» "B"
From Kay's 2008 performance at the Bowery Poetry Club, and more intimate and relaxed presentation of her performance at TED2011. What's your take?
» "Hiroshima"
Kay's poem that ended our show, as performed at The Nantucket Project in 2011.
» "Tshotsholoza"
Kay's poem about Noor Ebrahim in South Africa as taken from her performance at the Acumen Fund's *spark! event in New York City

Sarah Kay is a 23-year-old spoken word poet who has become a role model and teacher to teenagers around the world. Millions have viewed her TED talk, where she shared the main stage with figures like Bill Gates and Jamie Oliver. She puts words around what she knows about poetry, stories, and being human and connected in this age.
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Selected Poems
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Sarah Kay’s poem “Hiroshima” ends this week’s show. How we even knew that this audio existed came about as a result of a serendipitous invitation to The Nantucket Project.
About the Image
Sarah Kay and Phil Kaye perform at Da Poetry Lounge in Los Angeles in 2011.
Your Comments
Comments
I enjoy listening to your show, while I work in my art studio, I especially enjoyed the program today with Sarah Kay it was so inspiring and interesting.I hope you continue doing this good work for many many years, it truly is appreciated.
I had the opportunity to listen to Sarah Kay's wonderful poem about Noor Ibrahim. I have been to District 6 when just a remnant of the Indian neighborhood remained. Her story about the museum reminded me of the small museum that used to be in St. Paul's church in NY near the World Trade Center that briefly commemorated the rescue efforts. I could not bear to be inside for long and went outside, leaned against the iron fence and nearly collapsed crying. How could such terrible things like the bombing of the WTC or destruction of District 6 occur due to political orthodoxy? As you might guess from my last name, I am Jewish; I walked into a church; District 6 was mixed. Her poem brought that same grief and tears into my eyes. It was the same grief I felt during the wars in the former Yugoslavia when mixed communities were slaughtered or chased at gunpoint into ethnic enclave. I remembered, then, not the violence of apartheid but its terrible wastefulness and loss of human contact. I wanted to buy a 'black' record and it could only be purchased in a 'black' designated district where I could go. It was just a record but also a sign of how total the violence forced against daily life, like the public bath that no longer existed after the destruction of District 6. Thank you four presenting her work, listening to the Tshotshaloza song and the chance to re-experience my connecting grief about our world. May we live together in peace.
Voices on the Radio
Kay is a spoken word poet and founder/co-director of Project V.O.I.C.E. She's the author of B.
Production Credits
Host/Producer: Krista Tippett
Senior Editor: Trent Gilliss
Senior Producer: David McGuire
Producer: Chris Heagle
Producer: Nancy Rosenbaum
Associate Producer: Susan Leem
Associate Web Developer: Anne Breckbill
Coordinating Producer: Stefni Bell
Like-Minded Conversations
A poet and self-described literary activist, E. Ethelbert Miller attended Howard University in 1968 — the age in which Black Power was finding its voice. He has remained there ever since, observing and making sense of the trajectory of black history and culture. He pushes at the parameters within which mainstream America routinely sees what he calls "blackness."
Poetry is something many of us seem to be hungry for these days. We're hungry for fresh ways to tell hard truths and redemptive stories, for language that would elevate and embolden rather than demean and alienate. Elizabeth Alexander shares her sense of what poetry works in us — and in our children — and why it may become more relevant, not less so, in hard and complicated times.








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