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The black child raised by white supremacists

African-American writer Shane McCrae grew up with his racist white grandparents. Poetry became a salvation and helped him make sense of his difficult and abusive upbringing.

Shane McCrae is an award-winning African-American poet and writer whose work often addresses the black experience in the US. Poetry for him was a way of making sense of his difficult and abusive upbringing. As a child, Shane was raised by his white maternal grandparents in a deeply racist household. His grandmother taught him the Nazi salute, told him that he β€œtanned very easily” and that he was living with her because his black father didn’t want him. But when Shane was a teenager, he would learn the truth about the racial prejudice and deception that divided him from his father Stanley.

Shane's latest collections of poetry are called Sometimes I Never Suffered and The Gilded Auction Block.

Any comments please email us on outlook@bbc.com

Presenter: Emily Webb
Producer: Maryam Maruf

Picture: Shane McCrae as a child
Credit: Courtesy Shane McCrae

Available now

44 minutes

Last on

Tue 27 Oct 2020 03:06GMT

Broadcasts

  • Mon 26 Oct 2020 12:06GMT
  • Mon 26 Oct 2020 18:06GMT
  • Mon 26 Oct 2020 23:06GMT
  • Tue 27 Oct 2020 03:06GMT

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