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Black Fashion Magazine

@blackfashionmagazine / blackfashionmagazine.tumblr.com

Black Fashion is currently in the middle of a renovation. Check back in with us on November 2018. We promise you'll like what we have in store for you. In the meantime, we left some of our favourite work up under the home button. Don't forget to check out our tumblr, instagram, snapchat, twitter and pinterest.
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so i have to say, i’m really bad at doing a lot of things but luckily, This happens to be one of the things I’m kind of good at. Guys honestly, I’m really tired of working a 9-5 and making minimum wage, i just want create music forever and impact a whole generation of people. If this video ever cross your blog, do me a favor and reblog this please… don’t just ‘like’ this, but ‘reblogg’ pleaseee..  i Love you guys. heres a link to the song (for those who like it) 4beta, 4worse 

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“My father was a talented engineer.  He could fix any type of truck, and he used his income to help the poor.  Our neighbors’ school fees and hospital bills were always paid.  My mother would bring needy people to our table, and order us to give them the best portions of meat.  She’d explain that these people rarely had the chance to eat well.  Both my parents were very religious.  But they always taught us: ‘Humanity first.  Everything else comes after.’  When the genocide began, they invited our Tutsi neighbors to hide in our house.  There were seven of them.  Some lived under the beds.  Others lived in the cupboards.  I was a teenager back then and my job was to change the waste buckets.  It was a miserable existence, and it went on for months.  But we prayed with them.  We tried to give them hope.  We told them that God was in control.  At night we’d give them Muslim dress so they could go in the backyard and get fresh air.  Our neighbors suspected us because our curtains were always closed.  We never slept because we knew the penalty for hiding Tutsis was death.  But all seven people in our house survived.  Unfortunately my mother and father died a few years ago, so I must tell their story for them.  Their names were Mukamunosi Adha and Gasano Juma.  They saved seven lives.  And they valued love and humanity more than anything.”   (Kigali, Rwanda)

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