The African / Edenic Heritage Museum is a traveling exhibition that was established by Minister Ahmadiel Ben Yahuda in February, 1994. It displays more than 450 square feet of informative maps, provocative text, and exclusive photographs of the indigenous African/Edenic people of Israel. The African / Edenic Heritage Museum offers an opportunity to gain a new and uplifting cultural and historical perspective on the religious heritage of persons of African descent.

The African / Edenic Heritage Museum explores two northeast African landmarks: the Great African -Syrian Rift and the Suez Canal. It provides illuminating information on biblical history. It elaborates on the Crusades and other actions of warfare and highlights how these activities adversely impacted the African / Edenic diaspora (i.e. dispersion) and concerns itself with understanding and the prophetic plight of the African / Edenic world.

The African / Edenic Heritage Museum features a continuously playing video presentation that introduces the issues and centralizes the focus of analysis on the African / Edenic world. A brochure accompanies the exhibition and is designed to assist visitors in developing a more focused comprehension of the exhibit. Guided tours, lectures, and panel discussions may be arranged in consultation with the museum staff. An accompanying museum "marketplace" further enlarges the traveling exhibition. The exhibiton requires approximately 1,000 square feet of space and two to three hours for assembly and breakdown.

The African / Edenic Heritage Museum was established and is operated by the Information Exchange. The museum has a board of Directors, headed by the founder Ahmadiel Ben Yahuda, and a board of advisors, including Dr. Cain Hope Felder and Dr. Motefi K. Asante.