Poetry come alive
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Coral Wilson
In a world of video games and 30-second commercials, a poem hardly
stands a chance these days at capturing a child’s attention. But
guest author Ashley Bryan had an avid audience Monday at Joseph R.
Perry Elementary School as he shared his illustrations and readings
of African American poetry.
When Bryan reads poetry, kids listen.
Through whispering, screaming, laughing, crying, clapping and
singing, the emotions of the poem become real.
“What is the poet asking the voice to do?” Bryan asks.
When Bryan reads Langston Hughes, there is no more Bryan, there is
only Hughes and kids begin to understand the voice of the written
word. Then reading becomes fun.
“Reading educates,” Bryan said. “I want to make readers out of the
children so they educate themselves.”
By doing so, he hopes to ignite a hunger and thirst that will push
kids to learn more. If they want to know about Arctic exploration,
they don’t have to wait to study it in school, he said.
Bryan is an illustrator as well as a writer. He illustrates books
celebrating African American poetry in bright colors and vivid
detail. In expressing the voices of his people through painting and
reading, he keeps their words alive.
He points out story patterns that travel the world and unites
cultures, similar stories told from different perspectives. But love
for other cultures is rooted in a love for oneself, he believes.
“You must believe in the beauty of yourself and your people,” he
said.
Bryan travels the world reading poetry. He has been to schools in
Africa with no electricity or running water, but where the kids walk
six miles to school because they have such a desire to learn.
He always enjoys a “back and forth” interaction and this time the
children surprised him by singing “What a Wonderful World,” inspired
by Bryan’s illustrated book. The children illustrated their song with
colored pictures and hand gestures.
“You can’t write a poem without a lot of feeling,” said Kelly
Kuhn, 8, describing her impression.
Although Bryan enjoyed the children’s gift of song and is happy
when they learn something, he asks only one thing from any audience
-- their eyes.
“When I see two eyes looking straight at me, I know two ears are
listening,” Bryan said. “When two ears are listening, a mind is
thinking and the poem goes straight to the heart. Then you have a
poem that you can take home with you.”
* CORAL WILSON is a news assistant who covers education. She can
be reached at (714) 965-7177 or by e-mail at
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