
On Friday, I taught a writing workshop around my book Were You There? A Biography of Emma Wakefield Paillet. (Click the link to find out more about the book.) I had sent out a few feelers with people I knew to get gigs around Black History Month. I was excited and a little daunted to teach a senior AP class at Ascension High School. But the kids were great! They were engaged from the start and had limited experience with poetry.
The found poem form is a wonderful form to use with students new to poetry. They have the words in front of them. It takes some higher level thinking to synthesize the words into a new text, a poem.
We were using the text of Martin Luther King, Jr.’s speech at Selma at the conclusion of the Selma to Montgomery march in 1965. Four of the students shared their poems with me.
Untitled
by Martha O.
Our divided masses began awakening,
began uniting
to meet this threat, to follow the roots
today the state of the American dream will be transformed
Let us march
Let us march
Let us march on in honor, in struggle
and in faith
Transform dark yesterdays into
bright tomorrows
As I Stood on a Stage
By Rorie W.
As I stood on a stage,
all I can see is people.
Blacks and whites,
some young, some old.
Some shoot me angry glares with snarling lips,
some look as if I hold their fate in my hands.As I look out into the mass,
I am filled with emotions plenty.
Fear and anger, but most importantly hope.I hope for the day of unity, the day of peace
so, when I stand on the stage,
I don’t see only Black, only white,All I can see is people.
The Right to Vote
By Luke H.
They revised the doctrine of white supremacy
laws of the South made it a crime to come together as equals.
That’s what happened when the South threatened to unite.
We are on the move now.
Ghettos?
Let us march!
Social and economic depression?
Let us marchLet!
Ballot boxes?
Let us march!
Until brotherhood becomes more than a meaningless word.
Let us march!
Let Us March
by Cameron A.
I want to tell the city of Selma
We are on the move now
Let us continue our triumphant march
to the realization of the American dream.
Let us march on segregated housing.
Let us march on poverty.
Let us march on ballot boxes.
We are still in for a season of suffering
in many counties of Alabama,
many areas of Mississippi,
many areas of Louisiana.
We must come to see that the end we seek
is a society at peace with itself.
That will be the day of man as man.
Please leave a comment to encourage these students.































