Author: Dr. Ramona L. Hyman
Dr. Ramona L. Hyman, writer, speaker, professor, serves as an English Faculty professor at Oakwood University. She earned her PhD from the University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa. She is the founder of the African American Healers Conference. African American critic Dr. Joyce Joyce says, Hyman [ is a writer who] “challenges readers to explore a poetic imagination grounded in a feel for the southern landscape, African-American literary and political history, Black spirituality, and a creative fusion of Black folk speech with a Euro- American poetic vernacular. Ramona L. Hyman emerges as a strong . . .intellectual poetic voice.”
Her research and speaking interests are the Montgomery Bus Boycott of 1955, African American poetry, and the Healing Poetic in African American Thought.
Dr. Hyman's literary work has been included in journals and anthologies such as Message, African American Review, African American Pulpit, College Language Association Journal, Obsidian, and Callaloo. She has been anthologized in Amiri and Amini Baraka's An Anthology of African American Women Writers (Marrow Press). She is the author of the collections of poetry, In the Sanctuary of a South and I Am Black America.
Dr. William Ferris, former director of the National Endowment for the Humanities, says“Hyman’s skills as an actor and writer are rare.”
Contact: Ramona L. Hyman, PhD ramona.hyman@yahoo.com
when the blind boy speaks of beauty, sound coils (a) mimicry of sight
I Shall Await the WORD!
They shall teach us in the morning–I shall await the word!
Montgomery on My Mind
My heart speaks Montgomery 55!
Congressman John Lewis– Walking Towards the Heavenly Wind
And now Congressman Lewis is walking towards the heavenly wind. My God has called him home!
What Does It Mean to Be the Color BLACK
I have to wonder if today could be my last all because of a white man with a gun and a badge. I can’t wear a hoodie over my face, it’s a mask. A mask that says SHOOT ME!! But you don’t even ask. You don’t ask about my background such as where I grew…
Last Word
He died
A full man
It was a Wednesday
(just after prayer meeting)
Fun Times with “Dream Boogie”
Fun times with “Dream Boogie” by Langston Hughes