St. John's College, class of 2015
Justina Kehinde Ogunseitan started experimenting with spoken-word poetry to advocate for women of color and the issues they face, and found she not only enjoyed it but excelled at it. In November 2012, she won the Benjamin Zephaniah Poetry Competition for a poem on female genital mutilation, and she realized that her performances had the power to inform, entertain, and educate.
She’s since written about other issues, including human trafficking, domestic violence, and racism, and won several competitions. In November 2013, Ogunseitan was invited to be a keynote speaker at the global TEDx Youth conferences, where she performed.
Ogunseitan is no stranger to the stage. In the fall of 2012, she directed, coproduced, and acted in the first all-black, all-female production in Cambridge history. The show, “For Colored Girls (Who Have Considered Suicide When the Rainbow Is Enuf),” based on the famous poem by Ntozake Shange, uses poetry, song, and dance to confront subjects like rape, sisterhood, love, and abortion. The sold-out show was revived this past fall in the London theater for a one-night-only performance that sold out in 24 hours. Ogunseitan acted in this show, along with fellow Cambridge cast member Ifeyinwa Frederick.
In addition to her work in poetry and performance, Ogunseitan cofounded, with recent graduates Robyn Taylor, Susy Langsdale, and current undergraduate Priscilla Mensah, FLY, a forum for minority women at Cambridge to meet and support one another.
When she graduates, Ogunseitan hopes to work in the social-justice field, on issues of human and sex trafficking. Her plans aren’t too clear yet, she says, but as freedom means a lot to her, her ideal would be “to become a modern-day abolitionist.”