Monday 30 November 2015

Black Poppies Arts & Crafts Workshop

5th December at Kuumba Imani at 10am-4pm

You are invited to take part in this exciting free workshop with artist, Faith Bebbington to make Black Poppies for our exhibition to be displayed at Liverpool Central Library. This is part of Writing on the Wall's From Great War to Race Riots Archive Project which explores a fascinating archive of letters and documents highlighting the plight of black soldiers, seafarers, and workers in Liverpool following demobilisation in 1919.


All Welcome. If you would like to book a place for this workshop
If you have any queries, please email info@writingonthewall.org.uk




Friday 13 November 2015

Pulp Idol 2015/16 Book Launch

Celebration Event: Thursday 10th December
The Music Room at The Philharmonic Hall, 7.30pm. Free
 
Come down to the beautiful new Music Room at the Philharmonic Hall to celebrate local writers. 
12 writers made it to our Pulp Idol final and have had the opportunity to work with established editors before getting their work published. With great success from previous finalists Pulp Idol is an inspiring opportunity for writers. Pulp Idol focuses on supporting new original voices and getting them heard. We provide a platform for up-and-coming writers, helping with exposure to new audiences and providing contacts with key publishers and agents. Join WoW in celebrating their fantastic work over a few drinks and live music.

On the night we will also be holding a Q&A with previous Pulp Idol winner, John Donoghue to discuss his debut novel, The Death's Head Chess Club. The Book has just sold to America and is being translated for Norway, Poland, Italy, Greece, China and Brazil. It's an incredible tribute to the success of our Pulp Idol novel writing competition.

John says, 'I really do feel that, to a great extent, I owe this to Pulp Idol. My agent (Carolyn Whitaker from London Independent Books) contacted me after seeing the anthology of the finalists' first chapters. It was she who managed to get me in front of a highly respected editor, Ravi Mirchandani, leading to the subsequent book deal.'

Tuesday 10 November 2015

Black Poppies Workshops

Internationally renowned poet Levi Tafari is exploring the lives of men and their families stranded in Liverpool after WWI and responding creatively through story-telling and poetry workshops in Liverpool Central Library every Saturday throughout November. All welcome to join the sessions, find out more here 


Here is some of the work that has been created in the first session by participants...  

My War
By Pat Dinsmore 

You want me to fight for this country,
I am important, I matter

We suffer, we hope for a better future
To be important, to matter 

I draw on my recourses, my strength 
To carry on being important, to matter 

I return from my exertions in the bleakness
To be important? To matter?

No, it is more than bleak here
Aggression from my fellow man

I’m not important, I don’t matter   


------


Fear and Loathing in Liverpool
By Owen Allen

I arrived today 
But the promise of arrival faded into the truth of my pitiful situation
With an almighty crash like a wave on the Dockland stone wall

I realised there was nothing here for me 
No love, no warmth, welcome or friendship
Instantaneously I have become viewed as a parasite 

My heart is heavy and my soul is torn
How can I be viewed as worse than a stray dog!
Why am I being treated so? Alas, I don’t know 

All I know, are hateful stares and insults by tongue 
In a language I am unfamiliar with 
I am experiencing terror now 

I have no lodgings and it is well past the witching hour
As I walk these streets barefooted and ragged trousers 
I resemble little of the conventional native philanthropist 

I resent into the labyrinth of darkness
Maybe, just maybe this darkness will be my friend


------


Validation
By Janaya Pickett 

My ancestors where fragile,
Like a baby,
Defenceless,
That almost didn’t happen.

Yet my great grandparents’ eyes met
And their parents’ too:
Loves that stretch back
As far as I can imagine.

In whatever way they came up,
Everything was against them:
Time, the tide, their tan.

Here I am

By proxy of ghostly histories.
Tales more spectacular
And grizzly
Than any Tolkien could muster;

Of black heroes
And goddesses
And the darkness that worked against them,
But never won

Because here I am.
Feeling a million years old,
I nurse my daughter:
That ancient practice

Protected at great length
By the light and lives
That we now speak of in the past tense.
Unbreakable codes,
Unquestionable Strength.


--------


Black Poppies 
By Eileen Kyriacou

Like steadfast pillars, they stood in unison.
As brave soldiers, they were enslaved by war.
Some boys not yet men, when they took up arms.
They fought so that others could live in peace.
Not compelled they showed legion for the country.
Did anyone note that bravery in their eyes?
Who’d contemplated plight of their families?
Wives and Mothers left minus their brave men.
Children kept pining for much-loved fathers.
For those left behind still the battles raged.
Who stands at their graves now and sheds a tear?
Gallantries of the brave weren't in disguise.
In the majesty of black now, all are portrayed.
For their blood flowed too in those rivers of red.


Monday 2 November 2015

BLACK POPPIES

Creative Writing Workshops with Levi Tafari


Saturday 7th and 14th November at Liverpool Central Library
Saturday 21st and 28th November (Venue TBC)
Guided tour of the exhibition, 1pm. Creative Writing Workshop, 1.30-3.30pm

Writing on the Wall present a fascinating archive of letters and documents highlighting the plight of black soldiers, seafarers, and workers in Liverpool following demobilisation in 1919. This archive contains testimony from men from the Caribbean, West Africa and other colonial territories, who had fought for England on land and at sea during the Great War and were then left stranded, destitute and subject to racial violence on the streets of Liverpool.

As part of the Weeping Window experience, Writing on the Wall invites you to join internationally renowned poet Levi Tafari in exploring the lives of these men and their families and to respond creatively through story-telling and poetry. These creative writing workshops will be include a guided tour of the archive. Join the team for all four workshops or simply drop in for one.

Check out the new From Great War to Race Riots website - www.greatwar-to-raceriots.co.uk 
 
For more information contact WoW on
0151 703 0020 or info@writingonthewall.org.uk