LEGACY CULTURAL WORK
For three decades, my cultural work has centered the lived realities of sexual violence in Black communities. Through film, writing, and public scholarship, I have broken long-standing silences, created pathways for healing, and envisioned ways to address and end the widespread epidemic of sexual violence without relying on carceral systems. This work is foundational to who I am. It continues to shape my Dharma teaching, my understanding of liberation, and my commitment to collective wellbeing.
NO! The Rape Documentary
Released in 2006, my groundbreaking feature-length 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 across five continents, NO! continues to support survivors, educators, activists, and communities in building trauma-informed, non-carceral approaches to harm and healing, more than twenty years after its world premiere.
NO! Testimonials
love WITH accountability: Digging Up the Roots of Child Sexual Abuse
My Lambda Literary Award-winning anthology 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 collection continues to invite intergenerational honesty, accountability, and envisioning a world that ends child sexual abuse without relying on criminal justice systems.
love WITH accountability Testimonials
Salamishah Tillet presents the inaugural Courage Fund Award to Aishah Shahidah Simmons
This excerpt features Salamishah Tillet, co-founder of A Long Walk Home, Inc, and co-founder of The Courage Fund presenting the inaugural Courage Fund Award to Aishah Shahidah Simmons for her long-term Black survivor-centered cultural work, specifically in breaking the silence about sexual violence, providing healing paths for trauma, & advocating for humane responses to inhumane actions (NO! The Rape Documentary and love WITH accountability: Digging Up the Roots of Child Sexual Abuse).
The Courage Fund: Inaugural Awardees Stephanie "Sparkle" Edwards and Aishah Shahidah Simmons
The Courage Fund’s inaugural awardees, Stephanie “Sparkle” Edwards and Aishah Shahidah Simmons, join host Charles Blow to discuss standing up in the face of adversity for the benefit of women and girls everywhere. The Courage Fund is an initiative led by bestselling author Ta-Nehisi Coates and Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Salamishah Tillet and artist Scheherazade Tillet of A Long Walk Home, along with activist Ted Bunch of A Call to Men. It works to empower women and girls to speak out against violence.
Early Shorts: The Lineage of Cultural Work
Silence...Broken (1993)
Written in 1992 in a Toni Cade Bambara scriptwriting workshop at Scribe Video Center, Silence...Broken is my first video — an experimental short about a Black lesbian's refusal to be silent about racism, sexism, and homophobia. Featuring the poetry of award-winning poet Jourdan Keith, this video is dedicated to the memory of Audre Lorde, self-defined Black Lesbian Feminist Mother Warrior Poet.
In My Father's House (1996)
Produced and directed by me and edited by Joan Brannon, In My Father's House is a documentary short about my Black feminist lesbian coming out process, told through self-reflection and candid conversations with my father Michael Simmons, my younger brother Tyree Cinque Simmons (DJ Drama), and my close friend Yvonne Marie Jones. The film documents my coming out journey, which includes my rape on a study abroad program, subsequent pregnancy, and safe and legal abortion in my sophomore year of college.
Why These Projects Live Here
These projects do not live here as artifacts of a former life. They live here because they are the roots of this one.
Silence...Broken, In My Father's House, NO! The Rape Documentary, and love WITH accountability were never separate from the path that led to this Dharma teaching. They were the path, a decades-long practice of turning toward suffering with honesty, bearing witness without flinching, and insisting that healing and transformation are possible without punishment or erasure.
That is still what I do. The form has deepened and widened. The commitment has not changed.
These works are offered here not as a greatest hits collection but as living roots, evidence of a life devoted to liberation in all its forms. They belong alongside the Dharma teaching, not behind it.
The Aishah Shahidah Simmons Papers are held at the David M. Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library at Duke University, within 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.
