of (Un)Veiled Divine Technologies
Taylor Amari Little is a gender-variant diviner, Muslim, spiritualist, protector for the Unborn, artist and overall lover of research + history. At (Un)Veiled Divine Technologies, she works with her spirits and that of her clients to create handmade prayer blankets, prenatal spiritual security services for spirits of Unborn babies, talisman art/haatumeere, cultural research + lineage support, trainings, writings, matrimonial services, Tay in the Water Podcast, and other projects. Tay’s work is ultimately performed with the purpose of reconnecting Black lineages and preparing Black Indigenous power.
He lives life with a background in Criminology, an experience heavily shaped by her spirits. Her everyday work is an integrated experience with her Ancestors, Njuzu, jinn, Black + Blackness-aligned spirit allies and network members, and beyond.
Through Tay in the Water Podcast, created in 2019, she narrates lessons of survival and Black indigenous politics, highlighting conversations around working with spirits, Black gender, Hoodoo, Islam, indigenous African epistemologies, spiritual warfare, apocalypse commentary, astrology, and more.
Earlier on, Tay was known for organizing work that revolved around advocacy for queer Muslims as well as LGBTQ+ Black people + people of color, and cultivating explorative healing spaces, which later shifted into a stronger focus of making sure Black people have additional help in exploring and strengthening their spiritual gifts and arenas.
Tay has been featured on multiple outlets since school days, including earlier moments like Buzzfeed in late 2016 for the viral “White People Stay Colonizing” presentation and becoming a TEDx Speaker at age 17 for “Revolutionary Self-Produced Justice”. Around the same time, she created Queer Ummah: A Visibility Project, highlighting international narratives of LGBTQ+ Muslims.
With the activity of her Ancestors, Tay has served as a keynote speaker at Portland State University, Albion College, Fellowship of Reconciliation Seabeck Conference, presented at the “nation”’s largest racial justice conference Facing Race, Creating Change, the National Library of Medicine, on air at Atlanta Hits 92.3 radio, presented for panels at Amnesty International and University of North Carolina Charlotte, and more. Her written works can be found across Patreon, UDT’s very own site platform, Black Youth Project, and Root Work Journal.
All priority for the work she performs goes to unambiguously Black communities.
Watch her become your favorite Virgo.
For inquiries and collaborations, you can contact here.