Private Funeral Held for Benjamin Zephaniah

Private Funeral Held for Benjamin Zephaniah

Benjamin Zephaniah was laid to rest at a private​ funeral on⁢ Thursday.

The Birmingham-born British poet ⁢and ⁣campaigner died on 7 December aged‌ 65 and had⁣ been diagnosed with a brain tumour ⁢shortly‌ before his death.

Well-wishers have been‌ asked ‌to plant flowers or trees and name them⁢ in ⁢his memory, rather ​than sending cut ⁤flowers.

#benjaminzplantz pic.twitter.com/2y9s07vaxG

— ‍Professor Benjamin Zephaniah (@BZephaniah) December ⁢28, 2023

A statement on ‌X, formerly Twitter, said: “Today is Professor Benjamin Zephaniah’s funeral day. We know a lot of people want to ⁣show respect to​ him but cannot join his funeral.

“As ‍Benjamin does not like​ flowers ‍without roots,‌ we ⁢recommend that if you want to,‌ please plant something like⁤ flowers, trees or‍ any plants you want to, anywhere‌ you wish, name them as Benjamin ‌Zephaniah in​ memory⁤ of him.”

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Benjamin Zephaniah: for him, poetry was​ all about communicationRead more

Zephaniah, ⁢whose work often addressed ​political injustice, was also an ‍animal‍ rights activist and an ambassador⁢ for‍ the Vegan Society. When he⁣ was nine ‌years old he decided to stop eating animals.

People wishing to donate in Zephaniah’s memory⁢ have been asked to ⁣send money‍ to the charities the⁢ Vegan Society or​ Inquest, ​which helps bereaved families of⁢ people who have died in custody, immigration⁤ detention, mental health settings or where there ⁢have been ⁢failings by ⁣the‌ state.

Zephaniah was born in April 1958 in Handsworth and began ‌performing poetry locally⁢ in his early teenage years. He had⁤ dyslexia and⁤ left school ‍aged 14.

A sandy place, a recipe for ‍a nation and a‍ Christmas plea: three poems by Benjamin ZephaniahRead more

In‍ 1979, he⁢ moved to‍ London, and his first collection, Pen Rhythm, was published‌ the following‌ year.

His second​ poetry collection, The Dread Affair, was published in 1985‍ and featured ⁤a number ⁢of poems attacking the British⁢ legal system.

In 1999, he wrote What‌ Stephen Lawrence Has Taught Us as part of the campaign to find the murderers of the 18-year-old south-east ⁢Londoner.

Zephaniah played the role of‍ Jeremiah “Jimmy” Jesus in the BBC​ series Peaky Blinders.

2023-12-28 13:26:46
Article from <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/books/2023/dec/28/benjamin-zephaniah-laid-to-rest-in-private-funeral” target=”_blank” style=”color:blue” rel=”noopener”>www.theguardian.com
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