FORMAL INVITATION
AFRICAN RENAISSANCE FESTIVAL, aka AFRICAN RENAISSANCE FOUNDATION | UPRISING PRESS, INC|DOCTORROOTSAI
LIBERIAN CIVIL WAR MEMORIAL ENDOWMENT FOUNDATION, INC.
C/o
108 W 39th Street, Suite 1006-2444 | New York, NY 10018
Email: jmass@rootrootsai.com
Phone (202) 922-7291
INAUGURAL PRESIDENT DONALD JOHN TRUMP
TRADITIONAL FAMILY VALUES LEADERSHIP AWARDS CEREMONY
AND INTERNATIONAL GALA
Presented by
Osagyefo Nana Dunzuah Teh Dunzuah Gongbye Gonyah Vonyon Dondonee Biazullah Jacob Dunzuah Massaquoi II
Pen Name: DOCTORROOTS | Founder & Chief Architect
Saturday, April 11, 2026, | 4:00 PM – Midnight
Central Family Life Center | 59 Wright Street, Staten Island, New York 10304
Sunday, April 12, 2026, | 3:00 PM – 9:00 PM
Official Inaugural Launch of the Liberian Civil War Memorial Endowment Foundation
27 Hudson Street, Staten Island, New York 10304
Preamble: A Convocation of Sovereignty, Memory, and Renewal
The African Renaissance Foundation, Uprising Press, Inc., Africa Digital Bridge, LLC, and Doctorrootsai.com respectfully extend this formal invitation to scholars, statesmen, community leaders, civil society advocates, and all defenders of traditional family values to attend the Inaugural Excellency President Dr. Donald John Trump Traditional Family Values Leadership Awards Ceremony. This historic convocation unites America First patriots, Pan-Africanist intellectuals, and champions of national sovereignty in a shared commitment to cultural renewal, historical accountability, and the defense of foundational civilizational principles.
Held in the heart of the African American and Liberian diaspora community on Staten Island, New York, this ceremony represents far more than an awards event. It constitutes an act of principled intellectual defiance against globalist revisionism, neo-liberal cultural imposition, and the systematic erasure of indigenous identity, historical memory, and the traditional family (Huntington, 1996; Ngugi wa Thiong'o, 1986). The evening honors individuals whose courageous leadership — rooted in faith, family, and national responsibility — continues to inspire communities across the United States and across the African diaspora.
Presidential Keynote Address
The evening's principal address will be delivered by His Excellency President Dr. Donald John Trump, 45th and 47th President of the United States of America. President Trump's America First doctrine has reinvigorated the global discourse on national sovereignty, electoral integrity, and the preservation of traditional family structures against the encroachment of transnational ideological bureaucracies (Trump, 2017; Hazony, 2018). His leadership has given voice to the forgotten men and women of every nation who have been systematically excluded from the corridors of globalist power — a constituency that spans every race, every faith tradition, and every geographic boundary.
President Trump's keynote address will center on themes of sovereignty, cultural preservation, and the universal imperative to defend the family as the foundational institution of any civilized society. His presence at this event underscores the profound alignment between the America First political philosophy and the Pan-Africanist sovereignty doctrine advanced by the Africa First Political Movement (Massaquoi, 2025).
ON THE FOUNDER: A PROVEN FIGHTING MAN—RESILIENT, LEARNED, AND READY TO SERVE. I AM OSAGYEFO NANA DUNZUAH TEH DUNZUAH GONGBYE GONYAH VONYON DONDONEE BIAZULLAH JACOB DUNZUAH MASSAQUOI II.
I am a proud son of Liberia, and a card-carrying, flag-waving member of the Party of Lincoln—the Republican Party. I am a red-blooded, America First conservative who answers to no one but the Constitution and the will of the people. I am an unapologetic defender of the greatest President of my lifetime, Donald J. Trump, and am the founder of Immigrants for Trump. I am a Libertarian who believes in freedom, not bureaucracy.
My name is not merely a personal identifier. It is a civilizational declaration, a genealogical archive, and an act of cultural sovereignty. In the tradition of West African nomenclature, names carry the full weight of ancestral memory, territorial belonging, and spiritual mandate (Kofi Otieno Asante, 2003). Each element of this name constitutes a covenant with the living and the dead.
