Mulki Suleyman Fixed

Her life is a study in influence without formal authority—a woman who modernized Ethiopian education, championed women's rights, and managed the delicate balance of power in a feudal empire on the brink of transformation.

In the high-stakes game of politics and business, it’s easy to cross lines for personal gain. However, a "deep" life requires setting limits that "conscience does not allow us to cross". Loyalty and ethics aren't just old-fashioned ideals—they are the only things that keep a society from eating itself from the inside out. Reflection for the Week: mulki suleyman

She died in 1960, just months before the failed coup d’état that sought to overthrow Haile Selassie. Her passing went largely unremarked in the international press, but in the Oromo and Muslim communities of eastern Ethiopia, she was mourned as “Yewust Aragash” (The Insider’s Eye)—the woman who had secured their place in the modern Ethiopian state. Her life is a study in influence without