Title: Daughters of the Dustwind
South Carolina Sea Islands, early 1900s — Gullah Geechee community
In a small coastal village carved into the edge of the Atlantic, where moss hangs like memory from the oaks, lived three generations of Black women, bound by blood and spirit. They were known as the Benya Women—keepers of the past, midwives to the future.
Etta, the grandmother, had skin like polished mahogany and eyes like iron. Born just a decade after Emancipation, she carried stories in her bones. Stories of chains and chants, rice fields and resistance. She was a rootworker, a healer who whispered to plants and warned of storms before the clouds ever formed.
Her daughter, Naomi, was fire. She had marched in Charleston when women were told to stay home. She had taught herself to read from hymnals and taught others in secret under moonlight. Naomi dreamed of books in every Black child’s hands—and refused to live silent.
Then came Zora, born with the tide. She was a girl of sand and stars, who braided poetry into her hair and wrote on everything—scraps, shells, driftwood. While other girls picked crabs or stitched nets, Zora scribbled stories about flying Africans and underwater cities ruled by queens.
One day, a northern reporter came to the island, seeking tales of “the old world.” But Zora refused to let him write it his way. She told him, “Our magic ain’t past tense. We’re still living it.”
Etta passed during a blood moon, her hands folded over sweetgrass and cinnamon bark. Naomi, older now, watched Zora get into a train bound for Harlem with nothing but a suitcase and a satchel of stories.
Years later, Zora stood on a stage in New York, reading from her novel about Gullah girls who talk to spirits and women who remember too much. Her words made white critics uncomfortable—and Black grandmothers proud.
And back on the island, under the same oak where Etta once taught her to listen to trees, Naomi read that book aloud to children under starlight.
"They were not just mothers and daughters.
They were libraries."
"And no wind, no dust, no time could erase them."
#storytelling #blackwomen #blacks
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