Abolitionist Sanctuary cover art

Abolitionist Sanctuary

Abolitionist Sanctuary

By: Nikia
Listen for free

Join Founder and Executive Director of Abolitionist Sanctuary, Rev. Nikia S. Robert, Ph.D., in a podcast about Black women/mothers, religion, and mass punishment. Connect with us to be apart of a faith-based abolitionist movement!

© 2026 Abolitionist Sanctuary
Art
Episodes
  • Juneteenth, Sisterhood, And The Fight For Black Mothers
    Jun 22 2026

    Send us Fan Mail

    We celebrate Juneteenth and five years of Abolitionist Sanctuary by telling the truth about how freedom gets reclaimed through sisterhood, legacy, and community care. We name what it takes to protect Black mothers from punishment-first systems and why faith-based abolition has to look like real support, not shame.

    • introducing Reverend Dr Najuma Smith Pollard and Candace Benbow and grounding in faith, abolition, and Black motherhood
    • sharing pronouns, what we’re wearing, and naming our people as a practice of presence
    • catching up on current priorities, creativity, parenting, peace, and joy as survival
    • reflecting on vision boards, courage, and betting on ourselves beyond credentials
    • unpacking what Juneteenth means amid recalling, contradiction, and commodification
    • remembering founding board service and why Black women saying yes matters
    • honoring our mamas, grief, gratitude, and the complexity of Black mother daughter bonds
    • naming the criminalization of Black motherhood and rejecting carceral “solutions”
    • lifting up abolitionist virtues like compassion, care, courage, creativity, and community
    • making the case for training, funding, and building sanctuaries nationwide

    As we close, please download and share on all platforms. You can follow us on YouTube, Instagram, Facebook, and download our social mobile app. Also enroll in our courses at abolitionacademy.com and become certified. Don't forget to become a member and subscribe to our mailing list at abolitionistsctuary.org.


    Support the show

    Sign-up and join a social media platform for abolitionists
    Enroll to take courses at Abolition Academy
    Follow us on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook
    Subscribe to our YouTube Channel

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 1 min
  • A Mother Rebuilds Her Life After Surviving Abuse And Prison
    May 8 2026

    Send us Fan Mail

    We talk with Leslie Campbell about surviving abuse, being incarcerated as a mother, and rebuilding a life through education, faith, and community. We name the harm mass incarceration does to families and push for a world where Black women are believed, protected, and free to thrive.
    • Leslie’s testimony of self-defense, incarceration, and finding a way forward
    • Education as the turning point for voice, self-esteem, and reentry success
    • What Leslie sees when bringing hope and resources into women’s facilities
    • Realities of incarceration at Rikers and upstate, including prison labor
    • The impact of separation on children, mothers, and extended family caregivers
    • Reentry guilt, family alienation, and the trauma of reunification
    • Faith as survival in solitary confinement and a guide for restoration
    • Practical ways churches can support incarcerated people and returning citizens
    • Encouragement for mothers to practice grace and release perfection myths
    Please download and share on all platforms.
    Follow us on YouTube, Instagram, Facebook, and download our social mobile app.
    Download the Abolitionist Sanctuary Social Mobile app.
    Also enroll in our courses and become certified at abolitionacademy.com.
    Don't forget to become a member and subscribe to our mailing list at abolitionistsanctuary.org.


    Support the show

    Sign-up and join a social media platform for abolitionists
    Enroll to take courses at Abolition Academy
    Follow us on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook
    Subscribe to our YouTube Channel

    Show More Show Less
    33 mins
  • Ancestral Wisdom Can Help Us Resist Authoritarian Politics
    Apr 3 2026

    Send us Fan Mail

    Monuments, memory, and movement power collide when we sit down with Pastor William Lamar IV of Metropolitan AME Church in Washington, DC. We start with Abolition April and why faith-based abolition cannot stay theoretical when regressive policies and public violence keep targeting Black communities, especially Black women. From the first minutes, this conversation is clear: abolition is not only a practice, it is a way of life that forms what we believe, how we worship, and how we organize.

    Pastor Lamar takes us deep into the spiritual technology of ancestral veneration through his book “Ancestors: The Names That Bless Us, Curse Us, and Hold Us.” We unpack the difference between ancestors of light who bless and hold us and “shadow ancestors” whose energy can reinforce white supremacist culture, even through the architecture and rituals of Washington, DC. We also talk theology with our whole chest, from unlearning who is “in our head” when we read scripture to challenging harmful church teachings like gendering God and the violent logic of penal substitutionary atonement.

    Then we get concrete about strategy: how to organize in an authoritarian political climate without being rattled into burnout, what it meant for Metropolitan AME to sue after the Proud Boys attack, and why building power is not optional. We close with hard-won fundraising and philanthropy lessons on relational grantmaking, transparency, and expanding the table so the work can last.

    Subscribe, share the episode, and leave a review to help more people find this faith-based abolitionist conversation, then tell us in the comments: what would an abolitionist sanctuary look like in your city?

    Support the show

    Sign-up and join a social media platform for abolitionists
    Enroll to take courses at Abolition Academy
    Follow us on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook
    Subscribe to our YouTube Channel

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 8 mins
adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_t1
No reviews yet