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From $59.50
AfriKin Healing Women’s crop top — AfriKin Crop Tops.
Color: Select a color
Size: Select a size
Prices may vary by size. Final price shown after selection.
Mama Africa carries every scar that history has left on her. Colonization. Extraction. Borders drawn by strangers. Resources taken by force. Children scattered across oceans. And yet she endures. She feeds the world. She holds the oldest human story. She is still here. The Healing Our Nation design places the continent of Africa at the center with a bandage crossed over her in an X. Not because she is broken. But because healing is a process, and we are in it together. As Africa heals us, we heal her. As we reclaim our identity, she reclaims her dignity. The wound is real. The healing is also real. And it requires all of us, those on the continent and those in the diaspora, to show up with intention, with love, with the willingness to be part of the restoration. This design is that commitment made visible.
She wears Healing Our Nation because she understands that women have always been the first healers. The ones who tend to the wounds that history leaves. This crop top is her declaration that she is continuing that work. In her generation. On her terms.
All measurements in inches. When between sizes, size up.
| Size | Chest | Length | Sleeve |
|---|---|---|---|
| S | 36-38" | 28" | 8" |
| M | 38-40" | 29" | 8.5" |
| L | 42-44" | 30" | 9" |
| XL | 46-48" | 31" | 9.5" |
| 2XL+ | 50-60" | 32-34" | 10-11" |
Production time: 2-5 business days (printed on demand)
US Delivery: 3-8 business days after production
International: 10-20 business days after production
Free shipping: On orders over $75
The Story Behind the Design
Mama Africa carries every scar that history has left on her. Colonization. Extraction. Borders drawn by strangers. Resources taken by force. Children scattered across oceans. And yet she endures. She feeds the world. She holds the oldest human story. She is still here. The Healing Our Nation design places the continent of Africa at the center with a bandage crossed over her in an X. Not because she is broken. But because healing is a process, and we are in it together. As Africa heals us, we heal her. As we reclaim our identity, she reclaims her dignity. The wound is real. The healing is also real. And it requires all of us, those on the continent and those in the diaspora, to show up with intention, with love, with the willingness to be part of the restoration. This design is that commitment made visible.
She wears Healing Our Nation because she understands that women have always been the first healers. The ones who tend to the wounds that history leaves. This crop top is her declaration that she is continuing that work. In her generation. On her terms.