Join us on Tuesday, February 22 at 6pm PT, via Zoom – no prerequisites, no homework!

Nothing so frightens me as writing, but nothing so satisfies me. It’s like a swimmer in the [English] Channel: you face the stingrays and waves and cold and grease, and finally you reach the other shore, and you put your foot on the ground—Aaaahhhh!

Maya Angelou, 1989

Black/African-American Poets

February is Black History Month, and in honor of the event, Mindful Poetry will be celebrating the voices of Black poets throughout American history. The session will take a chronological approach, looking first at A Hymn to Evening by Phyllis Wheatley, an enslaved American who arrived from Gambia, Africa, in 1761. Later poets, such as Paul Laurence Dunbar and Langston Hughes, explore the developing Black consciousness and expose the institutional racism that oppresses Black Americans, with We Wear the Mask, Theme for English B and Mother to Son. Gwendolyn Brooks, the first Black American author to win the Pulitzer Prize, addresses both the yearnings of youth and the dangers of growing up too soon in We Real Cool and A Song in the Front Yard. Civil rights leader and world ambassador of the spoken word, Maya Angelou laments the loss of freedom in her famous poem, Caged Bird, and honors the resilient spirit of Black America in Still I Rise. Join us in the celebration of these renowned voices!


Check out these short videos for additional background…optional, of course.

Harlem Renaissance
Langston Hughes
Caged Bird with a variety of voices.
Still I Rise performed by Maya Angelou


Mindful Poetry usually meets the fourth Tuesday of each month at 6pm PT, via Zoom.





Meeting ID: 975 0515 6720 One tap mobile +12532158782,,97505156720# US (Tacoma)


Our Curator and Guide:

Poetry has been a life-long passion and solace for Rebecca Echert-Lennstrom. The beauty and playfulness of verse captured her heart early and became a well-spring of reflection and inspiration. For the last 25 years, she’s been sharing that love with high school students as an English teacher and creative writing instructor, steeped in words and imagery. She’s coached students in the National Poetry Out Loud Competition for ten years, paired with professional poets in the classroom to inspire student writing, and published high school creative writing magazines. This is her second year curating the Mindful Poetry Series as a ministry of the Episcopal Church.


Questions? Please email Sylvia Sepulveda.

Learn more at our Mindful Poetry page.

Stay connected by following our Facebook page.
Mindful Poetry – Still I Rise