A Black Woman's Guide to Becoming a Doula™ | Pre-Order

$20.99

Pre-Order Signed Paperback Book. Book will be shipped on the release date of 2/9/2024. E-Book can be pre-ordered on Amazon at this link.

“A Black Woman’s Guide to Becoming a Doula”, invites current and aspiring birth workers on a sacred journey into the cultural and ancestral origins of birth work, leading each person onto their own individual path of unlocking their divine calling and birth worker blueprint to reach their true potential as a birth companion and perinatal support person. This first of its kind guidebook is a must have for BIPOC Doulas worldwide as it details the Black Maternal Health landscape from a national and global perspective, while engaging her audience in storytelling and thought-provoking critical thinking, to choose the proper tools, teachers, and path along the birth worker journey.

 

Written by elder Doula Okunsola M. Amadou, a Yoruba Orisa Priestess and Traditional Yoruba Midwife known as an “Agbegbi” through the Balewa lineage, she is the founder of the thriving Jamaa Birth Village, with a long lineage of birth workers having trained of over 400 doulas and 10+ doula trainers throughout her 15-year career in Women’s Health. She has been called to give birth to this guidebook by her 92-year-old elder God Mother, Chief Iya Nifa Osun Monife Balewa. Having sat at the feet of over 20-elders across the US and in 3-African countries over the past 13-years, Okunsola has a wealth of knowledge, training, wisdom, and expertise.

 

A Black Woman’s Guide to Becoming a Doula includes an overview on the types of doulas, doula trainings and the varying routes to take in becoming a doula, with a comprehensive overview of the business side of the work. This essential guidebook is a part of a trinity series including the groundbreaking book, “A Black Woman’s Guide to Becoming a Midwife: For Aspiring and Future Midwives of Color” and more.

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Pre-Order Signed Paperback Book. Book will be shipped on the release date of 2/9/2024. E-Book can be pre-ordered on Amazon at this link.

“A Black Woman’s Guide to Becoming a Doula”, invites current and aspiring birth workers on a sacred journey into the cultural and ancestral origins of birth work, leading each person onto their own individual path of unlocking their divine calling and birth worker blueprint to reach their true potential as a birth companion and perinatal support person. This first of its kind guidebook is a must have for BIPOC Doulas worldwide as it details the Black Maternal Health landscape from a national and global perspective, while engaging her audience in storytelling and thought-provoking critical thinking, to choose the proper tools, teachers, and path along the birth worker journey.

 

Written by elder Doula Okunsola M. Amadou, a Yoruba Orisa Priestess and Traditional Yoruba Midwife known as an “Agbegbi” through the Balewa lineage, she is the founder of the thriving Jamaa Birth Village, with a long lineage of birth workers having trained of over 400 doulas and 10+ doula trainers throughout her 15-year career in Women’s Health. She has been called to give birth to this guidebook by her 92-year-old elder God Mother, Chief Iya Nifa Osun Monife Balewa. Having sat at the feet of over 20-elders across the US and in 3-African countries over the past 13-years, Okunsola has a wealth of knowledge, training, wisdom, and expertise.

 

A Black Woman’s Guide to Becoming a Doula includes an overview on the types of doulas, doula trainings and the varying routes to take in becoming a doula, with a comprehensive overview of the business side of the work. This essential guidebook is a part of a trinity series including the groundbreaking book, “A Black Woman’s Guide to Becoming a Midwife: For Aspiring and Future Midwives of Color” and more.

Pre-Order Signed Paperback Book. Book will be shipped on the release date of 2/9/2024. E-Book can be pre-ordered on Amazon at this link.

“A Black Woman’s Guide to Becoming a Doula”, invites current and aspiring birth workers on a sacred journey into the cultural and ancestral origins of birth work, leading each person onto their own individual path of unlocking their divine calling and birth worker blueprint to reach their true potential as a birth companion and perinatal support person. This first of its kind guidebook is a must have for BIPOC Doulas worldwide as it details the Black Maternal Health landscape from a national and global perspective, while engaging her audience in storytelling and thought-provoking critical thinking, to choose the proper tools, teachers, and path along the birth worker journey.

 

Written by elder Doula Okunsola M. Amadou, a Yoruba Orisa Priestess and Traditional Yoruba Midwife known as an “Agbegbi” through the Balewa lineage, she is the founder of the thriving Jamaa Birth Village, with a long lineage of birth workers having trained of over 400 doulas and 10+ doula trainers throughout her 15-year career in Women’s Health. She has been called to give birth to this guidebook by her 92-year-old elder God Mother, Chief Iya Nifa Osun Monife Balewa. Having sat at the feet of over 20-elders across the US and in 3-African countries over the past 13-years, Okunsola has a wealth of knowledge, training, wisdom, and expertise.

 

A Black Woman’s Guide to Becoming a Doula includes an overview on the types of doulas, doula trainings and the varying routes to take in becoming a doula, with a comprehensive overview of the business side of the work. This essential guidebook is a part of a trinity series including the groundbreaking book, “A Black Woman’s Guide to Becoming a Midwife: For Aspiring and Future Midwives of Color” and more.