Osagyefo designates the deliverer — a leader ordained to guide his people through the wilderness of oppression toward the promised ground of freedom and self-determination. The title was most famously borne by Dr. Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana, the architect of modern Pan-Africanism, whose intellectual legacy informs the Africa First Political Movement (Nkrumah, 1963). Nana is the revered title of royalty and elder wisdom transmitted across generations through oral tradition and institutional memory. Dunzuah Teh Dunzuah Gongbye Gonyah Vonyon Dondonee Biazullah encodes the ancestral geography of the Liberian interior, where the soil carries the footprints of a people who were never colonized in their spirits. And Jacob Dunzuah Massaquoi II is the man standing before you today — a living witness to one of the most under-documented atrocities of the late twentieth century.
On July 29, 1990, during the first Liberian Civil War, I survived the St. Peter's Lutheran Church Massacre in Monrovia, Liberia, in which forces aligned with President Samuel K. Doe's Armed Forces of Liberia (AFL) slaughtered an estimated 600 civilians who had sought sanctuary in the church compound (Ellis, 1999; Human Rights Watch, 1990). I watched the international community maintain a calculated silence. I witnessed the globalist establishment subordinate human life to geopolitical interest. I came to the United States of America bearing nothing but faith in the God of Abraham and trust in the dignity of ordinary American citizens. I did not come to consume. I came to construct.
Today I stand before you as an information systems professional, a cybersecurity governance, risk, and compliance (GRC) scholar, an artificial intelligence risk and benefit practitioner, a doctoral candidate in Technology and Innovation Management at Northcentral University, an author, an entrepreneur, and an unwavering traditionalist who categorically rejects the ideological project of cultural erasure that masquerades under the banner of progress (Massaquoi, 2024a; Sowell, 2002).
Literary Testimony: Publications in Service of Truth
My published works constitute a systematic intellectual challenge to the dominant narratives of globalist media, neoliberal academic orthodoxy, and the Democratic Party's patronage politics directed at Black American and African diaspora communities.
How to Become an AI Millionaire in 2026 and Beyond (Massaquoi, 2026a) provides a rigorous, accessible blueprint for wealth generation in the emerging artificial intelligence economy. The globalist establishment has historically concentrated on the instruments of economic mobility — capital access, technological literacy, elite network membership — within a narrow stratum of credentialed insiders (Reich, 1992). This book dismantles those barriers and places the roadmap for building generational wealth directly into the hands of the working class, single mothers, the academically underserved, and every community that has been systematically excluded from participation in the digital economy.
Demystifying Cybersecurity: Protecting the American Household in the Digital Age (Massaquoi, 2024b) responds to the documented reality that American households constitute one of the most vulnerable and under protected nodes in the national digital infrastructure. State-sponsored threat actors, including entities affiliated with adversary states and non-state criminal organizations, have increasingly targeted residential networks, financial accounts, and personal data repositories as vectors for intelligence collection and financial fraud (CISA, 2023; FBI, 2023). This work empowers ordinary American citizens with the technical literacy to defend their digital sovereignty — because, as President Trump has correctly argued, national defense begins at the threshold of every American home.
Unmasking Fake News: Unmasking Liberal Media Hypocrisy and Walking in the Shoes of White America: Why Donald Trump Won the 2016 and 2020 Elections (Massaquoi, 2024c) provides an empirically grounded, cross-cultural analysis of the political realignment that propelled President Trump to victory. Drawing on years of direct ethnographic engagement with working-class American communities of every racial and ethnic background, this work demonstrates that the Trump political coalition is not reducible to the racial resentment narrative propagated by corporate media. Rather, it represents a principled popular uprising of citizens who reject welfare dependency, educational indoctrination, family dissolution, and the systematic degradation of national culture that has characterized the Democratic Party's governance philosophy for six decades (Murray, 2012; Sowell, 1987). The work further documents the coordinated institutional effort to delegitimize the 2016 presidential election — an effort that represents the most consequential assault on electoral integrity in American democratic history — and exposes the Obama administration's calculated suppression of the historical record of Liberian civil war atrocities and their protection of their designated surrogate, former President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf.
