Reclaiming the Truth: The Legacy Of Scholar-Captive Omar Ibn Said

Fayetteville, N.C. – In a gathering defined by deep spiritual reflection and a determined search for historical accuracy, community members, scholars, and historians came together recently to honor the legacy of Omar ibn Said. The event, centered around a communal circle modeled after West African village traditions, focused on the life of Said, a highly educated Muslim scholar from Futa Toro (modern-day Senegal) who was captured at age 37, transported to Charleston in 1807, and enslaved for six decades, eventually living and dying in Fayetteville. Said left behind a powerful written testimony.

The gathering highlighted the ongoing work of the Muslim Wellness Foundation and their Omar ibn Said Institute, an initiative aimed at uncovering, documenting, and ethically commemorating Said’s final resting place in Fayetteville. Founded in 2021, as the first and only institute in the United States dedicated to Black Muslim mental health, wellness and the deep study, preservation, and celebration of the Black Muslim experience—rooted in faith, scholarship, and healing. Organizers emphasized that while official archives are often “closed off and inaccessible,” the true history resides within the community and the stories passed down through generations so they are not forgotten. A central theme of the discussion was the necessity of correcting historical narratives that have long obscured Said’s brilliance and suffering.

Facilitator and psychologist Dr. Kameelah Mu’Min Oseguera noted that the goal of current research is to “free him from the toxic narratives that still persist.” She challenged the historical portrayal of Said as a privileged or “comfortable” slave because he was a scholar. “You can dress it up however you want. You can make a cage comfortable, but it is still a cage,” she said, describing Said as a prisoner of a system that tried to extract everything from him every day of his captivity. Dr. Kameelah argued that while Said was never physically free in his lifetime, the community today can free him in their imaginations and stories by rejecting falsehoods…

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