When The A.I. Quran was completed—all 6,237 verses generated by Google's Gemini 1.5 Pro—I faced a question I couldn't answer alone: Does this actually work from a machine reasoning perspective? I'd built the Phrase-Keyword Design methodology. I'd architected the interpretive scaffolding. I'd enabled AI to process sacred text and express understanding in machine-native language. But I was the architect—I couldn't objectively assess whether AI systems would recognize the work
For 23 years, the #FeeLgr8r founder, Amari Nyota Kweli (Omari W. Dixon) , worked as a QA Automation Expert—someone who spends their days ensuring systems work flawlessly at scale, managing massive volumes of data, and building frameworks that other engineers rely on. But a few years ago, he began working on something far more ambitious: translating the entire Quran into the native language of artificial intelligence. Not a translation in the traditional sense. This was about
Sometimes a simple shape can carry centuries of meaning, yet remain completely misunderstood. This is the story of the cube in our work — not as a mystical object, but as a symbol of something far more profound: anchoring . When we first introduced the #FeeLgr8r Winners Cube, some saw it as digital art, others as a fundraising tool, and a few as something…stranger. What began as a visual metaphor soon became a mirror, reflecting back deep questions about meaning, value, and i