Saturday, June 9, 2018

Calabash 2018 and Poetry in Schools


How we were Lit Up with poetry at Calabash 2018!
 There were poems by women at the height of their greatness from Guyana/UK, USA and Liberia; by Lady Laureates from the UK, USA, Canada and Jamaica; by Fierce Flowers from Sudan, Somalia/UK and Jamaica; by Jamaica’s Ishion Hutchinson; from Kamau Braithwaite’s “The Arrivants”; and plenty more poets reading at the Open Mike. There were poems to appeal to everyone, including me. Thank you to Kwame Dawes, Justine Henzell and the rest of the Calabash team for staging another wonderful festival. 
Lady Laureates: Tracy K. Smith (USA), Carol Ann Duffy (UK)
Georgette LeBlanc (Canada) and Lorna Goodison  (JA).
Photo Courtesy of Susumba
There were prose readings, too, and reasonings and music, but I’m purposefully focusing on poetry. My appreciation of poetry did not begin until 2004 at Calabash. At school, it was slow torture for me to stand in front of the class, unable to recite the poem I knew by heart five minutes before; and exasperation for my mother when English homework was to write a poem with rhyme and meter. For ‘O’ level English Lit, we studied Milton’s “Comus”, of which I have absolutely no recollection. I was glad to say goodbye to poetry. I wonder if children nowadays have similar sentiments.
Linton Kwesi Johnson reading from
Kamau Brathwaite's "The Arrivants".
Photo courtesy of Susumba. 
 In the Gleaner of Thursday, July 13, 2017, section C, Lorna Goodison is quoted as saying:  “Though I had a wonderful education at St. Hugh’s, I was not taught any poetry by a Jamaican …writer. Things have changed drastically since then.” They may have in secondary schools, but what of the primary schools?
In perusing Rainbow Readers – A Jamaican Reading Series, Grade Four, by Roma Sinanan and Uriel Narinesingh, I found twenty-two poems. Only one of these is by a Jamaican – Andrew Salkey. There are fourteen by Caucasians, eight men and six women, from the USA or the UK, born before 1910; one Indian (Rabindranath Tagore, 1861-1941); one First Family American woman (born in 1896); and one African American (Langston Hughes, 1902-1967). About the remaining four poets, three women and one man, I can find out very little. I presume are contemporary, Caucasian, because of the subject matter of their poems.
Furthermore, in the selected poem by Langston Hughes, “Aunt Sue’s Stories”:
“Aunt Sue cuddles a brown-faced child …and tells him stories”
“And the dark-faced child listening…” knows the origin of the stories, which are about slavery. How would twenty-first century nine-year-olds react to such a poem?
Why are there no poems by Lorna Goodison herself, or Claude McKay, Mervyn Morris, Edward Baugh, Velma Pollard, Olive Senior, Kwame Dawes, Kei Miller, Louise Bennett, Jean Binta Breeze or any other Jamaican poet? It is sad that most of the poems fourth grade students will read were written by poets who lived so far away and long ago. 
Calabash Bay, Treasure Beach - Festival Venue in the distance.
2012 photo by HumphreyWallis
The Calabash Literary Festival, which takes place in Treasure Beach, St. Elizabeth, Jamaica, succeeds in being "The greatest little festival in the greatest little village, in the greatest little parish, in the greatest little country in the world." Its authors, patrons and audience come from all over the world. I wonder how many primary school children in Jamaica have heard of it. Perhaps all of us who have enjoyed Calabash over the years should, in addition to becoming patrons, pay back by taking the message of Calabash into primary schools by reading both poetry and prose in these schools and donating books to class and school libraries.


4 comments:

Melanie K Wood said...

I love your line: "The Calabash Literary Festival, which takes place in Treasure Beach, St. Elizabeth, Jamaica, succeeds in being the greatest little festival in the greatest little village, in the greatest little parish, in the greatest little country in the world. " Has the feel of children’s literature but makes your point. Quintessential celebration of literature, writing, writers, and Jamaica. I always get a sense of the vibrance of this festival; I wish we had one here.

With the list of contemporary Jamaican authors, there’s just no excuse for trading out the outdated, irrelevant poems for their works. Children need the connection to the culture in which they identify first in order to relate to history and its literature or other cultures and theirs. It can all work in tandem, but if theirs isn’t dominantly represented, that’s just wrong. Children’s lit, at its core, is educational - so let’s teach children not only values but that they are valued for whom they are.

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