A few weeks ago, at the Justice for Regis Korchinski-Paquet protest in Toronto, Keosha Love stood in front of a crowd of thousands, mask pulled down just below her lips to share her fiery words around anti-Black racism, privilege, and protest. But it was another devastating death just a few days later, of Black Lives Matter activist Oluwatoyin Salau, that inspired her to write this piece.
Β»Subscribe to CBC Arts to watch more videos:
bit.ly/CBCArtsSubscribe
She writes:
"I mourned Toyin's death not only because she was yet another innocent life taken, but because I saw myself in her. She looked like me; she could have been me. Another Black woman unseen and unprotected. It hurts me in such an unfathomable way that the consequence for Black women speaking up about their injustices is death. Self-advocacy comes with a death sentence."
"I think about Toyin and the countless other Black women who speak up about their abuse and choose to live in their truth, and get killed for it. I wondered if this was also my fate. Toyin was only 19 years old. I wrote this poem for her β for all the Black women who are NOT being protected the same way we protect other women or the same way we protect Black men. Black women deserve so much better, so I made this prayer. Not just a prayer for love, protection and safety, but a prayer demanding JUSTICE for all Black women."
Take a moment to watch her piece titled "A Prayer for Black Women" in the video above and send it to every woman you know who needs to feel seen, protected, held and safe right now.
As the world around us grows more and more uncertain, four Black poets speak their truth in the fourth season of the CBC Arts series Poetic License.
Find us at:
cbc.ca/arts
CBC Arts on Facebook:
facebook.com/cbcarts
CBC Arts on Twitter:
twitter.com/cbcarts
CBC Arts on Instagram:
instagram.com/cbcarts
About: Welcome to CBC Arts, your home for the most surprising, relevant and provocative stories featuring artists from diverse communities across Canada. Our job is to fill your feed with the disruptors and innovators changing how we see the country through movement, images and sound β and to inspire you to join in too.
@shyonnenugent3405
3 years ago
AmenππΎ
6 |