Standing four feet and eleven inches tall and embodying an inspiring and genuine story, Ayesha Imani began her journey in North Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. She was born to a mother, who had only a 4
th grade education, who was a domestic worker for middle class white families; also the great granddaughter of a slave. Born by the name Ann R. Platt, she attended William B. Kellie public school, but was soon requested to transfer to Masterman Academy, an advanced school for especially academically gifted students. She was the first student in the history of her school to be sent to Masterman, where she completed two grades in one year and graduated high school at the age of 16 in 1970. As a poor, black female, graduating high school was a huge accomplishment for her. In fact she was the first female of her family to graduate high school. From a very young age she was a serious activist and scholar. This made childhood somewhat difficult and unenjoyable, being the “only one” in almost ever setting made Imani feel “as if [she] didn’t belong anywhere.” In her line of 5 siblings she was the most serious one, excited by an assortment of bibles, politics, and society while simultaneously caring for her autistic sister; teaching her to read and write, before anyone knew exactly what autism was.
Although she did not come from a family with high academic standing at all, Ayesha Imani grew up with a mother who belabored the importance of education. Although she never officially joined feminist organizations her mother was an example of a “strong, independent, black women”, whose idol was Mary McLeod Bethune. “Black women of my time were hesitant to join the women’s’ movement, it did not seem to address the struggles of black women. We knew that as black people and black women we had to fight for respect from men and women both black and white.” she explained when asked about her involvement with the feminist movement. However with a mother who embodied feminism Imani was able to excel knowing that she had a purpose. Imani says with passion and nostalgia “not only did my mother encourage education, in fact she didn’t teach me the domestic skills that she used in the houses of her employers. I would ask her to help cook or clean, and she would sharply say ‘no do your work, this is what I have to do so that you won’t have to, I never want you to’.” Her mother was extremely forward thinking for her time in the 50’s. She believed in birth control and safe abortions, which was rare. With a powerful, progressive, and encouraging mother Imani did indeed excel. She went on to be the first person in her bloodline to graduate from college. She graduated from Temple University, where she started as a secretary of the Urban Education Department in 1978 and ended as a professor with a Ph.D in the same department in 2004. And as successful as this brief background may seem this was only the beginning of an individual’s life that has evolved into a community’s movement.