Saturday, 24 October 2015

Hayati- My Life.



Hayati Magazine- Nigeria’s fast Rising Muslima Magazine.

Hayati- comes from the word, Hayat, which means Life in the Arabic Language; it means My Life.

About- - started MuslimahConvert on Instagram back in August of 2012, it was meant to be a resource for new Muslima converts to grow, learn and understand Islam in an intersectional manner. The first online issue of Hayati launched in November of the same year, after Fatima Togbe, the founder, decided to go beyond just Instagram and try something different.

Hayati Magazine was founded by and for MUSLIM WOMEN. We seek to influence Muslim women’s whole lives by helping them be fashion-forward, smart and modern within the limits of ISLAM. We want to inspire our readers to build not just PERSONAL STYLE but PERSONAL POWER,” Fatima Togbe, Founder/Editor-In-Chief, Hayati Magazine.

In Nigeria, there are hundreds of Magazines rising with each passing day and attempting to break into the mainstream pan African and worldwide magazine. It mainstream magazines, there is something that keeps everyone going, both males and females, and that would be raw representation. It is becoming rampant to have representation in movies, music videos, shows and now magazines. Before, nobody really bothered whether or not vogue had models of colours on their front pages or covers.

Now, it is becoming a phenomenon and something spreading through the globe like wildfire. In the Nigeria media, it is easy to find representation but then it is unfortunately to a certain limit as all cultures and religious faces are not featured or largely promoted in a market as large as the Nigerian one. I first discovered Hayati Magazine about two years ago and I didn’t believe it was a Nigerian based magazine, because of the content and whatnot. As always, I assumed it was an African based abroad doing things over there and maintaining her ethnicity and religion. I was wrong, but happy.
Hayati is a Nigerian based magazine, primarily targeted at the Muslim female population but also working as an umbrella for the average young Nigerian female.

This magazine caters to all in the sense of Fashion, lifestyle, religion, articles and so much more that needs to be expressed, by Muslims, for Muslims and applicable to others, who are very interested in know the common things but from a different perspective.

The reason why I personally appreciate this magazine, would be the fact it is not strictly religious because it understands how vast and broad religion is, almost like a spectrum, and how people in the religion can either be at both ends of the spectrum or just in the middle. It is once again, applicable to everyone out there but of course, concentrated on its primary audience.

(Fall Issue for Hayati Magazine)


Now, some people might not cherish the fact that this magazine is a Muslim magazine, but to be realistic and practical, the Nigerian media market lacks fluid representation. Just the same way, people of colour complain about lack of diversity in certain movies, it is the same way I would complain about lack of diverse magazines in the Nigerian market. If everyone can be represented, it would not only impact personal views and perspectives, but it can aid in helping voices to be heard.

Hayati is a foundation, allowing young Nigerian or just Muslim women in general feel connected, relatable and comfortable with whatever they are going through; because you have stories, articles and more written by Muslimas like ourselves and there’s truly nothing like getting something from someone who connects with you.

A little downside would be the Magazine not having a broad sense of varieties, which are yet to be included but that can still happen in the near future. Some spaces lacking in the magazine could be a segment where readers can send in questions and have them answered by an experienced person. Or perhaps real life stories sent in and shared by other Muslim women, in order for readers to relate and learn a few things. That’s about the few things I see as a downside but it is a personal opinion, so it is very okay to disagree and suggest something else. There is truly little to nothing lacking in the magazine but I have to say that, in order to sound realistic and sincere.


Fatima Togbe
Founder & Editor-In-Chief
www.hayatimagazine.com

If you are looking for something that will treat Fashion recommendations, lifestyle tips, social issues, media topics and religious treatments, then I would say you should check out Hayati Magazine and decide to judge it by yourself. Or else, you want me to completely influence you into checking it out. It is an online magazine that might be a downside, as there is not Hardcopy for you to carry around and read anywhere you might be going.