Revolutionary transgender activist, elder, and icon, Miss Major, shares her thoughts and perspectives on police brutality, the current protests, and why we still have a long way to go to truly make all Black lives matter.
Read MoreAfrekete Convos with Black Feminist Future.
Read MoreSupport Black Trans Victims of State-Sanctioned Violence By Donating to The Okra Project.
Read MoreIn her powerful scholarship, Francesca Sobande (she/her) explores the intersections of race, gender, feminism, and popular culture in the lives of Black women in Britain.
Read MoreNigerian braid artist, body painter, and educator, Nneka Gigi, explores how Black women in the United States and in Africa and in the African Diaspora are maintaining their natural hair during COVID-19.
Read MoreFor Mother’s Day, Black Women Radicals’ Executive Director, Jaimee Swift, interviews her mother, Aretha Swift, an advocate and chronic kidney disease survivor on life, faith, and resilience.
Read MoreCheck out this reading list from our Zoom event, “Black Feminist Perspectives on COVID-19.”
Read MoreEvery first Thursday of the month, Black Women Radicals will host “Afrekete Convos”, an IG Live series that highlights and uplifts Black women, non-binary, and gender non-conforming activists, artists, and changemakers around the world. This series is in honor of and inspired by the self-described “Black, lesbian, mother, warrior, poet,” that was and is Audre Lorde.
Read MoreAs a pioneering poet, activist, essayist, and educator, Dr. Cheryl Clarke has and continues to center and uplift radical Black lesbian feminist literature and organizing. We honor her.
Read MoreBlack Women Radicals’ Blog, “Voices in Movement,” welcomes you to engage with our March 2020 theme, Sankofa: Honoring Our Black Feminist Pioneers.
Read MoreAs a pioneering activist, organizer, and alumnus of Howard University, Annette “Chi” Hughes (she/her/hers) paved a formidable legacy for LGBTQ+ student-activists at Howard and at other historically Black colleges and universities, as the co-founder of the first openly LGBTQ+ student organization at any HBCU.
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