Episodes
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Salone man get badat (Sierra Leoneans are envious) is not just a national catchphrase, its a widely held Sierra Leonean belief. The expression "Salone man get badat" has been used in presidential speeches and popular culture. President Kabbah once said it in a now-famous speech. Emmerson Bockarie, a Sierra Leonean Afropop singer, made a song about it. Badat is on everyone's lips, it's on their minds, and it is the root of all evil.
Make Sierra Leone Famous explores the root of this self-deprecating national catchphrase and negative belief through a spiritual and mental health lens. If Sierra Leoneans are envious, how can they unlearn or control it?
Special Guests: Dr. Ramadan Jalloh and Jesse Lamboi -
In Sierra Leone, just two out of every ten women is uncircumcised. These women, the minority are labelled "gborka" and deemed "unclean" or "not woman enough". Make Sierra Leone Famous places the sex lives of uncut women in focus to discuss the power of pleasure, women's liberation, and orgasm equality. Special Guests: Umu Jalloh, MSW, and Leanne MaHota Rizk, MPH (Sexual and Reproductive Health Specialist).
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Missing episodes?
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Drug addiction and mental health in Sierra Leone in focus on episode one to an all-new season of the Make Sierra Leone Famous Podcast!
Vickie Remoe interviews with Mahawa Sandy, founder of Nyali Foundation and Dr. Elizabeth Alieu resident psychiatrist in charge of the child and adolescent mental health at the Sierra Leone Psychiatric Teaching Hospital.
Sierra Leone’s youth are struggling with drug addiction and dependency. Vickie and guests discuss the root causes and and solutions for tackling the drug crisis. -
Host Vickie Remoe is in conversation with two of Sierra Leone’s most celebrated storytellers; award-winning playwright and founder of Freetong Players Charlie Haffner, and Emmy, BAFTA, and Peabody-winning journalist Sorious Samura.
Show Notes
Listen to Doniie Major’s Freetown City: https://bit.ly/3PaVtHB
Ship to Sierra Leone from the USA with Dot Bleu
Find your next outfit at The Doll House Boutique
To make Sierra Leone better for women and girls in Salone better support the Asmaa James Foundation https://bit.ly/3ybDLz5
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Host Vickie Remoe is in conversation with actress, producer, and founder of Lema’s Diary Production Company. The film producer uses her craft to make social commentary about issues affecting Sierra Leone’s women. Her latest film “Profit Point” set in the slums of Freetown is about the struggles of women trapped by poverty and sexual exploitation. Profit Point had its London Premiere at the Young Sierra Leonean Kip Kompin Cinema.
Show Notes
Listen to Kaley Bag’s Di Sai Wae Ar Komot: https://spoti.fi/3oL72KW
Ship to Sierra Leone from the USA with Dot Bleu
Find your next outfit at The Doll House Boutique
To make Sierra Leone better for women and girls in Salone better support the Asmaa James Foundation https://bit.ly/3ybDLz5
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Host Vickie Remoe is in conversation with Sierra Leonean poet, playwright, and author Oumar Farouk Sesay, Oumar talks and shares insights from his four-decade-long career as a writer and creative. His latest play “The Throne” challenges audiences to question their beliefs on identity, homosexuality, and tradition.
Show Notes
Listen to Daddy Saj’s Che Che: https://bit.ly/3Bc2xQY
Follow the Mane Chronicles: https://bit.ly/3Rq6AyV
Ship to Sierra Leone from the USA with Dot Bleu
Find your next outfit at The Doll House Boutique
To make Sierra Leone better for women and girls in Salone better support the Asmaa James Foundation https://bit.ly/3ybDLz5
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Host Vickie Remoe is in conversation with Tarah Majeek, Entrepreneur and founder of self-care and wellness brand “Mane Chronicles''. They discuss branding, startups, and tips to transform a hobby into an enterprise.
Show Notes
Listen to TMA’s No Sense: https://spoti.fi/3c94S4t
Follow the Mane Chronicles: https://bit.ly/3Rq6AyV
Ship to Sierra Leone from the USA with Dot Bleu
Find your next outfit at The Doll House Boutique
To make Sierra Leone better
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Host Vickie Remoe is in conversation with Alhaji Siraj Bah, a multiple award-winning green entrepreneur who makes cooking briquettes out of coconuts. Siraj shares his journey from homelessness in Freetown to becoming one of Sierra Leone’s most successful young founders and job creators.
Show Notes
Listen to Drizilik’s Di Mammi Ihn Moni Fo Comot: https://bit.ly/3NLiPCU j
Ship to Sierra Leone from the USA with Dot Bleu
Find your next outfit at The Doll House Boutique
To make Sierra Leone better for women and girls in Salone better support the Asmaa James Foundation https://bit.ly/3ybDLz5
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Host Vickie Remoe is in conversation with Namina Forna author of the New York Times bestsellers “The Gilded Ones” and the “Merciless Ones”. They discuss representation in fantasy books, girls' rites of passage, books as escapism, and growing up in Sierra Leone.
