Obituary:
Gifted Poet Sekou Sundiata
(August 22, 1948 -- July 18, 2007)
by Louis Reyes Rivera
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On Wednesday, July 18, 2007, at 5:47a.m. (ET),
poet Sekou Sundiata passed away. A highly esteemed performing poet, Mr.
Sundiata wrote for print, performance, music and theater. Born Robert
Franklin Feaster in Harlem, on August 22, 1948, Sundiata came of age as an
artist during the Black Arts/Black Aesthetic movements of the 1960s and
1970s.
While attending the City College of New York (CCNY),
where he began reciting poetry publicly, Sundiata converged with several
other student activists, including once-mayoral candidate of Pittsburgh
and longtime friend, Leroy Hodge, to form the basis for what soon became
known as the Black and Puerto Rican Student Community of City College (BPRSC).
This phalanx of 400 students soon made their own history, closing the
21,000-student campus during the Spring of 1969, to demand, among other
things, that CCNY be renamed Harlem University. The net effect of the
student takeover culminated in both an Open Admissions Policy that took
effect in September 1970, the full legitimization of ethnic studies
departments throughout the nation, as well as the requirement that all
education majors within the City University take courses in African
American History and to have Spanish as a Second Language.
Among his acknowledged mentors at City were
Toni Cade Bambara, June Jordan, and fellow student Louis Reyes Rivera,
with whom Sundiata helped to establish the first Black student newspaper
in the City University, CCNY's The Paper.
Their association would span close to forty years of mutual respect and
admiration.
Upon completing his Bachelor's Degree (circa
1974), Sundiata enrolled and completed his Master's in Creative Writing
while regularly producing community-based poetry readings that were known
to draw SRO crowds. In 1976, his creative sensibilities, his innate
organizing skills, and his associations with a convergent generation
of excellent poets, musicians and dancers immediately led to a
collaborative project he directed that would commemorate 100 years of
Black struggle for freedom and Human Rights. Titled The Sounds of
the Memory of Many Living People (1863-1876/ 1963-1976)
, this production, which included upcoming novelist Arthur Flowers and
such poets as Safiya Henderson-Holmes, BJ Ashanti, Tom Mitchelson, Louis
Reyes Rivera, et al, was staged in Harlem over a period of two days,
signaling much of what was to come from Sekou's sense of vision, steadily
breaking ground for what was then a new literary genre,
Performance Poetry, fully
anticipating elements of both Hip Hop Culture and Spoken Word Art.
In 1977, the aforementioned poets, along with Zizwe
Ngafua, Rashidah Ismaili, Fatisha (Hutson), Sandra Maria Esteves, Akua
Lezli Hope, Mervyn Taylor, and Sekou, among others, formed the Calabash
Poets Workshop, which group signaled the arrival of a new literary heat in
New York, regularly producing soirees and forums (1977-1983) that included
all of the arts and culminated in a three-year attempt (1979-1982) to
establish an independent Black Writers Union.
Upon the release of his first vinyl album
(circa 1980), Are & Be, Sekou Sundiata was dubbed by
Amiri Baraka as "the State of the Art." Since then, Mr. Sundiata
established a longtime relationship with CCNY's Aaron Davis Performing
Arts Center, through which venue he intermittently produced new material
for the stage, consistently collaborating with musicians, dancers and
actors. He was eventually selected for a number of earned fellowships,
including a Sundance Institute Screenwriting Fellow, a Columbia University
Revson Fellow, a Master Artist-in-Residence at the Atlantic Center for the
Arts (Florida), and as the first Writer-in-Residence at the New School
University in New York, in which university's Eugene Lang College he
remained a professor.
He was, as well, among those featured in the
Bill Moyers' PBS series on poetry, The Language of Life,
and in Russell Simmons' Def Poetry Jam on HBO.
Among several
highly acclaimed performance theater works in which he served as both
author and performer are: The Circle Unbroken is a Hard Bop,
which toured nationally and received three AUDELCO Awards and a BESSIE
Award; The Mystery of Love, commissioned and produced by
New Voices/ New Visions at Aaron Davis Hall in New York City and the
American Music Theater Festival in Philadelphia; and Udu,
a music theater work produced by 651 ARTS in Brooklyn and presented by the
International Festival of Arts and Ideas in New Haven, the Walker Art
Center and Penumbra Theater in Minneapolis, Flynn Center in Burlington,
VT, the Hopkins Center at Dartmouth College in New Hampshire, and
Miami-Dade Community College in Florida. Throughout this period and since
1985, he developed a close association with co-collaborator and legendary
trombonist Craig S. Harris.
blessing the boats,
Sundiata's first solo theater piece, an exploration into his own personal
battles with kidney failure, opened in November 2002 at Aaron Davis Hall,
NYC. It has since been presented in more than 30 cities and continued to
tour nationally. In March 2005, Sundiata produced The Gift of Life
Concert, an organ donation public awareness event at the Apollo
Theater that kicked off a three-week run of blessing the boats
at the Apollo's SoundStage. in partnership with the Apollo Theater
Foundation, the National Kidney Foundation and the New York Organ Donor
Network with support from the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services.
Since 2006,
his the 51st (dream) state has been presented throughout
the U.S. and in Australia. Both blessing the boats and
the 51st (dream) state were produced in collaboration
with MultiArts Projects and Productions (MAPP). In addition to working
within community engagement activities at Harlem Stages/Aaron Davis
Hall, the University of Michigan and University Musical Society (Ann
Arbor, MI), the University of North Carolina (Chapel Hill, NC), the
University of Texas Austin (Austin, TX), in Miami Dade College (Miami,
FL), and the Walker Arts Center in Minneapolis, Sundiata has appeared as a
featured speaker and artist at the Imagining America Conference (Ann
Arbor, MI), at the Institute of Contemporary Art (Boston, MA), and at
the Pedagogy and Theater of the Oppressed Conference (Minneapolis, MN),
among others. Prior to his demise, he was engaged in producing a DVD
documenting the America Project for use by universities and presenters as
a model for art and civic engagement.
In addition to the 1979 Are & Be
album, Sundiata's other releases include a second album, The
Sounds of the Memory of Many Living People, and two CDs, The
Blue Oneness of Dreams, nominated for a Grammy Award, and longstoryshort.
Each of these works are rich with the sounds of blues, funk, jazz and
African and Afro-Caribbean percussion, with the latter two featuring Craig
Harris.
He is
survived by his mother, Virginia Myrtle Feaster, his wife, Maurine Knighton,
daughter Myisha Gomez, stepdaughter Aida Riddle, grandson Aman, brothers
William Walter Feaster and Ronald Eugene Feaster, as well as a host
of relatives, admirers, students and friends.
A private funeral service of family and
friends is scheduled for Saturday, July 21, and a commemorative
celebration of his life and work is scheduled to take place on August
22, his birthday, at Brooklyn Academy of Music's Opera House. Details to
follow. In lieu of flowers, the family requests that donations be made
in the name of Sekou Sundiata to the New York Organ Donor Network or to
the National Kidney Foundation.
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Craig Harris and Sekou Sundiata
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