Lemn Sissay

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Preceded byTom Bloxham
Succeeded byNazir Afzal
Born (1967-05-21) 21 May 1967 (age 58)
Higher End, Wigan, Lancashire, England, UK
OccupationAuthor, broadcaster, poet
Lemn Sissay
Sissay speaking at the Hopemas Christmas party in 2010
Chancellor of the University of Manchester
In office
1 August 2015  31 July 2022
Preceded byTom Bloxham
Succeeded byNazir Afzal
Personal details
Born (1967-05-21) 21 May 1967 (age 58)
Higher End, Wigan, Lancashire, England, UK
OccupationAuthor, broadcaster, poet
Websitelemnsissay.com

Lemn Sissay OBE FRSL (born 21 May 1967)[1] is a British author and broadcaster. He was the official poet of the 2012 London Olympics, was chancellor of the University of Manchester from 2015 until 2022, and joined the Foundling Museum's board of trustees two years later, having previously been appointed one of the museum's fellows. He was awarded the 2019 PEN Pinter Prize. He has written a number of books and plays.[2]

Extract from "The Gilt of Cain", a poem by Sissay, in Fen Court, London

Sissay's mother, Yemarshet Sissay, arrived in Britain from Ethiopia in 1966.[3] Pregnant at the time, she was sent from Bracknell in Berkshire to a home for unmarried mothers in Lancashire to give birth.[4] His birth father, Giddey Estifanos, who was a pilot for Ethiopian Airlines, died in a plane crash in 1972. Sissay was born in Billinge Hospital, Wigan, Lancashire, in 1967. Norman Goldthorpe, a social worker assigned to his mother by Wigan Social Services, found foster parents for Sissay while his mother returned to Bracknell to finish her studies.

Goldthorpe named Sissay "Norman" and put him in the care of foster parents, telling them to treat the placement as an adoption.[3] The events are depicted in the play Something Dark and in the BBC documentary Internal Flight.[3][5][6][7] His strongly religious foster parents wanted to name him Mark after the Christian evangelist Mark and give him their surname, Greenwood.

When Sissay was 12 years old, his foster parents—who, by then, had three biological children of their own—placed him in a children's home and said that no one from their family would contact him again.[4]

Poem by Sissay on Hardy's Well, Manchester

Between the ages of 12 and 17, Sissay was held in a total of four children's homes. With no surrogate or birth family to turn to when he aged out of the care system, he was finally given his birth certificate, which revealed the name of his mother, Yemarshet Sissay, and his own legal name, Lemn Sissay. He was also given a letter from his files, dated 1968, written by his mother to Norman Goldthorpe, pleading for her son's return. She wrote: "How can I get Lemn back? I want him to be with his own people, his own colour. I don't want him to face discrimination."[3][8][9] From the point of leaving care, he began the search for his mother and took back his real name.[3][5]

At the age of 17, Sissay used his unemployment benefit money to self-publish his first poetry pamphlet, Perceptions of the Pen, which he sold to striking miners in Lancashire.[10] When he was 18 years old, he moved from Atherton to the city of Manchester. At 19, he was a literature development worker at Commonword, a community publishing cooperative in Manchester, where he set up their Cultureword strand for Black and Asian writers.[11]

Sissay met his birth mother when he was 21, after a long search. She was working for the United Nations in the Gambia.[5]

Career

References

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