Burkina Faso / Under the banner of memory: Captain Ibrahim Traoré rekindles the flame of the Institute of Black Peoples

At the heart of a Burkina Faso reaffirming its identity, one chapter of history closes, and another is reborn. Captain Ibrahim Traoré, a key figure in Africa’s sovereignist revival, has reignited a flame long extinguished: that of the Institute of Black Peoples. Now renamed the Institute of Black Peoples – Farafina (IPN-Farafina), this spiritual and intellectual legacy of the August 1983 Revolution is resurfacing—not as a relic of the past, but as a lever for the future.

By decree of the Council of Ministers, this legendary institution is being revived, this time under the clear political will of a Burkina Faso that is master of its own destiny, freed from the chains of imperialism, and firmly committed to the fight for Africa’s rebirth.

Its mission is to shape a sovereignist elite, to restore the people’s confidence, to rebuild historical consciousness, and to assert a powerful African geoculture. Attached to the Presidency of Faso, the Institute becomes one of the ideological arms of the insurgent Burkina—a force that wields the pen and memory while others bear the shield.

This revival is also an act of loyalty—loyalty to another captain, to another time of struggle: Thomas Sankara. It was under his vision that the IPN was conceived, born from the fiery breath of the Revolution. And though the dream had been put to sleep, it was never erased from the hearts. As the government notes, the disappearance of the original IPN was one of the many blows dealt to Sankarist memory.

Today, that memory rises again with dignity. It stands tall, transforming nostalgia into strategy, and carving a path toward Farafina—a proud, rooted, and upright Africa.

Captain Ibrahim Traoré has not merely recreated a structure. He has rekindled a fire—a fire of thought, of culture, of affirmation.

Sadia Nyaoré

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