Timbuktu Storykeeper
- Hybrid of for-profit and nonprofit
The Problem: Historical Erasure and Loss of Oral Histories
Throughout human history, everything from natural disasters to colonization, wars and selective or biased accounts of history have silenced an uncountable number of stories of cultures who have traditionally relied on oral history to keep their memories and cultural identities alive.
In the USA, two communities with whom we are piloting our solution are among those currently facing the impending loss of narratives that are essential to the world’s understanding of their place in the history of the human family.
Native American Nations:
For many Native American nations, the ravages of time and systemic genocide have already erased much of their history and culture from the collective memory of the human race, and current societal shifts threaten to disconnect their past and future in ways that are existential threats to their cultural identities.
Our Native cultures are among the oldest continuous cultures in humanity, who have used oral traditions to preserve ancestral knowledge and perspectives for periods barely imaginable for most in our modern times, and if we do not act quickly to capture and preserve this knowledge of the ages entrusted to an aging and dwindling population of elders, many of the oldest stories of the human race will be lost to us all forever.
This problem is not limited to indigenous communities in the United States, but similar losses are happening across the globe as industrialization and societal attitudes that only value the present threaten to cause us to ignore many of our pasts until some future time when it will be too late to ever know what we could learn today.
The Black American Community:
The past century has been a period of unparalleled change in the lives of Black Americans, and there are still living witnesses who can provide firsthand accounts of events like the Tulsa Race Massacre and life in the Jim Crow South.
While historians and documentarians tend to focus on the stories of movement leaders and other well-known major players in historical events, there are scores of thousands of elderly African Americans whose personal histories from significant periods remain largely untold, and due to the inability of traditional documentary methods to scale, will not be told using conventional historical approaches.
“In the Future, Stories that were never Digitized will be indistinguishable from Stories that never Happened.”
- Ken Granderson
Our Solution: Timbuktu StoryKeeper
StoryKeeper is a new Speech Recognition module that is being added to the Timbuktu Content Engine that powers the BlackFacts.com website and BlackFacts’ Diversity Schoolhouse ed-tech platform.
Launched in 1997 as the Internet’s First Black History Search Engine, BlackFacts.com has been sharing Black History to a global online audience longer than most people have been using the Internet, and today, with over one million articles in our databases, is the world's largest single online source of Black History and Global News.
The Timbuktu™ content engine has been powering the BlackFacts.com website since 2017.
Timbuktu is a three-phase content Aggregation, Classification and Syndication engine comprised of three modules that comprise the content management pipeline:
The Rosetta module (named after the Rosetta Stone) collects content from various sources and converts it to a common structure internal to the Timbuktu platform called a Manuscript. The Rosetta module currently generates Manuscripts from online historical and news articles through both automated and curated processes.
StoryKeeper (a term used by many Native cultures) will capture cultural stories using Speech Recognition technologies already present in most recent smartphones and other computing devices, as a monologue, as a dialogue with an AI agent or as a recording with a human interviewer.
Once Manuscripts have been created, they are passed through the Djuhti module (named after an ancient Egyptian wisdom deity, also known as Thoth), where multiple AI engines find common people, places, events and concepts to use to link the stories when displayed on web pages or other devices.
This contextual linkage is a core feature of the BlackFacts website that leads many visitors to spend significant amounts of time on the site compared to most other sites.
The contextually linked Manuscripts are finally shared with the public (based on the author’s privacy choices) via Timbuktu’s Griot module (named after West African storytellers) on any website or system that Timbuktu can publish to, including the BlackFacts.com site, BlackFacts’ content affiliates and messaging services.
The anecdotal nature of stories captured by StoryKeeper will necessitate categorization separate from content from more trusted historical or journalistic sources, so the ultimate public display of StoryKeeper content is likely to happen on websites and in collaboration with organizations yet to be determined.
The initial scope of this project focuses on the implementation of the technical solution to capture these firsthand stories by leveraging the widespread penetration of mobile devices (over 80% in more than 100 countries, and greater than the population in many), recent advances in Artificial Intelligence, and the arrival of Just-In-Time Speech Recognition which does not require prior training to recognize a wide variety of voices and languages.
