Race Matters / A menace to our enemies

23.03.25
A headshot of Fabliha Yeaqub from the waist up. They're looking into the camera and are wearing an embroidered kurta with a black, circle bindi
Aired on 23.03.25, 10:00am

Can writing be a political practice? How do you write in a way that serves liberation, the making of better worlds? 

Today Samantha and Bipasha are in conversation with Fabliha Yeaqub, a queer Bangladeshi writer, artist and community organiser based in so-called New York. We are talking about her journey with writing as catharsis and as rebellion, how it relates to her political work, and what it means to forge community connections amidst the individualist culture of the West. This episode is grounded in June Jordan's timeless words: I must become a menace to my enemies.

Connect with Fabliha’s work

Fabliha’s piece 'muslim girlhood is a knife. you kill us, and yet we will live forever’: https://fablihayeaqub.substack.com/p/muslim-girlhood-is-a-knife-you-kill

Website: https://www.fablihayeaqub.com/ 

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/fablihayeaqub/ 

Marigold Seeds Collective: https://www.instagram.com/marigoldseedscollective/ 

Amader Dawat: https://www.instagram.com/amaderdawat/ 

June Jordan’s I Must Become a Menace to my Enemieshttps://poets.org/poem/i-must-become-menace-my-enemies 

More Episodes

Tracklist

June Jordan - A menace to my enemies
DEVAURA
NSW
MEET YOUR MAKER
Fabliha Yeaqub
Interview
Queer Bangladeshi writer, artist and community organiser on writing as a way to self regulate, and the complexity of sharing your life online
Priya Ragu
School me like that
Nikki Giovanni
The Women Gatherer
Raveena
Headaches
Fabliha Yeaqub
Interview
Queer Bangladeshi writer and artist on subverting Western ideas about what queerness looks like, and the her community organising work
Asha Puthli
Let Me Into Your Life
Ziyad
Collide