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Mark Goggins was born in Charleston, S.C. on October
13, 1966 during the latter stages of the Civil Rights movement and
during the birth of what became known as the Black
Power movement. He graduated from Middleton high school in 1985 and joined the U.S. Army where he served four years as a cavalry scout trained in reconnaissance and surveillance. He began writing poetry seriously in the early 1990's as a way to express his innermost feelings about the racism and discrimination he encountered and saw others encounter. Several years earlier he was introduced to a recording of Malcolm X by a fellow soldier in the army and it was love at first listen. However, Malcolm was dead and Mark felt dismayed that he knew of no living Black person who spoke the way Malcolm spoke. That is until he heard the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan around 1992. Farrakhan's delivery of Elijah Muhammad's teachings resonated so deeply that Mark decided to incorporate some of those teachings into poetry form. Mark had always loved hip-hop, but, hated the direction hip-hop was headed as "gangsta rap" started to dominate the airwaves. Mark was a frequent attendee at Nation of Islam mosques in S.C. and became the radio-voice of the Nation in the months preceding the Million Man March which Mark attended.
Mark was also an activist in Charleston participating in marches and
protests. He was also a contributing writer of poetry and articles
for the Charleston Chronicle for over a decade. It was after the
Million Man March that Mark committed to doing a book of poetry
highlighting the plight of the suffering Black
masses. He is also the CEO of The Black Poetry Cafe and the newly-created BPC Entertainment, LLC, a new venture created to host spoken word shows around the country. Late in 2010, Mark is also scheduled to partner with poet and author, George Hunt, on a book of poetry geared toward Black women. |