Leanne Betasamosake Simpson on how poetry exists between time and space

Image | Leanne Betasamosake Simpson

Caption: Leanne Betasamosake Simpson's book This Accident of Being Lost was on the 2017 shortlist for the Rogers Writers' Trust Fiction Prize. (Nadya Kwandibens/Red Works Photography)

April is National Poetry Month. To celebrate, CBC Books(external link) asked poets the question: "What is the power of poetry?"
Leanne Betasamosake Simpson is a Michi Saagiig Nishnaabeg musician, artist, author and member of Alderville First Nation.
Her work often centres on the struggles of Indigenous Canadians. Her latest book, a collection of stories and poems called This Accident of Being Lost, was on the shortlist for the Rogers Writers' Trust Fiction Prize.​

"Poetry, and I mean all kinds of poetry — rap, lyrics, ancient stories echoing into the future from the present, the sounds and vibrations of Indigenous languages, the interstitial spaces between notes, and poetics of ice melting — is important because poetry holds space for other worlds.
"Worlds that exist despite and in spite of the tremendous violence of colonialism or anti-Blackness. Imagined, realized, birthed even temporarily, poetry allows us to feel and taste and breath freedom." ​