Show Notes
Listen to Zainab Sheriff’s Mammie Na Power: https://bit.ly/2Z6Vyrj
To buy Namina Forna’s Book: https://naminaforna.com/Ship to Sierra Leone from the USA with Dot Bleu
Find your next outfit at The Doll House Boutique
To make Sierra Leone better for women and girls in Salone better support the Asmaa James Foundation https://bit.ly/3ybDLz5
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Host Vickie Remoe is in conversation with Screenwriter and Director Mohamed ’Spartar’ Lansana. Mohamed talks about the growth of Sierra Leonean films, the importance of passing legislation to protect and support the industry, and emerging producers and filmmakers from Sierra Leone everyone should know.
Show Notes
Listen to Famous’s Brighter Future: https://bit.ly/39upgMH
Ship to Sierra Leone from the USA with Dot Bleu
Find your next outfit at The Doll House Boutique
To make Sierra Leone better for women and girls in Salone better support the Asmaa James Foundation https://bit.ly/3ybDLz5
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Host Vickie Remoe is in conversation with Renata Kamara, chef, musician, and author. Renata talks about taking Sierra Leonean food to the world stage, and the power of social media content in getting customers and she shares Sierra Leone-inspired vegan and Afro-fusion recipes.
Show Notes
Listen to Mattodo’s Fearless: https://spoti.fi/3mpu8p3
Ship to Sierra Leone from the USA with Dot Bleu
Find your next outfit at The Doll House Boutique
To make Sierra Leone better for women and girls in Salone better support the Asmaa James Foundation https://bit.ly/3ybDLz5 -
Host Vickie Remoe is in conversation with Hawa Jane, Lawyer, Artist, and founder of The Barray Arts Collective. Hawa talks about founding a community for artists in Freetown, opportunities for African art with NFTs, and emerging artists from Sierra Leone that everyone should know.
Show Notes
Listen to Bai Kamara Jr Lady Boss: https://spoti.fi/3NMrd5s
Ship to Sierra Leone from the USA with Dot Bleu
Find your next outfit at The Doll House Boutique
To make Sierra Leone better for women and girls in Salone better support the Asmaa James Foundation https://bit.ly/3ybDLz5
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Host Vickie Remoe is in conversation with Abu Yillah, poet, filmmaker, and co-founder of the Sierra Leone Arts and Culture Festival (SLACFEST). Abu uses poetry, film, and social media to build community and hold space for Sierra Leoneans in the UK both with online and in-person events.
Show Notes
Listen to Emmerson's Borbor Pain: https://spoti.fi/3LRlz0Q
Watch Run “Short Film”: https://bit.ly/38jfH2E
Ship to Sierra Leone from the USA with Dot Bleu
Find your next outfit at The Doll House Boutique
To make Sierra Leone better for women and girls in Salone better support the Asmaa James Foundation https://bit.ly/3ybDLz5
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Host Vickie Remoe is in conversation with Haja Myers, founder of Estu’s Delight. Her wellness brand makes fresh smoothies, organic honey, and fonio. Haja talks about her entrepreneurial journey, branding, and overcoming supply chain challenges with local farmers. She also shares tips and resources for navigating Sierra Leone’s agribusiness ecosystem.
Show Notes
Listen to Drizilik’s Popular: https://bit.ly/3sDb0re
Ship to Sierra Leone from the USA with Dot Bleu
Find your next outfit at The Doll House Boutique
To make Sierra Leone better for women and girls in Salone better support the Asmaa James Foundation https://bit.ly/3ybDLz5
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Host Vickie Remoe is in conversation with award winning Sierra Leonean hip hop and afrobeats artist Drizilik, also known as Benjamin M. George. Drizilik shares how he convinced his conservative Krio family to accept his career, language as a tool for authenticity and plans for his upcoming album Ashobi.
Show Notes
Listen to Drizilik’s Popular
Ship to Sierra Leone from the USA with Dot Bleu
Find your next outfit at The Doll House Boutique
To make Sierra Leone better for women and girls in Salone better support the Asmaa James Foundation https://bit.ly/3ybDLz5
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Host Vickie Remoe is in conversation with Makeda Cole, co-founder of the Sierra Leone Arts and Culture Festival. The British Sierra Leonean curator shares how she came to embrace her Sierra Leonean identity and how she created a platform to connect Sierra Leoneans in the UK through arts, and culture.