One of our pilot audiences are Native American Elders, many of whom are their culture’s last chances of preserving stories that have been passed down orally for hundreds, if not thousands of years.
It can be argued that no other cultures have been ignored, mistreated and devalued by mainstream history more than the First Nations of the Americas, and while we cannot turn the clock back and capture stories that have been forever lost, we can take advantage of today’s widespread availability and convergence of the key technologies that make StoryKeeper possible and do our best to capture and preserve endless stories of tragedy, triumph and everyday life from some of the oldest cultures in the human family.
For example, the Cheroenhaka tribe, a tribe for which Kevin Denny II is an active member, is still fighting for its right to be federally recognized working with the government of Virginia, the state we originate from. One of the requirements for being federally recognized is to demonstrate a certain portion of its members have basic knowledge of the language of the tribe. Technology, such as this, would tremendously benefit us in our fight for federal recognition, allowing us access the the very resources taken and owed to us and other indigenous communities.
Timbuktu StoryKeeper has the potential to similarly remove almost every barrier that has ever existed preventing the average person’s story from being able to occupy the same space as the stories heard around the world, and not only to exist on just another of millions of web pages that no one but the author and their family will ever know exists, but on a culturally-oriented online content platform that has been viewed by hundreds of millions of visitors over almost three decades of online presence.
From a practical and actionable perspective, this opportunity has never before been as possible as it is today, and as these oral histories are often only known by a dwindling population of elders, we have no time to lose if we intend to ensure that their firsthand stories and wisdom lives on for future generations.
Chief Walt "Red Hawk" Brown of the Cheroenhaka, is the only tribal member who truly knows the entire history of the tribe in and out and can tell the entire story of the tribe without hesitation. He is also one of the tribe's eldest members. With plenty of members on the roll call that are of younger generations that live across the nation, it is vital that the knowledge be passed down. Chief "Red Hawk" carries many burdens of tribal history and duties but one of the most important is obtaining federal recognition for Cheroenhaka. StoryKeeper would be a technology solution that could help ease the burden of passing down (and preserving) essential knowledge to tribal members that would contribute to furthering the case for Cheroenhaka to obtain federal recognition. There are many other indigenous communities also fighting this same fight that could benefit as well.
The BlackFacts Team has over a half century of combined experience delivering advanced technology solutions to positively impact communities of color.
Team Lead, Kevin Denny II, is a member of both the Black and indigenous community. He is a volunteer with the BlackFacts Team and has over two decades of software & web development experience along with a multitude of soft skills. He is also an active member of the Cheroenhaka Native American tribe located in Southampton County, Virginia, where also, most of his family, on his mother's side, reside and originate from.
Kevin also volunteers as a contributor to Native Land Digital, a non-profit, allowing indigenous communities to represent themselves and their own histories as well as be challenged to learn more about other indigenous communities.
You can learn more about his background at thatdeveloper.dev
Ken Granderson, co-founder of Blackfacts.com, is a Black MIT Alumnus born, raised and outside of college has almost always lived in predominately Black, low-to-moderate income communities, and since discovering in 1993 that he could chart his own career path with technology, has been a 'technology evangelist' for Black communities, and has been responsible for pioneering multiple culturally-oriented offline and online projects since 1995, including:
• Creating a multimedia CD-ROM version of a book on Boston's Black History in 1995 • Putting Boston's communities of color online in 1996 • Launching the Internet's first Black History Search Engine, BlackFacts.com, in 1997 • Putting Boston's Black Newspaper (the Bay State Banner) online in 2001 • Demonstrating self-service online event and business directory listings before EventBrite and Yelp by 2-4 years on Roxbury.com in 2002 • Architecting, building and maintaining the Official Website of the Government of Saint Lucia from 2013 to the present • Architecting and building Timbuktu, the AI-powered Content Aggregation, Classification and Syndication system that powers BlackFacts to the present day in 2017.
