Delois Blakely


Queen Mother Dr. Delois Blakely, born in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, has been an American nun; is a writer and activist. She is the successor of Queen Mother Audley Moore. She was recognized as the Queen Mother of the naming ceremony of the African Burial Ground National Monument by the U.S. National Park Service and Department of the Interior in 2003. She attended the unveiling ceremony of the United Nations' permanent memorial “The Ark of Return” on March 25, 2015. As a goodwill ambassador to Africa at the United Nations, she claims to represent the 55 million displaced Africans of the Trans-Atlantic slave trade, and calls for reparations for slavery. She has published books and articles on self-reliance, education, recreation and culture.

Biography

In 1958, Blakely entered the Franciscan Handmaids of the Most Pure Heart of Mary convent for ten years, as a teen under the name Sister Noelita Marie. She graduated in 1965 with a BS degree in Religious Education from the Franciscan Handmaids of The Most Pure Heart of Mary College affiliated with The Catholic University of America.
In 1969, Blakely founded the New Future Foundation Inc.
She was enstooled in Kpando, Volta Region in Ghana and subsequently received by the king of the Ashanti Kingdom. After this, she was given over to the king's mother for her blessing. Finally, she was blessed by Nana Afia Kobi Serwaa Ampem II, the Asantehemaa of the Ashantis, as the Nana of North America. She was subsequently initiated in another ceremony by the Maasai People. Later, in the Arusha Region of Tanzania, Saint Serigne Saliou Mbacké, former President of Tanzania Julius Nyerere, and Dr. Angie Elizabeth Brooks of Liberia, the first woman President of the United Nations General Assembly, conducted a third initiation. She criticizes mankind for what she believes to be economic injustice against billions of lives worldwide, and campaigns for improvements to education, basic business training, science and technology, entrepreneurship, and compassion as potential solutions for economic, social and sustainable development. She has served on the local and state level committees for children and youth. She served on the United States National Commission on the International Year of the Child under President Jimmy Carter. She also served as a co-chair for UNICEF International Day of the African Child from 1991-1993.

Work

Blakely has published two books, "The Harlem Street Nun: Autobiography of Queen Mother Dr. Delois Blakely " in 1987 and "Pilgrimage to Goree Island " in 2016. In 1995, she was appointed “The Community Mayor of Harlem” and “Ambassador of Goodwill to Africa” since the late 70's.

Lawsuit

In November 2011, Blakely filed a lawsuit against the Walt Disney Company and Sony Pictures claiming that her life was the basis for the 1992 film Sister Act. She sued for "breach of contract, misappropriation of likeness and unjust enrichment". She later dropped the original lawsuit in January 2012 to serve a more robust lawsuit in late August 2012 with the New York Supreme Court, asking for $1 billion in damages from Disney. In early February, 2013, the New York Supreme Court dismissed the lawsuit with prejudice, awarding no damages to Blakely.