Show Notes
Listen to Kaygee ADN Royalty: https://spoti.fi/3LO74M4
Watch the last edition of SLACFest: Beyond Borders; https://bit.ly/39nLcbN
Follow Makeda L. Cole on Instagram: https://bit.ly/3FdwC2H
Ship to Sierra Leone from the USA with Dot Bleu: https://bit.ly/3OV57PF
Find your next outfit at The Doll House Boutique: https://bit.ly/3LJOEvH
To make Sierra Leone better for women and girls in Salone better support the Asmaa James Foundation https://bit.ly/3ybDLz5
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Host Vickie Remoe continues the conversation with Usifu Jalloh; the Sierra Leonean storyteller who took a quarter-century to accept his gifts. In the second half of this conversation, the topic is cultural reclamation for national development. How can culture help Sierra Leoneans solve local problems?
Show Notes
Watch Usifu Jalloh’s The Tortoise and the Princess: https://bit.ly/36SdtGK
Ship to Sierra Leone from the USA with Dot Bleu
Find your next outfit at The Doll House Boutique
To make Sierra Leone better for women and girls in Salone better support the Asmaa James Foundation https://bit.ly/3ybDLz5
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Host Vickie Remoe is in conversation with Sierra Leone’s master storyteller and award-winning educator Usifu Jalloh. Usifu rejected storytelling as his life’s calling for 25 years until a turning point brought him self-acceptance. He spent decades afraid to accept cultural creativity as his profession because his post-colonial education indoctrination told him there all things African had little value.
Show Notes
Watch Usifu Jalloh’s full performance at the Jazz Cafe in London: https://bit.ly/3vLM4hZ
Ship to Sierra Leone from the USA with Dot Bleu
Find your next outfit at The Doll House Boutique
To make Sierra Leone better for women and girls in Salone better support the Asmaa James Foundation https://bit.ly/3ybDLz5
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Bunce Island is Sierra Leone’s World Heritage site that served as a major slave trading post for 300 years. Today it's restored ruins hold the story of Sierra Leone-American cultural heritage and connection.
Join this conversation with Isatu Smith, former head of Sierra Leone’s Monument & Relics Commission as she shares the fascinating history of Bunce Island and the preservationists working to restore it.
Show Notes
For More on Sierra Leone and Slavery Check out The Gilder Lehrman Center for the Study of Slavery, Resistance, and Abolition at Yale University https://bit.ly/2Ue5ZXL.
About Bunce Island
Bunce is a 1600 feet uninhabitted island lying approximately 20 miles up the Sierra Leone River from Freetown, the Capital city of Sierra Leone. Bunce Island was established as a slave trading station in 1670. From 1670 to 1728 two companies- the Gambia Adventurers and the Royal African Company of England ran Bunce Island one after the other. Bunce Island’s prosperity ran from 1744 to 1807 during private management by a consortium of London firms. At their slave trading heights British traders shipped tens of thousands of African slaves to the Americas from this place. The trading fort was subjected to attacks a number of times by other Europeans. Slave trading ceased on the island with the abolition of slace trade in 1808. It was however in the 1840 that the Bunce Island fort was finally abandoned. Bunce Island was declared a National Monument in 1948. (Read More)
https://bit.ly/3xvvB0E
Bunce Island - World Monuments Fund (https://bit.ly/2Sc2roh)
The Language You Cry In (1998, Film) https://bit.ly/3cQ77Hp
Joseph Opala in His Own Words (https://bit.ly/3xyMjw9)
The Gullah: Rice, Slavery, and the Sierra Leone-American Connection by Joseph Opala (https://amzn.to/2S9Isqe)
For more information on Colin Powell: https://n.pr/3wGaEQx
To listen to 'Beautiful' by Jimmy B: https://bit.ly/3xxC9f9 -
Join me for Part II of a conversation with one of my favorite writers and cultural historians, Ade Daramy.
We’re talking about Ade’s life and work, building community for and with Sierra Leoneans in the UK diaspora. I first talked to Ade on our October 29th episode about April 27 1961, and the early years after Independence when under the leadership of Sir Milton Margai, Sierra Leoneans believed excellence and greatness was within reach.
This time we talk about corruption and state decay in the 80s , and their impact on a generation who had dreamt of returning home from the diaspora.
We also talk about Ade’s life as a British civil servant and the things he learned being within earshot of retired British colonial officers on how they stole diamonds from Sierra Leone. We talk about neocolonialism and Sierra Leone’s continued courtship with foreign powers that exert influence over the nation’s leaders.
We talk about the war years, identity national pride, and what makes us optimistic about the future of Sierra Leone
To listen to 'Sweet Salone' by Lady Felicia: https://bit.ly/3gD6l3l
For more information on the work Ade Daramy does:https://bit.ly/3azWqYy - Show more