Rakiba Brown—May you R.I.P.

Latest

pt.2014.05.08_Rakiba
Editor’s note from People’s Tribune, Detroit: Rakiba Brown was an activist involved in the Occupy Detroit movement from its inception in October of 2011. She could be loving and disagreeable at the same time. But you always ended up with a hug and feeling better about yourself after any discussion. This tribute appeared on her Facebook page after her death.
DETROIT — Oh Rakiba. You were, with me, almost equal parts sharp and cutting, and warm, soft, and loving. You sugarcoated nothing, conceded rarely, and loved fully.
I knew when I got a hug from you (and you were a fantastic hugger for a lady that never minded cutting folks down to size, haha!) that you meant it, and it was real, and your biting retorts and jabs made your immense well-spring of tenderness all the more powerful and generous.
You never, never, shied away from speaking your truth. And similarly, you never missed an opportunity to extend real compassion, in the moments when you could do so honestly and without inhibition.
THAT is love, YOU are love, and I will never be the same for having met you, struggled WITH you and ALONGSIDE you, and been granted the tremendous opportunity and gift to hear your voice, and thoughts, and through those, the undercurrent of your song, which you sang out with such strength and sureness and beauty.
You changed me, and taught me, and brought me (sometimes kicking and screaming), just a little bit closer to truth and light.
And so today, is a terribly sad day, a day of great loss. There’s a Rakiba-shaped hole in the world and my heart, and that’s a mighty hole indeed, and since nothing and no one is shaped quite like you, it’s not a hole that can be filled.
It’s not the first time you’ve made me cry Rakiba, and it won’t be the last I bet, and I love you.
And I love that you were HERE, and always will be, on this planet, in this time, in such an indelible, TRUTHFUL, powerful way.
You are a woman I will always look up to, now I just have to look up a little higher. Rest in power Rakiba, you are so loved, and for just exactly who you are. You are, were, always will be… tremendous.
Thank you. For never once trying to hide it.
Thank you for you.”
Emma Howland Bolton was also a founder of Occupy Detroit and is a teacher in the Detroit Public School system

+ Articles by this author

Free to republish but please credit the People's Tribune. Visit us at www.peoplestribune.org, email peoplestribune@gmail.com, or call 773-486-3551.

The People’s Tribune brings you articles written by individuals or organizations, along with our own reporting. Bylined articles reflect the views of the authors. Unsigned articles reflect the views of the editorial board. Please credit the source when sharing: ©2024 peoplestribune.org. Please donate to help us keep bringing you voices of the movement. Click here. We’re all volunteer, no paid staff.

1 COMMENT

Leave a Reply to Randy Cancel reply

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Featured

Speakers Listed for April 22 Webinar on Mass Deportations

The speakers for an April 22 webinar on the resistance to mass deportations have been announced. See the speaker biographies and registration information.

Bring Union Brother Kilmar Home: His Deportation Is an Attack on All of Us

The deportation of union brother Kilmar Abrego Garcia is a gut punch to the labor movement, a slap in the face to every worker who dares to organize.

Michigan Journalism Hall of Fame Inducts 11 Journalists

Michigan Journalism Hall of Fame selects 11 journalists in its 2025 class. See speech from one of the 11, Daymon J. Hartley, who has contributed photos from the front lines to the People's Tribune for decades.

April 22 Webinar Will Explore Resistance to Mass Deportations

On April 22, the Zooming to the Border Coalition, which includes the People's Tribune and Tribuno del Pueblo, will hold a webinar titled Zooming to the Resistance Against Mass Deportations. A group of activists will share their experiences in resisting the government's assault on immigrants.

‘Oligarchs are Deeply Tied to Both Parties,’ says MI State Rep. at ‘Hands Off’ Protest

MI State Rep. Dylan Wegela tells protesters to prevent people like Trump from coming to power we have to fight for people, not corporations. And to win, Democrats cannot be complicit in the oligarchy.

More from the People's Tribune