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Dear Black Girl

Letters from Your Sisters on Stepping Into Your Power

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Dear Black Girl

Written by: Tamara Winfrey Harris
Narrated by: Donna Schiele, Tamberla Perry
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About this listen

"Dear Black Girl is the empowering, affirming love letter our girls need in order to thrive in a world that does not always protect, nurture, or celebrate us. This collection of Black women’s voices… is a must-read, not only for Black girls, but for everyone who cares about Black girls, and for Black women whose inner-Black girl could use some healing." (Tarana Burke, Founder of the "Me Too" Movement)

"Dear Dope Black Girl, you don’t know me, but I know you. I know you because I am you! We are magic, light, and stars in the universe.” So begins a letter that Tamara Winfrey Harris received as part of her Letters to Black Girls project, where she asked black women to write honest, open, and inspiring letters of support to young black girls aged 13 to 21. Her call went viral, resulting in a hundred personal letters from black women around the globe that cover topics such as identity, self-love, parents, violence, grief, mental health, sex, and sexuality.

In Dear Black Girl, Winfrey Harris organizes a selection of these letters, providing “a balm for the wounds of anti-black-girlness” and modeling how black women can nurture future generations. Each chapter ends with a prompt encouraging girls to write a letter to themselves, teaching the art of self-love and self-nurturing. Winfrey Harris’ The Sisters Are Alright explores how black women must often fight and stumble their way into all rightness after adulthood. Dear Black Girl continues this work by delivering pro-black, feminist, LGBTQ+ positive, and body positive messages for black women-to-be - and for the girl who still lives inside every black woman who still needs reminding sometimes that she is alright.

©2021 Tamara Winfrey Harris (P)2021 Tamara Winfrey Harris
Gender Studies Self-Esteem Social Sciences United States Self-Love
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From Black women to Black women

This is a love letter between generations of women. it is a response in understanding the struggles and assumptions of what it is to be a black woman in an a world that fixates on sexualizing and stereotyping them.
This is the needed voices young women everywhere should hear from their elders.
This is a safe and loving space of truth and guidance.

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