Tawhida Tanya Evanson
Biography
Tawhida Tanya Evanson is a Canadian poet, novelist, artist and Ashiq. Her work blends poetry, orality, music and multimedia around themes of African diasporic identity and Sufi spirituality in resistance to Western values. Born and based in Tiohtià:ke/Montréal she has roots in Antigua, West Indies. Evanson's novels include the French Livre des ailes (Marchand de feuilles 2023), the award-winning Book of Wings (Véhicule 2021); her two poetry collections are Nouveau Griot (Frontenac 2018) and Bothism (Ekstasis 2017). She has an extensive history of vocal performance, audio recordings and films including the multi-award-winning Afrofuturist concert film CYANO SUN SUITE (2024). Evanson's work has traveled internationally to arts festivals across Africa, Asia, Australia, Europe, and North America. She was director of the Banff Centre Spoken Word Program from 2012-19; president of the Quebec Writers' Federation from 2023-25; and 2025 Poet Ambassador in Residence at the League of Canadian Poets. She moonlights as a whirling dervish.
Micro-interview
Yes, I read poetry in high school, and it was mainly poetry by musicians because music has always played a central role in my life. When I was fifteen, I listened to The Doors day and night and had several books of poetry by Jim Morrison. I still have my copy of "Wilderness" which contains one of my favourite pieces of his called “Signals.” Also, when I was sixteen, I had to do a school project on a famous Canadian and my father suggested the poet Leonard Cohen. I had no idea who he was and so it was a fantastic discovery. My project had to be presented creatively outside of the standard essay format. So, I wrote an essay about Leonard Cohen, recorded myself reading the text onto a cassette interspersed with samples of his songs, and handed in my first spoken word project. It was 1988 and I still have that cassette.
I started writing poetry after a very heavy depression put me in the hospital when I was fourteen. A friend from class gave me a journal while I was there. I had had other journals before but this one was different--I blackened the pages with poetry. Poetry saved me, and poetry continues to save me to this day. However, it took many years for me to consider myself a poet. In 1996 while I was completing my BA in English Literature and Creative Writing at Concordia University, I started compiling my work and self-published my first chapbook called "Blood In, Blood Out." I went on to self-publish five more. And because I have always presented my work orally as a spoken word artist, it is only after my first studio album of poetry and music in 2004 that I really began seeing myself as a poet and not just an occasional writer of poems. It's not a job one chooses, it is a verdict.
I believe that the job of the poet--and all artists in fact--is to question, reflect, inspire and predict the future.
I would choose Guanahani, 11 by Kamau Brathwaite.