First of all, props to those that find out things before I do and tell me about them. Al-Muhajabah told me about an article in The Guardian by Benjamin Zephaniah, a Black poet who is apparently refusing induction into the Order of the British Empire.
There's something very strange about receiving a letter from Tony Blair's office asking me if I want to accept this award. In the past couple of months I've been on Blair's doorstep a few times. I have begged him to come out and meet me; I have been longing for a conversation with him, but he won't come out, and now here he is asking me to meet him at the palace! I was there with a million people on February 15, and the last time I was there was just a couple of weeks ago. My cousin, Michael Powell, was arrested and taken to Thornhill Road police station in Birmingham where he died. Now, I know how he died. The whole of Birmingham knows how he died, but in order to get this article published and to be politically (or journalistically) correct, I have to say that he died in suspicious circumstances. The police will not give us any answers. We have not seen or heard anything of all the reports and investigations we were told were going to take place. Now, all that my family can do is join with all the other families who have lost members while in custody because no one in power is listening to us. Come on Mr Blair, I'll meet you anytime. Let's talk about your Home Office, let's talk about being tough on crime.
I'm pretty impressed with the guy who wrote the article. So I looked into just what he did that might cause him to be knighted. I found his website, read some of his work…I must say, I remain impressed with him as a person. I ain't feeling the poetry, though. Personal taste, I guess.
Posted by P6 at December 5, 2003 05:42 PM | Trackback URL: http://www.prometheus6.org/mt/mt-tb.cgi/2437I'm feel certain that, having read that declination, Mssr. Blair and HRH would agree that Mssr. Zephaniah is indeed an ill fit for the OBE.
I've always found poetry difficult to get into, though there's some poetry that's excellent. I kind of liked the line in one of his poems about "I used to think poets were boring/Until I became one of them" (paraphrase from memory).