Welcome to our virtual pop up shop where you will find all kinds of amazing apparel, mugs, buttons, and stickers for you and your loved ones! Featuring two of our most popular designs, “I respond with RAHMA*” and “Patriarchy is fitna**,” get your merchandise today AND support our important work.
AVAILABLE FOR PURCHASE NOW!
We know that surviving abuse can be a terrifying and lonely experience. HEART, ZUDO, and Savera of @artsavvy collaborated to create a Survivor Care Package. Crafted with love and thoughtfulness for survivors, we hope it serves as a reminder that you are not alone. Each item in the package is tied together by a unifying message and powerful reminder from the Quranic verse, “Indeed I am near” (Quran 2:186): in times of happiness and in times of hardship, you are never alone – Allah (swt) is always with you.
In this box, you will find the following gifts:
- An “Indeed I am near” jewelry cuff created by ZUDO, to carry this powerful reminder with you wherever you go.
- A deck of affirmation cards created by HEART, to remind you are worthy of love, care, and compassion.
- A journal, designed by Savera of SavvyStuff, and a pen, to fill the pages with your own affirmations, reflections, and more.
PURCHASE THE SURVIVOR CARE PACKAGE TODAY!
Don’t want to purchase the entire care package? The affirmation cards and journal are available to purchase separately. Please note: any orders received on or after Nov. 22, 2021 will be shipped the week of Nov. 29th. Thanks in advance for your patience!
**If you’d like to purchase two or more of the journals and/or affirmation cards, please reach out to Aisha at aisha@heartwomenandgirls.org so we can ensure you’re not overpaying for shipping.
*I Respond With RAHMA is a slogan that is inspired by the Islamic core value of rahma, or compassion. Our hope is to provide folks with an easy-to-remember framework to help them respond to disclosures of sexual assault. Learn more about the RAHMA principles.
** This slogan was coined as a means to flip an all too common narrative: that those who challenge patriarchy are causing fitna (the Arabic word for extreme distress or hardship). Women are sometimes referred to as fitna in the community for using their voices, their bodies, or their work to challenge systems that oppress them. Those who protect and uplift women and marginalized communities – feminists, advocates, anti-violence activists often find themselves targeted in this way as well.