The Scotsman

Lavery shapes her life into poetry as a survival skill

- HANNAH LAVERY JOYCE MCMILLAN

Hannah L avery’ s dr am atic monologue The Drift– staged by the National The - atre of Scotland in 2019, on a brief Scottish tour–is an iconic piece of 21 st century Scottish poetry about the experience of growing up black, or mixed-race, in a Scotland that often prides itself on its inclusive attitude to citizenshi­p, but is still profoundly unused to dealing with real-life racial and cultural diversity.

Born in Edinburgh in the 1970s to an English mother and mixed-race father – who himself was born in Ed inburgh in the 1940s, and was a passionate Hibs supporter– Lavery carried a heavy burden of rage and disappoint­ment from the moment when her father left the family home, when she was only two.

And if she felt anger against her absent father, she was also appalled by the daily racism encountere­d by her father, by herself, and by her own children; by the pervasive assumption that she and they somehow “don’t belong”, and by a rage that comes from the depths of Scotland’ s history, and our complicity in the long narrative of slavery, colonialis­m and racial exploitati­on.

For Lavery, the act of shaping her life into poetry has become a survival skill, allowing her both to work her way towards a deeper understand­ing of her father – who died in Leeds in 2014– and to set down a markera sa Scottish black woman and writer who loves this country, but cannot subscribe to any facile narrative about Scottish moral superiorit­y.

In this extract from The Drift, La very speaks both of her ambivalent relationsh­ip with Scotland, and of the father who, wherever he was, always wanted her to be his “Edinburgh girl”, growing up in the shadow of Easter Road; and reflects briefly on the experience of her own young children, learning how to cope with the racist attitudes they too still encounter.

Over the last decade, Lavery has emerged as a major figure on the Scottish poetry scene, and in spoken word performanc­e and theatre.

Her poetry and short fiction has been published by Gutt er magazine and Post box Press, among others. She is currently working on a play about climate change called Three Pints On A Sunday; and she is the founder and director of Coast Word, a poetry and music festival in Dunbar, where she now lives.

This year, she has taken on the challenge of creating a play for the Lyceum Theatre, the Edinburgh Internatio­nal Festival and the National Theatre of Scotland about the death of Sheku Bayoh, a young man of Sierra Leonian heritage who died in Kirkcaldy in 2015, following his forcible arrest by nine policemen.

Lament For She ku Bayoh received an acclaimed rehearsed reading during last year’s Edinburgh Festi - val; Laver y’s fully-staged version was live-streamed online by the Lyceum Theatre this weekend.

To watch a trailer for Lament For Sheku Bayoh, visit: https:// lyceum.org.uk/whats-on/product ion/ lament-for-she kubayoh. For more on Hannah and her work, visit: www.hannahlave­ry.com/

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0 Hannah Lavery

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