The Leadership of Liberation with Shaka Senghor
From 19 years of incarceration to guiding thousands toward emotional freedom: what it truly means to lead.
In this deeply moving conversation, host Alexandra Lopoukhine sits down with bestselling author and speaker Shaka Senghor, a man whose 19 years in prison, including seven in solitary confinement, forged one of the most compelling voices in healing, emotional freedom, and human liberation today.
Shaka unpacks what it means to be a "shepherd" of freedom, why collective healing requires grace and accountability in equal measure, and how his journey from physical incarceration gave him a rare sensitivity to the invisible prisons we all carry: fear, shame, and limiting stories.
The conversation moves into exciting new territory as Shaka reveals his pivot toward fiction-writing and screenwriting, exploring how art can crack open conversations that nonfiction cannot. He speaks with disarming honesty about vulnerability, and why the act of creating is itself the freedom, not the outcome. A conversation about power, art, community, and what we owe each other.
"We have more power than we give ourselves credit for. We have power in our everyday exchanges, our everyday interactions. If we just start choosing more of that, the world by default becomes a better place." — Shaka Senghor
Shaka Senghor is a bestselling author, speaker, and advocate for healing and emotional freedom. After 19 years incarcerated, seven in solitary confinement, he emerged to write three bestselling books, including his memoir Writing My Wrongs, which Oprah Winfrey named one of her all-time favourite memoirs. He now works at the intersection of storytelling, justice, and human transformation and is currently developing his first novel, a screenplay, and a one-man stage show.
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