Iresha Picot and Natasha Butler, created a grassroots collective in the name of our Revolutionary Warrior Mama, Assata Shakur.
In a 1978 article in the Black Scholar, Assata Shakur stated that for Black Women, it is of the greatest importance of organizing our own collectives because it is “imperative to our struggle that we build a strong black women’s movement… [to] talk about the experiences that shaped us; that we assess our strengths and weaknesses and define our own history….we need Black Woman’s medicines to give us strength to fight and the drive to win. Under the guidance of Harriet Tubman and Fannie Lou Hamer and all of our foremothers, let us rebuild a sense of community. Let us rebuild the culture of giving and carry on the tradition of fierce determination to move on closer to freedom.”—Assata Shakur
We seek to carry out what Assata beckoned Sistas to do—building a collective addressing the needs, concerns, and creativity of Black Women. This will be done through multimedia-based projects, ground level outreach and local events.
Continue to check back as we develop and move forward in the spirit and work of Assata Shakur.
For more information, contact AssataDaughters@gmail.com
Iresha Picot and Natasha Butler created a propaganda project “Dismantling the Master’s Tools: Looking Out for Sistas’ Welfare” under our overarching “The Assata’s Daughters Project”. Many people believe that mobilizing themselves off of welfare is easy but in reality, the system makes welfare a false “need” and creates difficult hurdles for women and men to be independent off the system. It is very crucial that the Black community becomes self-sufficient and not rely on this system because it will not let us reach our full potential for self-determination. There is nothing wrong with being on welfare but it is important to not rely solely upon and instead, “ work the system” and take their resources to form group survival strategies and mobilize oneself off of this system.
Our goal for this project is to (1) ignite a discussion with Sistas around the welfare system (2) to get them to start thinking about moving away from this system with self-sufficient co-operative programs. What we have been doing is putting these STICKERS (below) up on poles, bus stops, and places around low-income and subsidized housing. Then we flier our self-sufficient leaflets (that have resources for upward mobility) in the doors of these same apartments. If you would like to partake in the project, please run with it. Also if you would like to implement some of the “solutions” at the bottom, please hit me up and we can get busy!
(the stickers—please click on them to read!) 

Ways in which we can form group reliance and give this system back its “resources”: