In this episode of Somali Spirit, Araweelo guides us through Dayr the Somali season of transformation — when the rains fade, the earth cools, and the soul learns to release. Bridging Somali cosmology and Chinese Feng Shui, she explores how both traditions honor the balance between activity and rest, holding and letting go. This reflection invites you to realign your home, body, and spirit with the natural rhythm of the season — whether you live in Mogadishu, London, or Toronto. A meditative journey into gratitude, release, and renewal.
In this episode of Somali Spirit, we journey into the forgotten sacred power of the feminine in Somali culture — from prehistoric echoes in Laas Geel to the fierce riddle hidden in Araweelo’s name. We explore how women shaped myth and memory through sheeko and buraanbur, embodied divine energy in rituals like saar and sitaat, and how even the names of Allah trace mercy back to the womb. We ask when and why this power was eclipsed, how other cultures followed the same path, and why rebalancing the feminine is vital for a society’s soul and survival.
In Somali culture, time is not just hours on a clock — it is life, spirit, and ancestral memory. This episode explores the ancient Somali calendar (dayax-tiriska and amin-tiriska), where moon phases, seasonal rains, and star patterns guided pastoral migrations, harvests, and spiritual life. From the bonfires of Dabshiid to the wisdom of weather lore experts, from cycles of 8 and 50 years to the blessings of baraaka, discover how Somalis wove astronomy, poetry, and Sufi traditions into a living cosmology of time — one that still carries lessons for today.
In our first episode, Araaweelo explores Somali traditional medicine (dhawo daqamed) — from its deep ties to ancient Egypt and the land of Punt, to the sacred resins that reached Rome, Christianity, and even Chinese medicine. We uncover the plants, herbs, and healing rituals still used by Somali herbalists today, blending science with spirituality. At its core, this episode shows why preserving Somali traditional medicine is about more than remedies — it is about protecting the emotional and spiritual immune system of a people.