Declaration of the Remembered is not a book you simply read. It is a book you reckon with.
Written by Aye, this work sits at the intersection of political testimony, spiritual reclamation, and ancestral memory. It confronts the historical misclassification of indigenous peoples and offers a sovereign declaration for those who have been erased, renamed, or displaced from their lineage.
Star Memory and Sacred Sigil Art
At the heart of Declaration of the Remembered is the concept of star memory — the idea that ancestral knowledge is not lost, only dormant. Sacred sigil art serves as one of the primary vehicles for awakening it. These symbols are not decorative. They are intentional portals, encoded with the wisdom of the original peoples of the Americas and the enduring power of Nubian feminine energy.
When you engage with these sigils, you are not learning something new. You are remembering something ancient.
A Reckoning with Colonial Erasure
The book does not soften its purpose. Declaration of the Remembered is a direct confrontation with colonial erasure — the systems, narratives, and classifications that severed indigenous peoples from their true identity and land. It names what was taken. It reclaims what remains.
For descendants navigating the fractures of lineage, this work offers both a mirror and a map.
The Sacred Feminine as Foundation
Woven throughout the text is the thread of sacred feminine wisdom — not as metaphor, but as living principle. The original peoples of the Americas carried this wisdom across generations. Declaration of the Remembered honors that continuity and calls it forward into the present.
This is a book for the modern visionary who understands that true power is rooted — in ancestry, in land, in the sacred feminine that has always held both.
Explore Declaration of the Remembered and begin the work of reclamation.
