Aishah Shahidah Simmons

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In My Father's House
1

In My Father's House

Jan 01, 1996
A documentary short about Aishah's Black feminist lesbian exploration of her coming out process through self reflection, and candid conversations with her father, Michael Simmons, her younger brother, Tyree Cinque Simmons (DJ Drama), and Yvonne Marie Jones, one of her best friends from high school.
In My Father's House
1

In My Father's House

Jan 01, 1996
A documentary short about Aishah's Black feminist lesbian exploration of her coming out process through self reflection, and candid conversations with her father, Michael Simmons, her younger brother, Tyree Cinque Simmons (DJ Drama), and Yvonne Marie Jones, one of her best friends from high school.
In My Father's House
1

In My Father's House

Jan 01, 1996
A documentary short about Aishah's Black feminist lesbian exploration of her coming out process through self reflection, and candid conversations with her father, Michael Simmons, her younger brother, Tyree Cinque Simmons (DJ Drama), and Yvonne Marie Jones, one of her best friends from high school.
Silence... Broken
1

Silence... Broken

Jan 01, 1993
Silence...Broken is an experimental narrative short about an African American lesbian's refusal to be silent about racism, sexism and homophobia. Featuring the poetry of acclaimed poet Jourdan Keith, this video is dedicated to the memory of self-defined Black Lesbian Feminist Warrior Mother Poet Audre Lorde who died in 1992 after a fourteen-year battle with breast cancer. This experimental short was created out of the filmmaker's personal need to see on screen the internal and external struggle Black lesbians go through when they constantly fight against choosing between their race, their gender and their sexuality in a racist, sexist and homophobic society. Silence...Broken is strongly influenced by award-winning filmmaker Marlon Riggs' masterpiece Tongues Untied about Black gay men.
No! The Rape Documentary
1
NO! The Rape Documentary is the 2006-released Ford-Foundation funded award-winning, internationally acclaimed, groundbreaking feature length film that explores the international atrocity of heterosexual rape and other forms of sexual assault through the first person testimonies, scholarship, spirituality, activism, and cultural work of Black people in the United States. NO! also explores how rape is used as a weapon of homophobia. NO! is a Black feminist educational organizing tool that has been used in the global movements to end violence against women and children for ten years and counting.