“Oh Allah, I ask you for a good end to my life. Ameen.”— Ending our day with this dua
Sheila Abdus-Salaam, the first black female judge in the New York State Court of Appeals and the first female Muslim judge in the United States, was found dead on April 12, 2017. Sheila Abdus-Salaam was born Sheila Turner to working-class parents in Washington DC on March 14, 1952. Her inspiration to become a lawyer came from the TV shows she loved as a girl and from Frankie Muse Freeman, a civil rights activist and lawyer, who visited her school. Among her many accomplishments, Sheila Abdus-Salaam made the groundbreaking decision in a case that allowed LGBT parents to pursue equal parenting rights.
Lacking a final statement from a medical examiner or a suicide note, the police and the media have still been quick to label her death a suicide, citing that she was ‘stressed at work.’ We can only wait for further investigation and hope that she receives as much justice in death as she offered to the world in life. For the time being, until we know the results of the investigation, SAY HER NAME.Sheila Abdus-Salaam.
‘Cartagena forever’ | photography by Colombian photographer Hernan Diaz.
“… In the photography of Hernan Diaz there is something that identifies him more than his name: it is faithfulness to himself always in acsent; an aristocracy of the soul in the gaze, which beautifies all that he sees; the magic which transforms an object into something metaphysical, the real into poetry, the everyday into amazement…” - Gonzalo Arango
I finally got my hands on his collection of photography. I’m so in awe at all of the beauty he’s managed to capture.
“Out of jasmine the night’s blood streams white. Your perfume,
my weakness and your secret, follows me like a snakebite. And your hair
is a tent of wind autumn in color. I walk along with speech
to the last of the words a bedouin told a pair of doves”- Mahmoud Darwish, from The Butterfly’s Burden
You’re not actually against capitalism if your end goal is making sure everyone has jobs rather than making sure everyone can live and function regardless.
(via naturaekos)