Margari Aziza Hill
Margari Aziza Hill is co-founder and Programming Director of Muslim Anti-Racism Collaborative (MuslimARC), assistant editor at AltM, columnist at MuslimMatters,and co-founder of Muslims Make it Plain. She is a Women鈥檚 Policy Institute-County
fellow, joining the First for Women team on protecting women鈥檚 religious rights in the criminal justice system in LA County. She is also an adjunct professor, blogger, and freelance writer with articles published in Time, SISTERS, Islamic Monthly, Al Jazeera English, Muslimmatters, Virtual Mosque (formerly Suhaibwebb.com), and Spice Digest. She is on the advisory councils of the Los Angeles Chapter of Council of American Islamic Relations (CAIR-LA), and Islam and Social Justice and InterReligious
Exchange (ISJIE) at the Theological Seminary After converting to Islam in 1993, her
life experiences as a Black American woman have informed her research
and writing on Islam, education, race, and gender. She has nearly a decade of teaching
experiences at all levels from elementary, secondary, college level, to adult education.
She has worked in education at various capacities including as substitute teacher,
instructor, curriculum design, school policy, teacher training, as well as teaching
assistant and teaching fellow. She taught Writing and Literature at Al-Aqsa
Islamic Academy, developed instructed an Art and Literacy class for Clara Muhammad Summer Camp, worked as a Lead Teacher and Curriculum Developer at United Muslim Masjid Summer Madrasa, and taught traditional and online college level Introduction to World Religions. She earned her bachelor鈥檚 degree in History from Santa Clara University in 2003 and master鈥檚 in History of the Middle East and Islamic Africa from Stanford University in 2006. Her research includes colonial
surveillance in Northern Nigeria, anti-colonial resistance among West Africans in
Sudan during the early 20th century, transformations in Islamic learning in Northern
Nigeria, and race in North American Muslim communities. She has given talks and lectures
in various universities and community centers throughout the country.
Topics she has lectured on include: