Sister Khadijah Siddeeq-Mohammed is an adjunct professor of education, social entrepreneur, teacher, and public advocate for the recognition and application of Imam W.D. Mohammed’s legacy in the community and classroom. She is a resident of Indianapolis, Indiana where she is an Urban Education Studies doctoral student at Indiana University School of Education, an educational research and leadership program openly addressing many issues, including the complexities of race, ethnicity, class, cultures, and languages of the urban education environment, where she also teaches a course on Multicultural Education and Global Awareness to future K-12 educators.
She is founder of A Call to Life, Inc, a nonprofit organization where she is a lead instructor and designer of online and classroom courses teaching Qur’anic Arabic and Islamic Studies for students at elementary, junior and senior or university levels, supporting our next generation of Muslim leaders and souls by designing and leading courses connecting students with the Qur’an and Al-Islam using the clear perception and wisdom of Imam W.D. Mohammed.
She has taught high school english language arts in the Indianapolis Public Schools and at a private charter academy where she learned and honed strategies for engaging large online cohorts supported by blended or hybrid classroom learning environments.
She has also taught junior and high school students at the K-12 Algebraic Institute founded by her family and community in Indianapolis.
She is a regular attendee of the Nur’Allah Islamic Center and volunteers as a teacher in the Sister Clara Muhammad’s weekend school as offered to Indianapolis community youth.
Sister Khadijah is the wife of the late, honorable Muslim leader Imam W.D. Mohammed and steadfast supporter of her late husband’s work as a religious leader… And his work as a businessman.
From 2004 to 2008, she served as his Administrative Assistant in his ministry and in the business he started, CPC, L.L.C. Sister Khadijah was also a student in the Islamic Studies and Comparative Religions classes taught by Imam W.D. Mohammed, commuting with her parents and brothers between Indianapolis and Chicago every weekend until her marriage to Imam W.D. Mohammed in 2004 and moving to Chicago.
Since Imam W.D. Mohammed’s passing in September 2008, Sister Khadijah has maintained an active involvement with the nationwide concerns of the community of Imam W.D. Mohammed.
Sister Khadijah has traveled to Dallas, Philadelphia, Racine, Milwaukee, D.C., Atlanta and many other cities across the country to support the efforts of the local masajid and to encourage their members to continue in their good works.
Sister Khadijah Siddeeq-Mohammed is passionate about applying what she has learned from Imam W. D. Mohammed to all areas of life.