Why Blikipedia
Black history is too often fragmented, reduced to a few famous names, or limited to one month of attention. Blikipedia organizes Black culture, history, HBCU legacy, and excellence into a modern knowledge home built for students, families, educators, creators, and institutions.
What we believe
Black history is American history and world history. It is rigorous, plural, and ongoing. Excellence and joy belong in the archive next to struggle.
Who it serves
Students writing papers. Teachers planning curricula. Families teaching at home. Creators making culture. Institutions building exhibits. And anyone who wants a clear starting point.
How it works
Editorial entries, community submissions, teacher and family resource hubs, and timelines — built mobile-first and shareable. This demo runs entirely in your browser; a live launch would add cloud storage, full editorial review, and partnerships.
Built for the next generation
The site is designed for the classroom, the family table, and the smartphone. Premium typography. Hyper-realistic photography. Plain-language explanations.
Community contribution
We invite you to submit a person, place, event, HBCU memory, local history, or cultural term. Every submission is reviewed for accuracy and respect.
Accuracy and respect
We prioritize primary sources, scholar-reviewed material, and community voices. Corrections are welcomed and credited.
Disclaimer
Blikipedia is an independent Black knowledge platform and is not affiliated with Wikipedia or the Wikimedia Foundation.