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The 2010 National Poetry Month poster, designed by Marian Bantjes.
Inaugurated by the Academy of American Poets in 1996, National Poetry Month is now held every April, when publishers, booksellers, literary organizations, libraries, schools and poets around the country band together to celebrate poetry and its vital place in American culture. Thousands of businesses and non-profit organizations participate through readings, festivals, book displays, workshops, and other events.

Share your poems with us....

Here are a couple of mine...enjoy!

Raised up…

Copyright © 2010 by Helen Tinsley

i raised an empress & 3 warriors
African spirits of long ago descended in you
to continue the fight

that still needed to be fought & wasn’t won
yet.
i put words in you as they had been put in me,
from generations past thru the gift of the pen.
i raised fighters to change the status quo,
revolutionaries to awaken the masses,
disrupters of false peace ―
becuz there is no peace
with  over 2 million Black folks on lockdown,
homeless families from coast to coast
& death by starvation on our city streets.
i raised poets, rappers, entrepreneurs &
independent thinkers

to stand up for what is right
on this battlefield called America.
so my children, if you lose your focus,
& get distracted from the path
like the Sankofa bird
i raised you to return to the source
& continue the fight for freedom, justice & equality..


 Who Speaks For Me
Copyright© 2008 by Helen Tinsley

i am the voice of the voiceless
i am the voice of those students who are
 uneducated, miseducated

or simply not given the tools
to be successful in society today.

i am the voice of those students
who languish in special education classes,
remedial programs, alternative classes
or other structures that marginalize
& demoralize their essence.

i am the voice of students whose spirit is squashed
by uncaring adults, low expectations
& pervasive disregard

in inner city schools throughout America.
i am their voice & this is their story.

STOP – u don’t know me
u only make money off me
yea, tho i walk thru the valley of public schools
i shall fear no evil for i am BLACK & my God is with me.
i sit in classes, raise my hand, draw my pictures,
want to read my story & teacher, u don’t call on me
music teacher – u give out instruments & u bypass me
math teacher, u have calculators i never see
art teachers – your closets r full of papers,
paints and clay

u think r too good for me
principal – u create cracks to push me in
breed academic gaps & try to limit me
what is your problem & whose agenda do u follow?
i am strong, powerful and smart & i’m gonna do me
i read the books u hide
understand the knowledge u deny
& recognize today is the day we will not be shy
we will take this information & fly.
today we are revolving, slowly evolving
& the lies are dissolving.

the revolution was televised
when the levees broke & America choked
Langston Hughes wrote about the ways of white folks
& the Hon Elijah Muhammad spoke —
told us Wake up Black Folks

This is the final Call!

 




 
 

Over 30 years ago....Helen typing stories...the journey continues...

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Greetings to those of you that already know me and to those I have not had the pleasure of meeting yet. I am a black woman, mother, grandmother, educator, artist, and fighter for children…still a work in progress.  In this particular “conversation” I want you to have some sense of who I am and what I am about. I raised 4 children (now adults at various stages in their development) and I am a Grandma of 5.  I have been blessed to work with children for over 30 years in various ways…and there are unbelievable stories from that journey ― some that hurt you and scar you to the core and others that warm and touch your heart.

Tonight when I came home from work, spirit told me to write and send this particular blog out ― immediately, with urgency! I have no idea why I felt this tremendous sense of urgency to write this tonight. But I listen to the voice of the Creator. I have learned through many hard lessons that when the Creator tells me to do something ― not to question it, but to obey. So I am obeying the message I was given. My original intent of this blog was to focus on health, and holistic healing. Tonight the conversation is about Black families and public education. However, in reality any aspect of our life has to do with holistic healing – be it physical, mental, emotional, education, family, survival, etc.

Folks, I have been working on a book about the stories of Black families in public education for a while. For me, it will be one way of sharing the stories I have been blessed to experience first hand as a mother, teacher, woman, neighbor and friend. I find that when people hear stories of diverse families, different situations and various experiences, that they get a better understanding of what people go through which can make us all more sensitive to the plight of others  if we care.

Over the years I have also spent many nights in meetings and on the phone talking with relatives and friends about public school drama that they and I were dealing with as parents and teachers. I raised 4 children in the public schools of New Jersey and I could go on an on about my families experiences. But, I want to hear from you. I want you to share with me the stories you have lived, the experiences you have gone through both good and bad as parents, students, teachers, school staff, friends, neighbors, etc. I want to include your stories in this book by sharing “real life” experiences of Black folks, from across the country. It is important that we share and publicly reveal our stories, because some people go through certain experiences with teachers, schools and programs and think it is them alone. They sometimes suffer in silence, and other times celebrate in isolation. It is important to describe and expose the reality of what is happening to Black students in public schools and to also look at how to change an inherently flawed system.

If you are interested in sharing a story or experience with us, please send it as a comment or as an attachment to this blog. We will protect your privacy if you choose to share your story with us. Your name, child's name and school name will not be shared. We need to include diverse experiences in the book to show the challenges Black children are facing in public schools on a national level. We also want to focus on ways to bring about positive and productive change! We look forward to your stories.

Thank you. Helen Tinsley