Elder, Mwalimu Kabaila, the NBCE - National Black Council of Elders, the Keepers Of Wisdom who stand beside Marshon N. Kincy, lending their vision, experience, and spiritual guidance to shape a future worthy of Africa's Children for generations to come.
Franchise Model
The Elders
Baba Mwalimu Kabaila's Ancestral Wisdom at the Helm of the Hundred Year Plan
In a time when the world cries out for leadership rooted in compassion, clarity, and culture, a sacred circle has emerged: The Council of Elders. These are the Master Weavers Of TimeMemory Keepers and Spiritual Stewards who now stand beside Marshon, lending their vast experience to shape a future worthy of Africa's Children.
They have watched storms pass and nations rise. They have seen movements born and forgotten. Yet they remain — steady, resolute, and committed. Now, they offer not just advice, but Alignment with Eternity.
With each decision, they ask not "Is this profitable?" but "Is this honorable?" Not "Will this bring power?" but "Will this bring healing?" Not "Is this expedient?" but "Is this just?" Through their guidance, the Hundred Year Plan moves with both vision and wisdom, ensuring we build not just for tomorrow, but for our great-grandchildren's tomorrow.
Anchored in MA'AT: The Spiritual Backbone
Truth
Speaking what is real and right, even when difficult. Recognizing reality as the foundation for change.
Justice
Ensuring fairness in all dealings, with special attention to those who have been historically marginalized.
Balance
Finding the harmonious center between opposing forces, neither too harsh nor too lenient.
Harmony
Creating peaceful relationships between individuals, communities, and nations through mutual respect.
Order
Establishing systems that reflect natural law and support the dignity of all beings.
Propriety
Behaving with dignity and appropriate respect for tradition, ceremony, and cultural protocols.
Reciprocity
Understanding that what we give returns to us, creating cycles of generosity rather than exploitation.
The Council Of Elders anchors its moral compass in the Ancient African Spiritual Science Of MA'AT, a system that has endured for over 5,000 years. These Seven Virtues form the Ethical and Spiritual Foundation of their governance and decision-making process.
MA'AT's Fourfold PathGood Speech, Thought, Emotion, and Conduct — serves as the standard by which they guide decisions. This is not merely philosophical; it is intensely practical. Before any initiative is approved, it must pass through this filter: Does it uphold truth? Does it serve justice? Will it create harmony rather than division?
The 42 Declarations of Innocence are held in reverence by each Council member, setting a tone of humility and sacred responsibility. They do not govern for power. They govern for the soul of a people whose destiny is intertwined with the fate of humanity itself.
Elders Of History And Strategy
The Council recognizes and studies contemporary African leadership that reflects pan-African progress. They uplift examples of bold leadership — like that seen in Captain Ibrahim Traoré — not out of politics, but as strategic models for agricultural revitalization, educational access, and sovereign economic systems.
These Elders do not view history as a passive record of the past, but as an active blueprint for the future. They meticulously document successful resistance movements, economic innovations, and cultural revivals across the African Diaspora. From the Haitian Revolution to the Mau Mau uprising, from the Black Wall Street of Tulsa to the economic cooperative movements of modern-day Ghana — these case studies inform their strategic vision.
The Council maintains an extensive archive of both written and oral histories, ensuring that the lessons of the past are not forgotten but applied. They host regular strategic sessions where historical precedents are examined alongside contemporary challenges, asking: "What worked before? What failed? And how can we adapt these lessons to our present moment?"
In their hands, history becomes not a burden but a weapon — not a source of trauma but a wellspring of inspiration. They do not simply reflect on history. They are actively making it.
Protectors of Social
& Cultural Order
These Elders safeguard the rites of passage that mark the journey of every African child, ensuring cultural continuity from cradle to community. Their vision extends beyond policy papers and organizational charts — they are concerned with the very fabric of community life, with how individuals grow, learn, and find their place within the collective.
The Queen Mothers Sanctums and Elders' Circles they establish carry wisdom into every region, serving as living libraries of cultural knowledge and ethical guidance. These circles are not symbolic; they are functional governing bodies that mediate disputes, guide families, and ensure that no member of the community falls through the cracks.
They promote naming ceremonies that connect children to their Ancestral Lineage, African Weddings that cement bonds between families rather than just individuals, and rehabilitative programs for youth and Returning Citizens — ensuring no soul is abandoned to the margins of society.
The Council understands that true social stability cannot be imposed from above but must grow organically from shared values and mutual care. Their dream is to see every orphan embraced by community, not forgotten by systems. Every elder honored, not warehoused in isolation. Every young person guided, not merely policed.
Their compass is compassion. Their direction is always toward wholeness.
Builders Of Just Economies
Resource Sovereignty
Advocating for African nations to maintain control of their natural resources, ensuring profits benefit local communities first.
Pan-African Banking
Creating financial institutions that operate according to African values, circulating wealth within our communities globally.
Indigenous Industries
Developing fashion, agriculture, technology, and trade sectors that build on traditional knowledge while embracing innovation.
Integrative Health
Revitalizing traditional healing practices alongside modern medicine, creating accessible healthcare for all.
The Council of Elders is deeply committed to economic sovereignty, understanding that political freedom without economic self-determination is merely symbolic. They steward conversations around nationalization of resources, not from ideological rigidity, but from the practical observation that nations which control their own resources thrive while those that surrender them languish.
