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This poet's students - including rapper Tommy Raps - learn to love spoken word.

Darius Ajai Frasure performs his poem "We, Us, Our" as a meditation on marriage "when you move from the individual to the collective," he said.
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Darius Ajai Frasure performs his poem "We, Us, Our" as a meditation on marriage "when you move from the individual to the collective," he said.

We're celebrating National Poetry Month with a video reading from a different North Texas poet each week. Poet and professor Darius Ajai Frasure dedicates his time helping young people discover and share their voices.

Darius Ajai Frasure knew that in order to be a poet, he needed to be a professor.

True to plan, he is a full-time English and creative writing professor at Dallas College and also teaches at the University of North Texas-Dallas, Texas Christian University in Fort Worth and Tarrant County College. He is currently working on his Ph.D.

His poem 鈥淲e, Us, Our鈥 was inspired by his thoughts of marriage 鈥渨hen you move from the individual to the collective,鈥 he said. It was a subject he contemplated for most of his life, from his own early experiences.

He said his grandmother鈥檚 sister adopted him out of foster care in Tuscon, Arizona, when he was 2 years old. He attended kindergarten in the Philippines, due to his father鈥檚 Air Force posting. Later, his parents divorced, so he was raised back in Tuscon in a single-parent household.

Processing pain with poetry

He wrote his first poem in sixth grade, inspired by Edgar Alan Poe鈥檚 鈥淭he Raven.鈥 His other early inspirations include rap music and the King James version of the Bible.

He used poetry to process his pain, grief and joy by writing his creative musings in a journal鈥攈is first therapy, he said.

鈥淚 didn't have a personal life expectancy beyond 21,鈥 he said, 鈥渂ecause...within my peer group, a lot of people were being killed or locked up then.鈥

Frasure enrolled in Paul Quinn College in Dallas 鈥渂ecause my family mostly did military,鈥 he said. 鈥淏efore military service, it was sharecropping and dealing with the segregation of society. And then before that was slavery.鈥

Inspiring future poets

In college, he said he realized that he had a knack for working with young people. His goal has been to help youth process their experiences and make sense of them to 鈥渄iscover, affirm, validate, share鈥 their voices.

After graduating, he taught English at Carter High School in Dallas. He mentored students in the art of poetry, teaching them how to write and appreciate it by taking them to spoken word venues. formerly known as So-So Topic, is one of his former students.

He is active in working with in Dallas, a venue for youth under 21 years old featuring music, visual arts and spoken word performance.

What's next?

Lately, he said his focus is on his publishing company, Assure Press, 鈥渆mpowering writers into authors.鈥

An active member of the Dallas literary community, Frasure writes fiction and creative nonfiction, as well as poetry.

His own ancestry contributed to his first book, 鈥渙f stone and rope鈥濃攑oems reflecting on the African American experience and how descendants have been affected.

Frasure said there鈥檚 a photo of his great-grandfather 鈥淕randpa Dan,鈥 celebrating his 100th birthday, surrounded by generations of family. A paragraph explains that Grandpa Dan acquired 100 acres in Texas near where he had been enslaved and then became a sharecropper.

鈥淚t鈥檚 kind of a brief, real footnote in history,鈥 he said of his family. 鈥淓verybody knows this thing, and we keep telling the story.鈥

How to see more of :

  • Facebook: Darius Frasure 
  • Instagram: @dariusfrasure 
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Senior in journalism at TCU, intern with 四虎影院's Art&Seek