From Here To There – African and African Diasporic Poetry Indaba II; Online, Sat., 28 Feb. 2026 (6-7.30pm UK time)

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Ambrose Musiyiwa

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Feb 23, 2026, 8:16:43 AMFeb 23
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📰 From Here To There – African and African Diasporic Poetry Indaba II
🗓️ Online, Sat., 28 Feb. 2026
🕕 6-7.30pm UK time
🔗 To attend, register here https://zoom.us/meeting/register/ryExknHSQSWnaM9g8PdQEg

Join us for poetry and conversation focusing on African and African diasporic migration and immobility.

The readings and conversation take place online on Saturday, 28 February 2026, from 6pm till 7.30pm (UK time).

As part of the session, poets from Jamaica and the Africa Migration Report Poetry Anthology Series will read and discuss their work and take part in a Q&A session.

Co-organised by Dr Rene' Level and the Africa Migration Report Poetry Anthology Series, the indaba will feature Jamaican poets, Rene' Level, Zonia Level, Erica Moses and Annmarie Rubie, and Sarpong Agyemang (Ghana), Zita Holbourne (Caribbean / UK), Nandi Jola (South Africa / Northern Ireland), and Furaha Youngblood (US).

The readings and conversation take place as part of a series of events marking 100 years of Black History commemorations in the African diaspora where Black History Month is celebrated in February in the US and in October in the UK, and to draw attention to African and African diasporic migration and immobility, and the horrors taking taking place in the English Channel.

REFERENCES

[1] The history of Black History Month, one hundred years in. Code Switch. NPR, 4 February 2026 

[2] ITV News. 2026. "How 27 people lost their lives in Channel crossing tragedy." ITV News, February 5. 

[3] Jola, N. & Osamor, O. (Eds). 2025. From Here To There: 101 Poems on African and African Diasporic Migration. CivicLeicester, 2025

NOTES

The Africa Migration Report Poetry Anthology Series is volunteer-led and is organised by Forced Migration and The Arts in association with CivicLeicester and the migrants' rights collective, Regularise.

The series was inspired by the Africa Migration Report: 2nd Edition (African Union and International Organisation for Migration, 2024), and
 has open calls for poems (40 lines or less) and short prose (100 words or less) exploring: 
We take the African diaspora to include all people of African descent in all the ways they define themselves, e.g. African, African American, African Asian, African Brazilian, African Canadian, African Caribbean, African Italian, African Latino, African Palestinian, Afropean, Afro Turk, Black British, Black Canadian, Black, etc.

So far we have released two poetry collections: Japa Fire: An Anthology of Poems on African and African Diasporic Migration (CivicLeicester, 2024), edited by Munya R and I (both, Zimbabwe / UK), and From Here To There (CivicLeicester, 2025), edited by Nandi Jola (South Africa / Northern Ireland) and Omobola Osamor (Nigeria / USA). More are on the way.

The series is currently not in receipt of funding from any source. 

To cover some of the costs associated with the work, we have a crowdfunding appeal

Any support you can lend us in spreading the word about these and about books in the series will be appreciated.

"Through fire and water" (Morning Star, 12 March 2025) and "The songlines of migration" (Morning Star, 16 January 2026), reviews of Japa Fire (CivicLeicester, 2024) and From Here To There (CivicLeicester, 2025) might also be of interest.

Kind regards,

Ambrose Musiyiwa
Coordinator, Africa Migration Report Poetry Anthology Series

Ambrose Musiyiwa | Coordinator, Forced Migration and The Arts (Blog), Journeys in Translation (Journal ArticleVideo Playlist), and The Africa Migration Report Poetry Anthology Series (Concept NoteCall for SubmissionsVideo PlaylistFunding Appeal) | (Ed.) [New BookJapa Fire: An Anthology of Poems on African and African Diasporic Migration (CivicLeicester, 2024. Co-edited with Munya R from the migrants' rights collective, Regularise); Welcome to Britain: An Anthology of Poems and Short Fiction (CivicLeicester, 2023); Black Lives Matter: Poems for a New World (CivicLeicester, 2020)
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