

She became a well-known and outspoken voice on campus and wrote for the school newspaper. She graduated from Rutgers University with a dual major in American History and African Studies. She also traveled to South Africa and Zambia. Her education was reinforced with first-hand experiences as she worked in a medical center in Mtepa Tepa, a village located in Zimbabwe, and assisted refugee children from Mozambique. In her college years she traveled widely, visiting Britain, France, Spain, Portugal, Finland, and Russia. She won the American Legion's Constitutional Oratory Contest, for which she received a scholarship to attend Cornell University's Advanced Summer Program.

Souljah was also the recipient of several honors during her teenage years. She was a legislative intern in the House of Representatives. She commented: "I supplemented my education in the white American school system by reading African history, which was intentionally left out of the curriculum of American students." From 1978 to 1981 she attended Dwight Morrow High School, which had a relatively even distribution of black, Latino, and Jewish student enrollment and a majority-black administration during the time of her studies. She felt that she was being taught very little of her history, since the junior high school and high school left out Black history, art, and culture.

In addition, she criticized the absence of a comprehensive curriculum of African-American history, which she felt that all students, black and white, needed to learn and understand in order to be properly educated. She felt that the school systems intentionally left out the African origins of civilization. Souljah disliked what American students were being taught in school systems across the country. There she attended Dwight Morrow High School. Englewood is also home to other famous black artists such as George Benson, Eddie Murphy, and Regina Belle. At the age of 10, she moved with her family to the suburb of Englewood, New Jersey, a suburb with a strong African-American presence. She recounts in her memoir No Disrespect that she was born into poverty and raised on welfare for some years. Sister Souljah was born in the Bronx, New York. His repudiation of her comments led to what is now known in American politics as a Sister Souljah moment. Democratic Party candidate Bill Clinton criticized her remarks about race in the United States during the 1992 presidential campaign. Sister Souljah (born Lisa Williamson, Bronx, New York) is an American author, activist, and film producer.
