Aishah Shahidah Simmons at her desk, African textiles behind her, Buddhist figurines nearby. Photo by Studio TSHAY.

My History

I offer this work in gratitude to all who made it possible.

Aishah Shahidah Simmons is a Black feminist lesbian Buddhist practitioner, dharma teacher, survivor-healer, and award-winning writer-filmmaker whose life and work have always moved toward liberation, first through film and cultural production, and now through the ancient wisdom of contemplative practice.

Formed by more than three decades of survivor-centered cultural work and more than two decades of Buddhist practice and vipassanā meditation, Aishah brings to her teaching a rare depth, the practitioner who has sat in silence for a cumulative year of residential retreats, and who has also stood in the streets, broken silences, and demanded accountability. Her teachings are rooted in the Theravāda Insight tradition and shaped by Buddhist, Black feminist, queer, and survivor lineages. She holds space that is race-conscious, LGBTQIA+-affirming, and trauma-informed, grounded in the understanding that our apparent identities are not obstacles to practice but portals into it.

Aishah Shahidah Simmons on a sofa beneath a gallery wall of ancestor and cultural icons. Photo by Studio TSHAY.

Aishah serves as a resident teacher at Delaware Valley Insight and is currently enrolled in the 2025-2028 Spirit Rock Meditation Center and Insight Meditation Society Residential Retreat Teacher Training Program. She is a certified Mindfulness Meditation Teacher and a qualified Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) teacher through Brown University.

Her groundbreaking documentary NO! The Rape Documentary cinematically broke the silence on sexual violence in Black communities. Funded by the Ford Foundation, subtitled in Spanish, French, Portuguese, and German, and screened extensively across five continents, NO! exemplifies her commitment to work that is survivor-centered and accessible to all. Her Lambda Literary Award-winning anthology love WITH accountability: Digging Up the Roots of Child Sexual Abuse brings together diasporic Black child sexual abuse survivors and advocates who, through first person transformative storytelling, explore child sexual abuse within Black families and communities.

The Aishah Shahidah Simmons Papers are held at the David M. Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library at Duke University. The papers are part of the Sallie Bingham Center for Women's History and Culture, the John Hope Franklin Research Center for African and African American History and Culture, and the Archive of Documentary Arts.

This work has brought me into many rooms across the United States and internationally. To the right is a small selection of organizations and institutions where I have taught, collaborated, or partnered, past and present.

Much of this work has been in service of addressing sexual violence, a foundation that continues to inform and deepen my Dharma and mindfulness teaching within a broader cultural commitment to cultural and justice work spanning more than three decades.