A Principled Commitment: Why I Stand with President Donald J. Trump
I founded the Immigrants for Trump movement and the Africa First Political Movement because I possess a perspective on American democracy that is unavailable to those whose understanding of freedom is purely theoretical. I have known what it means to live under a regime of state terror. I have witnessed what happens to a people when their institutions are hollowed out by corruption, their history is distorted by foreign patrons, and their leaders are installed by transnational power brokers who care nothing for the welfare of the governed (Reno, 1998; Sawyer, 1992). From that vantage point, the America First doctrine is not merely a political preference. It is a civilizational imperative.
President Donald J. Trump has done what no other political figure in the modern era has been willing to do: he confronted the bipartisan globalist consensus that has progressively dismantled American sovereignty, exported American jobs, subordinated American foreign policy to transnational financial interests, and treated the working people of this nation as expendable inputs in a global economic system designed by and for the Davos class (Hazony, 2018; Luce, 2017). He is neither a bigot nor a demagogue. He is a sovereign nationalist who understands that without borders, families, and faith, there can be no civilization worth defending.
As a Liberian-born civil war survivor who rebuilt his life through faith, scholarship, and unrelenting labor, I am not a theoretical idealist. I am a practical sovereign. And I will spend every breath of my remaining days defending the presidency and the legacy of His Excellency President Dr. Donald John Trump — the most consequential leader in the history of the American Republic.
The Liberian Civil War Memorial Endowment Foundation: Honoring the Fallen
The official launch of the Liberian Civil War Memorial Endowment Foundation (LCWMEF) on April 12, 2026, represents the culmination of decades of advocacy for historical accountability and transitional justice for the victims of Liberia's First and Second Civil Wars (1989–2003). Conservatively estimated death tolls range from 250,000 to over 300,000 civilians, including American catholic nuns and other American humanitarian workers with documented patterns of mass atrocity including targeted ethnic killings, sexual violence used as a weapon of war, and the systematic destruction of cultural and religious institutions (Ellis, 1999; Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Liberia, 2009).
The LCWMEF will establish a permanent national memorial, a peace and reconciliation institute, and a comprehensive historical archive to ensure that the sacrifices of the Liberian people are neither forgotten nor distorted by the political interests of external patrons. This initiative is consistent with established international standards for transitional justice, including the United Nations Basic Principles on the Right to a Remedy and Reparation for Victims of Gross Violations of International Human Rights Law (United Nations, 2006).
Book Launch: Ellen Johnson Sirleaf: The Real Ellen — Unmasking the Neoliberal Queen of Africa, the Fake Iron Lady
The April 12 proceedings will culminate in the official public launch of Ellen Johnson Sirleaf: The Real Ellen — Unmasking the Neoliberal Queen of Africa, the Fake Iron Lady (Massaquoi, 2026b). This doctoral-level evidentiary work draws on primary source documentation, declassified diplomatic cables, Truth and Reconciliation Commission testimony, and the voluminous but systematically suppressed scholarship on the intersection of international financial institutions, Cold War geopolitics, and the governance failures of post-conflict Liberia to construct a comprehensive historical indictment of Sirleaf's political career.
The work demonstrates with evidentiary rigor how Sirleaf's rise to power was engineered by a convergence of World Bank patronage, USAID institutional support, and the Obama administration's strategic interest in maintaining a pliable, Western-compliant head of state in West Africa's oldest republic (Pham, 2011; van der Kraaij, 1983). The historical record that emerges from this investigation is one of systematic betrayal: a political class that sacrificed the welfare, dignity, and historical memory of the Liberian people on the altar of donor-driven neoliberal governance. No longer will that record remain buried.
Closing Declaration: A Covenant with Truth, Dignity, and Historical Justice
We gather in Staten Island not merely to celebrate. We gather to fulfill a covenant with the dead, to honor the resilience of the living, and to build a permanent institutional legacy of truth, dignity, and civilizational sovereignty. We stand against every force that has sought to erase our stories, falsify our history, and install foreign-approved surrogates as stewards of our nations. We stand for the family as the irreducible foundation of every legitimate social order. We stand for the sovereign nation as the only institution capable of protecting its citizens from the predations of transnational capital and ideological imperialism. In the words of Dr. Kwame Nkrumah (1963), 'the forces that unite us are intrinsic and greater than the superimposed influences that keep us apart' (p. 217). We are building something permanent. And we will not be silent!
