Walela was listed in Out 100 2020 as a leading change maker in the queer and trans community
Read MoreAn interview with Squarespace in which Walela speaks on how they came into spoken word, mutual aid during COVID19, and advice for new organizers
Read MoreWalela discusses with Lutte Collective their transplant journey, how cancer has changed their life, their mental health, their music, and what they’ve learned in organizing.
Read MoreA personal essay on the importance of social distancing and social solidarity during COVID19
Read MoreAn interview in which Walela discusses being immune compromised & Black during COVID19.
Read MoreWalela speaks with Teen Vogue on their organizing during the COVID19 pandemic & the importance of centering disabled / immunocompromised people
Read MoreWalela speaks with The Guardian on social distancing, mutual aid, and organizing in the midst of COVID19
Read MoreWhat It's Like To Be A Fat Black Queer Femme—With Cancer: Taylor Crumpton. Talking with Walela Nehanda about the decolonization of body image through cancer.
Read MoreWalela Nehanda, Poet and Organizer Releases EP On Radicalism, Self Defense, and Self Determination: Andrea Baldrias
Read MoreWalela engages in conversation with Jimanekia Eborn on their gender, cisnormativity, community organizing, cancer, mental health, and ratchet intellectualism.
Read MoreWalela Nehanda on Poetry, Reactionary Individualism & Love for Unbound Magazine
Read MoreWalela shares struggles with body image post cancer diagnosis and how their tattoos have become a form of healing with 5 strangers for Jubilee
Read More“The Powerful Young Poet Harnessing Words for a Revolution” by Clementine de Pressigny - Walela (formerly known as KiNG) shares an ode to Beyonce’s Lemonade and speaks on facing the contradictions in an idol, how art functions in relationship to liberation, and how poetry helped with healing from sexual violence.
Walela (formerly known as KiNG) interviews with InStyle and I Am That Girl as the platforms debut a series of videos aimed at getting everyday girls and femmes to talk about their own struggles and, perhaps more important, how those trials shaped who they are today.
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