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A Christian poet
whose work is defined by her experiences during Liberia's six-year civil
war will bring her keen observations, passion and humor to Calvin College
during Women's History Month.
Patricia Jabbeh Wesley, a
Liberian poet and professor of creative writing and English at the Indiana
University of Pennsylvania, will read her poetry and participate in
literature classes on March 11 through a collaboration of Calvin's English,
gender studies and multicultural affairs departments.
"She is a poet who draws
on her experience from the Liberian Civil war and tries to face honestly
the violence of that conflict, but then also discern some hopefulness,"
says Linda Naranjo-Huebl, a Calvin English professor and member of the
committee that invited Wesley.
The poet will invite the
Calvin community into her work in a number of ways. At 3:30 p.m. on
March 11, in the Alumni Association Board Room, Wesley will discuss
the experience of Africans who — like herself — have been
exiled from their countries through war. This phenomenon, which she
calls "Living in the Diaspora," is also the title of this
informal conversation.
At 7 p.m. in the Calvin Theological
Seminary auditorium, Wesley will read and expand upon her work, an event
titled Becoming Ebony, after her latest book of poetry. The public is
invited to attend both of these free events.
Born in southeastern Liberia
and raised in Monrovia, Jabbeh-Wesley attended the University of Liberia
in the late 1970s, a period of unrest. From 1983-1985, prior to the
outbreak of civil war, Jabbeh-Wesley studied at the University of Indiana
in Bloomington, Indiana, where she earned a master of science in English
education degree. She returned to her homeland and taught at her alma
mater, only to be trapped in the turmoil when rebels overran Monrovia.
After enduring the horrors of civil war, including torture, Jabbeh-Wesley,
her husband and three children immigrated to the United States, losing
their possessions and family in the process. In 2002, after publishing
her first book of poetry, she earned a Ph.D. in creative writing from
Western Michigan University. She subsequently taught creative writing
and African literature there.
Said one review of Wesley's
work: "Her poems are scintillating and vivid, quickly sketched
fables shaped by recollections of childhood playmates, moonlight and
ocean surf, hibiscus hedges, and big pots of boiling soup. But these
paeans to home blend with percussive visions of falling rockets and
murdered children, shaped recollections of hunger and mourning, and
a survivor’s careful gratitude in a land of cold winds and rationed
sunlight, her carefully measured memories and cherished dreams of return."
Calvin professor of English
Roy Anker heard Wesley speak at a Hope College event and was struck
by her poetry.
"She's very lively,
passionate, colorful," says Anker. "It's vivid conversational
poetry."
Women's History Month, says
those organizing Calvin's celebration of the month, seemed like a good
time to welcome a woman who had lived through so much contemporary history.
"This looked like a
great opportunity," says history and gender studies professor Peggy
Bendroth. "It's someone who the English department is excited about,
and we were happy to support it."
~written by media relations
staff writer Myrna Anderson
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