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Resilience

3/6/2025

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​'Our story didn't begin in chains'
Brother Malcolm reminded.
Remember when we were free to just be?
Be comfortable in the skin we're in? 
Where our chests were just as expansive as baobab trees?
Where free traders and dusty foot philosophers
threaded red earth paths of knowledge 
Seeking the truths we hold?
Even held on to across the Seas?
Where village aunties kept up tradition
In colorful head scarves made educated guesses
That healing was never done in isolation
and understood that womanhood was the best hood to live in?
Where children's classrooms were filled with wooden writing boards 
Not only blackboards 
To illustrate the long history of Islam and literacy in Africa?
As lessons completed, boards were washed clean for reuse
And the ink of young scholars flowed through the Savannah?
Where the Sheikh and the mureed convened
under the shade of palms from the heated sun beams
sitting knees bent dripped in clothes without seams?

Knowledge is a garden, if it isn't cultivated, you can't harvest it, 
the proverb says.
Remember when they had us cultivating and harvesting everything else but
 in foreign, unwelcoming places and in cruel and unusual ways?
'But my hand was made strong by the hand of the Almighty'
Brother Bob put forward 
​And as we forward in this generation triumphantly 
'We are going to emancipate ourselves from mental slavery
because while others might free the body, none but ourselves can free the mind '
A lion name Marcus Mosiah authored
 So free your mind and be unconfined.

Go ahead and tell your story
Freely, in all your strength and glory
The mind is a terrible thing to waste they said
so don't waste time with those unworthy. 
Know your worth and charge taxes on every gem you drop
Pick up where the ancestors left off and don't you stop.
You are Black history and future in the making 
Through the joy and the pain 
Your spirit is steady manifesting 
The plant that God favours grows even without rain
​
Resilience is a blessing

Written by Zaakirah Rose
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The African Mother of the Prophet ﷺ: Barakah bint Tha’labah (رضي الله عنها)

3/1/2025

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Photo by Mari Potter on Unsplash
 “…this is the one religion that erases from its society the race problem.” - Malcolm X

“I believe that Islam and the Holy Quran offer all men and women the opportunity to understand how to live a decent, disciplined and meaningful life." - Sister Souljah

“I try not to live my life…in reaction to racism.” - Sister Souljah 

“The very serious function of racism is distraction. It keeps you from doing your work. It keeps you explaining, over and over again, your reason for being. Somebody says you have no language and you spend twenty years proving that you do.
Somebody says your head isn’t shaped properly so you have scientists working on the fact that it is. Somebody says you have no art, so you dredge that up. Somebody says you have no kingdoms, so you dredge that up. None of this is necessary. There will always be one more thing.” - Tony Morrison

It is Allah who shows us how to honor people, not by the color of their skin or status or place of birth but by their character and goodness. Those whom Allah attached to the Messenger ﷺ are the ones who receive nobility in character and deed. Thus we remember and venerate Barakah bint Tha'labah (رضي الله عنها), who was also known as Umm Ayman.

She was an enslaved Abyssinian
when she was taken captive from the army of Abrahah and became the servant of ‘Abdullah ibn ‘Abdul Muttalib, the father of the blessed Prophet ﷺ. She thereafter became part of the Prophet’s ﷺ inheritance, serving his blessed mother Aminah  (رضي الله عنها). After her demise, she took on the role of the Prophet's ﷺ mother on Lady Aminah's behalf.

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    Baraka Initiative was established with the goal of empowering, educating, and healing Black Muslim women and girls of the Americas through Islamic education and mental, emotional, physical and spiritual support.

    Baraka Initiative is an affiliate of Sakina Literary Society.

    Authors

    Eman Manigat
    Na'eemah Martinez
    Zaakirah Rose

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A community project of:
BARAKA UMM AYMAN FOUNDATION
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