Yeye Olosunde Aduke is the founder of the Yoni Steam Movement (est. 2009) and Yeye’s Sacred Feminine Arts, a living body of work dedicated to the preservation, education, and restoration of ancestral womb wisdom, sacred feminine leadership, and culturally rooted healing practices. For over fifteen years, Yeye has been a leading voice in the global womb wellness movement, recognized for reintroducing vaginal steam practices through an Indigenous, culturally grounded framework that centers dignity, informed consent, and respect for the womb as both a physical and cultural site of power. Her work has influenced practitioners, educators, and wellness spaces internationally. Central to her work is Healing Waters, an ancestral approach to wellness rooted in African cosmology that recognizes water as a vital medium for cleansing, restoration, and renewal. Through culturally informed hydrotherapy and water-based healing traditions, Yeye teaches the role of Healing Waters in supporting womb health, emotional balance, and holistic wellbeing. Yeye holds a Bachelor’s degree in Sociology and a Master’s degree in Social Work (MSW) with a focus on women, children, and community wellness. Her public-facing work focuses on education, cultural preservation, menstrual dignity, and community-centered care, while her sacred training work is held within protected learning environments. Her work is informed by maternal lineage and ancestral teachings passed through women healers, midwives, and spiritual practitioners, grounding her approach in lived tradition alongside public education.