I have published a couple of essays before (literally 2, lol) and I'm finally getting round to having them in one place. Happy reading 📚 https://t.co/v0HhtkUsXQ
An accident in 2025 left Patricia paralyzed from the chest down. Today she moves her arms and drives her own wheelchair, earned in physio five days a week.
KES 750,000 covers six more months of care. M-Pesa, under a minute. Link in first comment. Keep her recovery moving.
A little girl child is missing from her family, she was brought to Tembisa Police station (Rabasotho) by good samaritans who found her roaming the streets at Ibazelo, Thembisa.
It is rare to see deaf Black women with PhDs in STEM, making this a remarkable and historic one.
Meet Dr. Amie Fornah Sankoh, a scientist from Sierra Leone 🇸🇱, who is the first deaf Black woman to earn a PhD in a STEM field in the United States of America.
Ashenda is a traditional women's cultural festival celebrated during the summer season in the last week of the month of August in Tigray, northern Ethiopia 🇪🇹
It is a three days festival of womanhoơd, sisterhood, and female joy, celebrated every August in Tigray, Ethiopia where all women show up with their natural hair. It brings together physical adornment, music, and dance to honour the feminine form, where female participants are gifted food, drinks, and money by the rest of the community.
On the occasion of Ashenda also known as Shaday or Ahendiye in Amhara regional state, the young women and girls dress the best traditional dresses called tilfi which is a cotton dress decorated with amazing embroidery from the neck to toe in front of the dress.
It is not only on this event that Ethiopian women show up with natural hair. l have met lot of Ethiopian wơmen, they truIy embrace who they are. No makeup, no wigs and they are always glowing!