All of these innovations, along with many others are fully documented by newspaper and magazine articles, television interview, contemporaneously created presentations and more at https://kengranderson.com.
Chief Walt "Red Hawk" Brown of the Cheroenhaka, is the only tribal member who truly knows the entire history of the tribe in and out and can tell the entire story of the tribe without hesitation. He is also one of the tribe's eldest members. With plenty of members on the roll call that are of younger generations that live across the nation, it is vital that the knowledge be passed down. Chief "Red Hawk" carries many burdens of tribal history and duties but one of the most important is obtaining federal recognition for Cheroenhaka. StoryKeeper would be a technology solution that could help ease the burden of passing down (and preserving) essential knowledge to tribal members that would contribute to furthering the case for Cheroenhaka to obtain federal recognition. There are many other indigenous communities also fighting this same fight that could benefit as well.
- Other
- 4. Quality Education
- 10. Reduced Inequalities
- 11. Sustainable Cities and Communities
- 16. Peace, Justice, and Strong Institutions
- Prototype
The Timbuktu StoryKeeper module is currently in the Prototype state of development.
From a technological perspective, we have the Speech Recognition, conversion to Timbuktu Manuscript and Syndication via Timbuktu Griot operating in our test environments.
We are also currently engaged in usability testing with high-fidelity PowerPoint mockups with a half dozen African American elders we have connected with through family and friends.
For the Black American demographic, we have been building connections with organizations in the areas of Community Development, Politics and Clergy in New York City, and for the Native American demographic, we are reaching out to organizations in the Wampanoag Nation through one of our associates who is Wampanoag as well as the Cheroenhaka tribe in Southampton, Virginia.
We are also currently planning social media messaging to coincide with the upcoming Juneteenth holiday for Black elders and will have messaging tailored for Native communities in November when Native American History Month is celebrated.
We have not yet done much brainstorming in regard to the ultimate end user-facing systems that will feature content captured and organized by StoryKeeper.
In lieu of relying on standalone websites that may require significant amounts of planning, collaboration and resources to be viable, a longtime fallback plan has always been to simply include a new page in the BlackFacts website, titled “Firsthand Accounts” or “Personal Stories” to distinguish them from content sourced from academic or journalistic online sources.
My entire technical career of 30 years has been committed to conceiving, coding, deploying and supporting technology solutions intended to positively impact underserved communities, especially communities of color.
While I have done this in ways that have directly impacted hundreds of thousands and have been viewed by scores of millions over the years, it has been done from a self-funded basis and in relative isolation due to the timing and geographic location of all of my early work.
I believe that we have finally reached enough widespread familiarity with advanced technologies, as well as enough people who have seen that we have NOT leveraged the Internet to live up to its early expectations of delivering widespread democratization and supporting fair access to opportunities, that today there is a more fertile landscape for innovative ideas that leverage online technologies to positively impact historically disadvantaged communities.
In almost all cases where I see technology initiatives focusing on communities of color, they are operating only at the most basic levels and generally from a 'deficit narrative' of trying to get a foot in the door, while my 'normal' for my entire career has been using the most current technologies and delivering advanced applications on par with or ahead of mainstream names and companies known throughout the industry and world today.
From collaborating with a handful of friends in 1996 to put Boston's Black communities online (https://www.blackhistory.mit.e...) or single-handedly architecting, coding and supporting the Official Website of the Government of Saint Lucia (https://govt.lc), I know that it only takes a handful of committed tech visionaries to set the stage for potentially massive improvements for many people, so I believe that getting greater visibility for both our current projects and those still on the drawing board will be the catalyst for more innovative, out of the box tech solutions to be conceived and deployed to help foster greater equity across a variety of communities.
- Financial (e.g. accounting practices, pitching to investors)
- Human Capital (e.g. sourcing talent, board development)
- Monitoring & Evaluation (e.g. collecting/using data, measuring impact)
- Public Relations (e.g. branding/marketing strategy, social and global media)
Kevin Denny II is active member of the Cheroenhaka Native American tribe located in Southampton Country, Virginia head by Chief Walt "Red Hawk" Brown



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