Priscillia Kounkou Hoveyda is a black Iranian Freetown-based filmmaker (Where My Memory Began, We Will Be Who We Are), creative director and founder at the Collective for Black Iranians and  Haus of Salone, a production and creative agency that advises on critically conscious storytelling. A recovering human rights lawyer, Priscillia has worked with the UN in war zones negotiating the release of child soldiers in armed groups and implementing reintegration programming.

Priscillia’s experience with storytelling and filmmaking started with the founding of the Collective for Black Iranians (2020) where she has been directing and producing a slate of short films and documentaries centering Black Iranian narratives in Iran and its diaspora. Her work as a storyteller has been written about in multiple outlets, BBC World, BBC Persian, AlJazeera, AJ+, Atlantic Fellows for Racial Equality, France24, etc.

Priscillia’s visual storytelling is grounded in ancestral memory, intersectionality and Blackness to lyrically bear witness to Black life in its varied diasporic iterations. Her first short film, Where My Memory Began has been selected in prestigious film festivals (HotDocs, NYAFF, PAFF, Aspen Shortsfest) and her latest short film, We Will Be Who We Are, is currently in the festival circuit. 

A product of a childhood spent being the only Black Iranian girl she ever saw in Tehran, the capital city of Iran, to staring up at the tall buildings in French projects, Priscillia has spent most of her life observing mainstream society from the margins. Her ideas and creative vision were born out of those margins. 

Priscillia holds dual International Law and Business degrees from Sorbonne Law, ESSEC Business School, NYU Law and is a USC Film school drop-out. She lives in Freetown where she balances her filmmaking, the Collective for Black Iranians with productions and narrative consulting for the UN.

PUBLICATIONS/WRITINGS

2024

Siyah/Black, Hypervisible in silence is violence

Forthcoming anthology, Black and Asian Feminist Solidarities with Haymarket Press

2024

Cambridge History of the African Diaspora

Forthcoming with Cambridge University Press

2023

Africa Is a Country

2021

Doek!

2021

Doek!