Another Crossing
Here is a marvellous collection of poems that speaks to Leeds and the world; there’s lyricism here, and history and joy, politics, food, anger, and love. Above all there’s a powerful voice steeped in the Black Yorkshire experience that truly mines the universal in the local.” Ian McMillan
Price
£8.99
Author(s)
Khadijah Ibrahiim
ISBN number
9781845232412
Pages
64
Price
£8.99
Classification
Poetry
Country setting
Gambia
Jamaica
United Kingdom
Publication date
20 Oct 2014

Another Crossing tells the stories of an individual life, of a family, of the communities of Chapeltown and Harehills, and of crucial moments in the making of Leeds as a place where cultures meet.

In poetry that sings from the page, Another Crossing recreates places that have been swept away by time, like the house on 56 Cowper Street where Khadijah Ibrahiim’s Jamaican grandmother captured her from time to time, where there was black pride and Victorian respectability, where there were aunts who gave the young girl a cultural education, where her grandfather entertained his friends in the sanctum of the West Indian front room – and where there was a forbidden attic whose religious significance only became clear long afterwards. Or there was her mother’s house on Gathorne Mount, a place that moved to the looser beat of reggae, where there was strict discipline, love, good food – and blues parties in the cellar.

The poems tell of the days when youths were excluded from school for growing their locks, of the bonfire night riots, police harassment and overt racism. But they were also the days when black people in Leeds were creating their own culture in music, dance, dress – shaped by influences from the Caribbean, from Black American music, and from British punk, into something unique.

In rhythms that draw from the music being celebrated, with an unerring eye for the details of style that catch a moment, Another Crossing both recreates the recent past, and uses that recreation to ask questions about the present. Where has that political fire gone? Where the energies that danced to a political beat? But if there are notes of regret for a lost clarity of vision, there is also celebration of times that continue to inspire.

"Khadijah combines her rich gifts for rhythm, rhyme and rap in these wonderfully evocative poems which carry a rare authenticity, drawing as they do from lived experience. These are poems about family, friendships, love and survival – and ultimately a people’s growing awareness of their rights and worth in a society that barely welcomed them.”
Jacob Ross, author of Pynter Bender

Khadijah Ibrahiim was born in Leeds of Jamaican parentage. Hailed as one of Yorkshire's leading poets by BBC Radio, she has appeared alongside the likes of Linton Kwesi Johnson, Lemn Sissay and Benjamin Zephaniah.

 

Variations

Khadijah Ibrahiim

Khadijah Ibrahiim was born in Leeds of Jamaican parentage. Educated at the University of Leeds, she is a literary activist, theatre maker and published writer, who combines’ inter-disciplinary art forms to re-imagine poetry as performance theatre.
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