— Amanda Gorman
American poet and activist Amanda Gorman (1998- ) captured the world’s heart when she stood at President Joe Biden’s 2021 inauguration and declared that the United States was “not broken, but unfinished.” With those few words, she reminded us all that hope is an act of courage. And that the work of building a better world never ends.
Finding her voice was not easy. Her speech impediment made it hard to pronounce certain letters of the alphabet, especially the letter r. As a child, writing poetry helped her shape her words and courage. By high school, she was reciting her poetry aloud.
“If I choose not to speak out of fear, then there's no one that my silence is standing for,” she has said, reflecting her belief that words are a duty as much as an art. Her mantra calls on “honorary ancestors,” the creative activists who came before her, for strength when her own courage wavers. The writers and dreamers who set her heart on fire.
Named the first-ever National Youth Poet Laureate, Gorman grew up with a love of books and a fierce determination to tell her own story. “It might feel like every story has been told before,” she insists. “But the truth is, no one's ever told my story in the way I would tell it.”
For Gorman, poetry is activism. “Poetry has never been the language of barriers. It's always been the language of bridges,” she says. Her passion for bridge-building, between ideas and even generations, makes her words feel like sunlight breaking through clouds.
She writes not for perfection but for connection, proving that even the youngest voice can carry a nation’s hope. One unfinished line at a time, she is helping to write our future.
Tell your story in your way. The world is waiting. 🌟