Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

Haki Madhubuti: Honored worldwide — except in his home state of Illinois

- MARY MITCHELL mmitchell@suntimes.com | @MaryMitche­llCST

Most voices are seasonal.

We hear them for a generation, then they fade into the wind. That’s not the case with Haki R. Madhubuti.

Known as Don L. Lee in his youth, some might remember him as a tall, skinny, highyellow brother who peddled his poems on the same South Side streets where brothers sling drugs.

Many more will remember him as the dashiki-clad poet whose poems helped give birth to the Black Arts Movement, a cultural revolution that turned the South Side into a mecca for Black writers and artists in the 1960s.

If it was happening to Black people, Madhubuti spoke on it.

‘Assassinat­ion’

it was wild. the bullet hit high. (the throat-neck) & from everywhere: the motel, from under bushes and cars, from around corners and across streets, out of garbage cans and from rat holes in the earth they came running toward the king — all of them fast and sure — as if the King was going to fire back. they came running, fast and sure, in the wrong direction.

His poems became more than hashtags and slogans. Madhubuti turned Black thought into Third-World Press, the largest and oldest Black-owned publishing company in the country.

His poems became the Institute of Positive Education, New Concept School, Betty Shabazz Internatio­nal Charter School and the Barbara A. Sizemore Academy, all schools and cultural institutio­ns he founded or co-founded.

Last month, Madhubuti, 78, published his 15th book of poetry. He also has published more than 30 books and contribute­d poetry and essays to more than 100 anthologie­s and journals.

“Taught by Women — Poems as Resistance Language” pays tribute to the female activists, poets, artists and writers who shaped him as a husband, father, activist, publisher, institutio­n-builder and poet.

In a review by Patrick T. Reardon for Third Coast Review, the writer pointed out that, “unlike many 1960s radicals, white and Black, Madhubuti remains a leading Black artistic, political and social revolution­ary — a poet who still writes for other Blacks about the Black experience from deep inside the community.”

For instance:

‘The Damage We Do’

he loved his women weak & small so that he would not tire of beating them. he sought the weakest & the smallest his rage of boxing their heads up against refrigerat­ors, slamming their hands in doors, stepping on them like roaches. kicking them in their centers of life, all of his women were weak and small and sick & he an embarrassm­ent to the human form was not an exception in america.

So it is particular­ly dishearten­ing that, at a time the entire country is reflecting on racial inclusiven­ess, this cultural and literary treasure did not make the final cut to become the next Illinois poet laureate.

There have been just three other poets to be given that title since Howard B. Austin was honored in 1936. Carl Sandburg served from 1962 to 1967, Gwendolyn Brooks, the first Black author to win the Pulitzer Prize, held the title from 1968 to 2000, and Bradley University professor Kevin Stein served from 2003 to 2017.

After a search committee sifted through numerous nomination­s, Madhubuti was among five semifinali­sts.

“The search committee will select three finalists, based on the video responses to be submitted to the first lady and governor for final considerat­ion as the next Illinois poet laureate,” Madhubuti was advised in a communicat­ion from Lee LoBue, deputy chief of staff for Gov. J.B. Pritzker. Madhubuti was not among the three. LoBue and the committee chair, Norah Brooks Blakely, the daughter of Gwendolyn Brooks and president of Brooks Permission­s, didn’t return my call regarding this matter.

After so long a journey — from a 43rd Street corner selling books out of a box to New Delhi, India, in 2006, as the only poet chosen to represent the United States at the Internatio­nal Valmiki World Poetry Festival — Madhubuti is understand­ably disappoint­ed.

Poetry saved his life. Through it, he has tried to save the lives of others.

You can’t do any better than that.

 ?? SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? Haki Madhubuti
SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO Haki Madhubuti
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