America First. Africa First. Liberia First. Truth Forever.
Make America Great Again!
God Bless President Trump. God Bless the United States of America.
OSAGYEFO NANA DUNZUAH TEH DUNZUAH
GONGBYE GONYAH VONYON DONDONEE BIAZULLAH
JACOB DUNZUAH MASSAQUOI II
Pen Name: DOCTORROOTS | Affectionately: Family Man Jake
Founder & Chief Architect | Author | Pan-African Policy Advocate
AI Scholar | Cybersecurity Governance, Risk, and Compliance Practitioner
Doctoral Candidate, Technology & Innovation Management | Northcentral University
REFERENCES
Central Intelligence Agency. (2023). World factbook: Liberia. https://www.cia.gov/the-world-factbook/countries/liberia/
Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency. (2023). 2023 cybersecurity advisory: People's Republic of China state-sponsored cyber activity. U.S. Department of Homeland Security.
Ellis, S. (1999). The mask of anarchy: The destruction of Liberia and the religious dimension of an African civil war. New York University Press.
Federal Bureau of Investigation. (2023). Internet crime report 2022. Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3).
Hazony, Y. (2018). The virtue of nationalism. Basic Books.
Human Rights Watch. (1990). Liberia: A human rights disaster: Violations of the laws of war by all parties to the conflict in Liberia. Human Rights Watch/Africa.
Huntington, S. P. (1996). The clash of civilizations and the remaking of world order. Simon & Schuster.
Luce, E. (2017). The retreat of Western liberalism. Atlantic Monthly Press.
Massaquoi, J. D., II. (2024a). African lenses: Civilization under siege — A defense of West African indigenous institutions. Uprising Press.
Massaquoi, J. D., II. (2024b). Demystifying cybersecurity: Protecting the American household in the digital age. Uprising Press.
Massaquoi, J. D., II. (2024c). Unmasking fake news: Liberal media hypocrisy and the Trump presidency. Uprising Press.
Massaquoi, J. D., II. (2025). Africa First political movement: A sovereignty doctrine for African political and economic self-determination. African Renaissance Foundation.
Massaquoi, J. D., II. (2026a). How to become an AI millionaire in 2026 and beyond. Uprising Press.
Massaquoi, J. D., II. (2026b). Ellen Johnson Sirleaf: The real Ellen — Unmasking the neoliberal queen of Africa, the fake Iron Lady. Uprising Press.
Murray, C. (2012). Coming apart: The state of White America, 1960–2010. Crown Forum.
Ngugi wa Thiong'o. (1986). Decolonising the mind: The politics of language in African literature. James Currey.
Nkrumah, K. (1963). Africa must unite. Heinemann.
Otieno Asante, K. (2003). The African philosophical tradition and the question of identity. Journal of Black Studies, 34(2), 200–218. https://doi.org/10.1177/0021934703254047
Pham, J. P. (2011). Liberia: Portrait of a failed state. Reed Press.
Reich, R. B. (1992). The work of nations: Preparing ourselves for 21st century capitalism. Vintage Books.
Reno, W. (1998). Warlord politics and African states. Lynne Rienner Publishers.
Sawyer, A. (1992). The emergence of autocracy in Liberia: Tragedy and challenge. Institute for Contemporary Studies Press.
Sowell, T. (1987). A conflict of visions: Ideological origins of political struggles. William Morrow.
Sowell, T. (2002). The quest for cosmic justice. Free Press.
Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Liberia. (2009). Final report of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Liberia (Vol. II). TRC Liberia.
Trump, D. J. (2017, January 20). Inaugural address [Speech transcript]. The White House. https://www.whitehouse.gov
United Nations. (2006). Basic principles and guidelines on the right to a remedy and reparation for victims of gross violations of international human rights law and serious violations of international humanitarian law. UN General Assembly Resolution 60/147.
van der Kraaij, F. P. M. (1983). The Open Door Policy of Liberia: An economic history of modern Liberia. Bremer Afrika-Studien.

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