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Bringing the Reverence Back to Black Womanhood
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to honor
the greats
BY SISTAH MAGAZINE


The Museum of Women Who Were Never on Display
The museum appeared like a memory I hadn’t lived yet, breathing with names the world had tried to forget. As I moved through its halls, I understood it wasn’t built of walls at all, but of women waiting to be remembered.
Mar 9


Alexa Canady: A Legacy of Excellence, Courage, and Care
Dr. Alexa Canady reshaped what leadership in medicine could look like. Her impact reaches far beyond milestones, living on in the lives she changed and the paths she made possible for others.
Mar 6


Ayisha Cravotta: From First Black Clara to Shaping the Next Generation of Ballet in Charlotte
At a Charlotte Post Women’s History Month event at West Boulevard Library, Charlotte Ballet Academy Director Ayisha Cravotta reflected on a career shaped by discipline, representation, and global training. From becoming Charlotte’s first Black Clara in The Nutcracker to mentoring the next generation of dancers, Cravotta shared how the power of seeing oneself reflected in the arts can shape an entire life — and why creating those mirrors for young dancers today remains essenti
Mar 4


My Time Is Near
Being last taught us discernment. It taught us that timing is sacred and that preparation is a form of love. So when we arrive, we arrive whole— with boundaries, with wisdom, with legacy in our hands. We are not late. We were being formed.
Mar 2


I Know Who I Am
This piece is a declaration, not a whisper—an unapologetic return to self in a world that benefits from Black women shrinking. What follows is self-love as truth, resistance, and inheritance, spoken without permission.
Feb 23


A Black Queen's Responsibility
A vow spoken in defiance of a world designed to fracture Black love and dignity. What follows is devotion as sanctuary—faith, loyalty, and reverence rising where systems have failed.
Feb 14


Word To My Brother
One brother speaks from exhaustion and frustration, the other from lived understanding. What passes between them is simple but heavy: unity is not optional—it’s necessary.
Feb 6


The Weight of a Holiday Smile
Sheena was the glue. Everyone said it, and most days she wore that title like a crown. But as December settled over Brooklyn with its flashing lights, long grocery lines, and endless WhatsApp messages from family, the crown began to feel more like a chain.
Nov 13, 2025


Silence Seasons the Soul
She gives endlessly, worn by love and duty. Expectations pull, but her spirit whispers for peace. She lets go—the meal, the noise, the weight. Tonight, she chooses herself and rests in the quiet.
Nov 11, 2025


Rest is Revolutionary
I was conflicted between the two, should I rest or continue on?
I knew I should slow down but it felt so wrong.
Nov 10, 2025


When Rest Became my Revolution
There comes a moment when your body refuses to carry what your heart won’t release. I learned that peace isn’t passive; it’s protection. Healing began when I stopped pretending to be unbreakable and started choosing myself. My rest became rebellion. My boundaries became redemption. My peace became non-negotiable. For the first time, I understood—true strength isn’t enduring pain; it’s having the courage to release it.
Nov 8, 2025


Close Your Eyes and Rise
Before the world demands your strength again, this is a reminder to choose yourself. To rest without guilt. To remember that you were never meant to hold everything together alone.
Nov 6, 2025


Two Shades of Sorrow Under the Same Moon
The sun burned through Nahlia’s back as she dreamed of the cool air inside the white house. Inside, Ailhan balanced a tray beneath the mistress’s stare, longing for the laughter drifting from the fields. Each envied the other’s world, blind to how both were prisons built from different bricks. But under the same moon, they would learn that freedom was never found alone.
Nov 5, 2025


If Your Man Thinks He’s the Prize, He’s Probably Feminine… and That’s Okay!
Since the rise of incel rhetoric, red-pill and blue-pill podcasting, and the sudden normalization of men in skirts in pop culture, we have watched the slow but steady emasculation of Black manhood. Men are throwing down hard hats and briefcases for podcasting equipment, stepping away from leading families to become stay-at-home dads (with no plan for leadership), and trading in loose pants for “man bags.” Riley from the Boondocks dressing like a "thug" But let’s be clear: thi
Sep 26, 2025


The Last Press: How One Salon Captured 40 Years of Black Womanhood
Don't want to read? Listen to the story narrated by Natasha. By nine a.m., the air in Gloria’s House of Beauty was already sweet with pressing oil and grape soda. The door chime, that old brass bell that had dinged for forty years, sang its little two-note hello every time someone stepped in with a head scarf and a story. The gospel station played low, a choir holding a note like morning sunlight, and the curling irons clicked gently across the countertops like metronomes kee
Sep 24, 2025


The Reputation of Red: How a Color Defined Women as ‘Fast’ or Sacred Across Cultures
When you were a kid, did your mom ever forbid you from wearing red nail polish? Maybe she said something like, “That color is a bit too grown.” Perhaps she warned that red lipstick was for “fast” girls, or that a red dress would send the “wrong message.” These warnings didn’t emerge out of thin air. Generations of women were taught that red was dangerous — a color that could draw the wrong kind of attention, one that marked you as unruly, provocative, or “loose.” But why doe
Sep 9, 2025


The Injustice of Pretty Privilege: An Analysis Through The Color Purple
Warner Bros. Pictures On a long flight to Lihue, Hawaii, I re-watched The Color Purple: The Musical . I had seen the original film as a child, but this time, the themes felt heavier, sharper. Scenes of parental abuse, incest, and servitude under unbearable strain were devastating. Yet one theme wouldn’t leave me: pretty privilege. It’s the unspoken currency of desirability, a force that shapes who gets love, who gets dismissed, and who gets discarded. In The Color Purple , w
Sep 5, 2025


At this Point, Jubilee might be an enemy to Black People.
Credit: The Root "Screenshot from Youtube" I used to want to trust media. To believe the stories presented as truth, the documentaries as honest depictions, and the conversations as authentic dialogue. But thanks to my African American Studies class at the greatest HBCU in the World (#AggiePride) I learned about COINTELPRO. The FBI’s covert program didn’t just spy on and sabotage Black leaders—it mastered the art of manipulating narrative. And if they had those kinds of psych
Aug 22, 2025


What Your Favorite Black Celebrity Says About You (Psychologically Speaking)
L et’s be honest: the celebs we admire aren’t just about the glam, the Grammy, or the genius. They reflect a piece of us — the dreamer, the survivor, the rebel, the romantic. So what does your favorite Black woman celebrity say about you? Here are 8 icons and what your love for them reveals about your character, drive, and cultural vibe — including their shadow sides. (Psychologist not required. Just vibes + emotional depth.) Beyonce If you stan Queen Bey, you are strategic
Aug 6, 2025


The Plastic Surgery Identity Crisis: How Cosmetic Alteration Distorts Divine Image
In a world filtered by Instagram and contoured by algorithms, the lines between what is real and what is manufactured are blurring fast. Today, beauty is no longer just curated—it's constructed . What began as subtle enhancements has mutated into full-blown identity modification, pulling both women and men further away from their Creator image. L to R: Drake showing off new abs. Nicki Minaj performing. Glorilla with new nose features. This isn’t just about vanity. It’s about
Jul 2, 2025
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