This essay is the outcome of a conversation between two radical African feminists, Patricia McFadden and Patricia Twasiima, who unapologetically and gleefully think, live and share feminist ideas and imaginaries. Both are part of the African Feminist Reflection and Action Group. They live in eastern and southern Africa, respectively, and whilst they are 'separated' by distance and age in very conventional ways, their passionate ideas about freedom and being able to live lives of dignity through their own truths as Black women on their continent, and beyond, are the ties that bind them inseparably as Contemporary African Feminists in the 21st century. The conversation they are engaged with and in range over several core challenges and tasks that have faced feminists ever since the emergence of a public radical women's political resistance against Patriarchy. But it also reflects the new faces of Patriarchy and oppression that we are confronted with today and on how women`s struggles to counter them can be strengthened.