Thursday, July 18, 2024 - Late iconic poet, Benjamin Zephaniah left an estate worth more than £1.3million to his wife when he died.
Zephaniah, an acclaimed poet, and writer died at the age of
65 in December 2023, eight weeks after he was diagnosed with a brain tumour in
December last year.
It has now emerged his estate had a gross value of
£1,325,363 with a net value of £1,322,082.
Zephaniah left instructions for his wife Qian to inherit his
fortune and personal belongings.
Probate documents show he also ordered donations of £20,000
to be given to the Vegan Society and the charity campaign group
Inques.
Zephaniah, the son of a Barbadian postman and a Jamaican
nurse was born and raised in Handsworth, Birmingham.
He moved to London at age 22 and published his first book,
Pen Rhythm.
His early work used dub poetry, a Jamaican style of work
that has evolved into the music genre of the same name, and he would also
perform with the group The Benjamin Zephaniah Band.
As Zephaniah's profile grew, he became a familiar face on
television and was credited with bringing Dub Poetry into British living rooms.
He also wrote five novels as well as poetry for children,
and his first book for younger readers, Talking Turkeys, was a huge success
upon its publication in 1994.
On top of his writing work, Zephaniah was an actor and
appeared in the BBC drama series Peaky Blinders between 2013 and 2022.
He played Jeremiah "Jimmy" Jesus, appearing in 14
episodes across the six series.
Zephaniah famously rejected an OBE in 2003 due to the
association of such an honour with the British Empire and its history of
slavery.
"I've been fighting against empire all my life,
fighting against slavery and colonialism all my life," he told The Big
Narstie Show in 2020.
"I've been writing to connect with people, not to
impress governments and monarchy. So I could I then accept an honour that puts
the word Empire on to my name? That would be hypocritical.
He often spoke out about issues such as racial abuse and
education.
When he was younger, Zephaniah served a prison sentence for
burglary and received a criminal record.
In 1982, Zephaniah released an album called Rasta, which
featured the Wailers' first recording since the death of Bob Marley.
It also included a tribute to the then-political prisoner
Nelson Mandela, who would later become South African president.
In an interview in 2005, Zephaniah said growing up in a
violent household led to him assuming that was the norm.
He recalled: "I once asked a friend of mine, 'What do
you do when your dad beats your mum?' And he went: 'He doesn't.'
"I said, 'Ah, you come from one of those, like,
feminist houses. So, what do you do when your mum beats your dad?'"
Zephaniah was nominated for autobiography of the year at the
National Book Awards for his work, The Life And Rhymes Of Benjamin Zephaniah,
which was also shortlisted for the Costa Book Award in 2018.
0 Comments