Amina/
Camille Lenain, France
“My mother told me that these pigeons were a part of her that I could keep with me.”
READ THE STORY“My mother told me that these pigeons were a part of her that I could keep with me.”
READ THE STORY“It’s like a knot in your stomach, as if you were burning from the inside, as if you feel your heart blazing, and you say to yourself, what is happening?”
READ THE STORY“I think that to believe in something, even if you don’t necessarily believe in God, but you believe in an entity, it’s a kind of pillar and allows you to have hope in the world.”
READ THE STORY“I thank God everyday that I’m not straight. When you love someone outside of a norm, you step out of that norm. You love the person.”
READ THE STORY“My family perceived femininity in me, so they tried to contain it, to repress and expel it. Why do I dance? A boy doesn’t dance. He’s supposed to love football. I did not like football”
READ THE STORY“I think it’s Islam that saved me a little from not getting into heterosexuality”
READ THE STORY“I am a transgender and Muslim woman, and this changes nothing about my relationship with Islam. Not with Ramadan, not with Allah, and not with my worship. There is not a single thing that has changed in this regard. I am who I am because of religion. I don’t care about the opinions from people … READ THE STORY
READ THE STORYI thank God everyday that I’m not straight. When you love someone outside of a norm, you step out of that norm. It’s a relationship to love that goes beyond something. You love the person.
READ THE STORY