Being Here

Toyin

Toyin

Some words are written as offerings — as acts of grief, love, and refusal to forget. Toyin is a spell by adrienne maree brown, written in honor of Oluwatoyin Salau, a young Black activist and survivor whose life was taken far too soon. Part mourning, part prayer, part protest, this piece is a reminder that our movements are made of real people — and that holding their names, their stories, and their humanity is itself a radical act. Read it slowly. Let it land.

Toyin

Some words are written as offerings — as acts of grief, love, and refusal to forget. Toyin is a spell by adrienne maree brown, written in honor of Oluwatoyin Salau, a young Black activist and survivor whose life was taken far too soon. Part mourning, part prayer, part protest, this piece is a reminder that our movements are made of real people — and that holding their names, their stories, and their humanity is itself a radical act. Read it slowly. Let it land.

Toyin

Some words are written as offerings — as acts of grief, love, and refusal to forget. Toyin is a spell by adrienne maree brown, written in honor of Oluwatoyin Salau, a young Black activist and survivor whose life was taken far too soon. Part mourning, part prayer, part protest, this piece is a reminder that our movements are made of real people — and that holding their names, their stories, and their humanity is itself a radical act. Read it slowly. Let it land.

By adrienne maree brown, Excerpt from Toyin

Some words are written as offerings. As acts of grief, love, and refusal to forget. Toyin is a spell by adrienne maree brown, written in honor of Oluwatoyin Salau, a young Black activist and survivor whose life was taken far too soon. Part mourning, part prayer, part protest, this piece is a reminder that our movements are made of real people — and that holding their names, their stories, and their humanity is itself a radical act. Read it slowly. Let it land.

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