Their economic vision extends beyond mere capitalism or socialism to embrace what might be called "communalism" — systems where wealth circulates through communities rather than accumulating in distant centers of power. They advocate for infrastructure development (roads, bridges, homes) that connects rather than divides communities, and investment models that prioritize sustainable growth over extractive profit.
The Council's economic wisdom draws on both ancient African trading networks and contemporary innovations like digital currencies. Their vision is not one of scarcity, but of dignified abundance rooted in African Self-determination — where people do not merely survive but thrive, creating wealth that nurtures both the individual and the collective.
Organizers of Global African Power
The Council's political vision is one of organized unity — understanding that power fragmented is power diminished. They envision a Unified African Army not for conquest but for protection, ensuring that never again will African People be vulnerable to external exploitation or internal corruption.
Their blueprint includes a Pan-African Assembly built from an African-centered worldview, where decisions are made not by simple majority but through a process of deep listening and consensus-building. This Assembly would transcend the artificial borders imposed by colonialism, recognizing the fundamental unity of African peoples while honoring their rich diversity.
The Elders are equally committed to building a Diaspora Commonwealth that ties together Haiti, West Papua, Aboriginal Australia, Brazil, and the Pacific Islands — all regions where African presence and influence run deep. They recognize that the struggle for liberation is global, requiring alliance with Indigenous peoples to form a shield wall of native solidarity against ongoing colonization and exploitation.
Their model of leadership draws on both the democratic traditions of various African societies and the strategic discipline of successful liberation movements. They do not believe in command by control—but by consensus, commitment, and community. Their ultimate aim is not power for its own sake, but power as the necessary tool for protecting their people and fulfilling the divine mandate of MA'AT.
Champions of Sacred Creativity
For the Council of Elders, art is sacred. It is not mere entertainment — it is spiritual engineering, shaping the consciousness of generations and determining what they will value, fear, love, and aspire to become. This is why they take cultural production so seriously, understanding its power to either elevate or degrade.
They reject art that reinforces negative stereotypes, glorifies self-destruction, or incites violence within African communities. Instead, they call for a Black Aesthetic that uplifts, inspires, and drives social change — art that remembers our past greatness while imagining new possibilities for the future.
Their influence shapes the music, cinema, storytelling, technology, and fashion embedded in this movement — including projects under MAR-JAX Entertainment and UCM-JAX. They meet regularly with artists, offering guidance while respecting creative freedom, ensuring that cultural production serves the larger vision of African Liberation and Human Advancement.
The Council understands that while policy changes governments, art changes hearts. They know that a movement without songs will not march far, and a people without stories will forget who they are. To them, art is medicine, and every image must heal or empower — connecting us to our Ancestors while pointing the way toward our descendants.
Guardians of the New African Ethos
"As fathers and mothers of human civilization, we have a duty to represent the best of what it means to be African—and human—in the world." — Council of Elders
The Council guides a reconstruction of the African Identity — understanding that how a people see themselves determines what they believe is possible. They reject both the demeaning stereotypes imposed by oppressors and the reactive identities that sometimes emerge from trauma.
No longer defined by liberal filters or colonial projections, they teach a conscious, sovereign, future-facing identity. This identity is rooted in historical truth but not limited by it, drawing strength from tradition while remaining adaptive to new challenges. It embraces technological advancement without sacrificing spiritual awareness, and celebrates individual excellence while maintaining commitment to collective progress.
The Elders remind us: We are not merely the descendants of kings and queens, but the parents of civilization itself. This perspective transforms how we approach everything from education to diplomacy, from business to environmental stewardship. It replaces shame with dignity, victimhood with agency, and scarcity thinking with abundant vision.
Through regular teachings, publications, and ceremonies, The Council instills this ethos in each generation. They understand that external changes in policy or economics cannot succeed without this internal transformation in consciousness. Their ultimate goal is not just a new social order but a new human being — one who embodies the highest virtues of African Civilization while creating new possibilities for all humanity.
Why They Have Been Chosen?
Marshon N. Kincy, founder of the Hundred Year Plan, has long understood that wisdom is the infrastructure behind every successful movement. Vision without wisdom leads to spectacular failures; ambition without ethical grounding leads to corrupted victories. That's why he invited these Elders to the table from the very beginning.
These are not figureheads selected for symbolic value or public relations. They are working partners in the enterprise of liberation, bringing decades of lived experience, spiritual insight, and strategic acumen. They guide the ships, bless the soil, speak into policy, and remind the people that no skyscraper is built without first consulting the earth.
Marshon chose them not only for what they know, but for who they are — men and women of impeccable character who have remained steadfast through both triumph and tribulation. Some have academic credentials; others carry wisdom passed down through oral tradition. All have demonstrated unwavering commitment to African liberation and human advancement.
The future Marshon envisions will be technologically advanced, economically vibrant, and politically sophisticated. But thanks to these Elders, it will also be Spiritually Aligned — ensuring that progress serves purpose, and innovation advances not just efficiency but eternity.

If you feel called to support the work of The Council of Elders and the Hundred Year Plan, please consider making a contribution. Your support enables us to continue preserving Ancestral Wisdom while building sustainable futures for generations to come.
Prepared By Jackson P. Hamiter
CEO - Kelavision A.I.