Octobre 26, 2020
Poète, playwright, militant, Buddhist, feminist pioneer Diane di Prima made her transition on the morning of Sunday October 25. Diane had been fighting a long battle with a number of major health challenges among them Parkinson’s Disease and Sjogren’s Syndrome. She died peacefully and fearlessly at SF General Hospital with her beloved husband Sheppard by her side. Despite her Parkinson’s diagnosis di Prima had no cognitive impairment and was actively working on several books until two weeks before she passed away.
A San Francisco Poet Laureate emeritus and author of more than four dozen volumes of poetry, prose and plays. Her work has been translated into twenty languages. Diane di Prima almost singlehandedly added a strong womanist voice to the Beat writers movement. Famously published by City Lights legend Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Diane was a founder of the New York Village Beats and the San Francisco North Beach writers scene. Author of the powerful Revolutionary Letters di Prima was a lifelong activist both on the page and in the streets, reading and fundraising for countless causes, festivals, benefits and protests. An incredibly versatile writer with volumes ranging from the early poetry of This Kind of Bird Flies Backwards; to the prose of Dinners and Nightmares to the epic verse of her long form poem Loba; to the steamy pages of Memoirs of a Beatnik to her hundreds of beautiful love poems, haikus, abstract plays as well as writings on spirituality, anarchy and alchemy. She edited the newspaper The Floating Bear with Amiri Baraka (LeRoi Jones) and was co-founder of the New York Poets Theatre and founder of the Poets Press. She has been awarded the National Poetry Association’s Lifetime Service Award and the Fred Cody Award for Lifetime Achievement.
Diane was a devout Buddhist, studying under Suzuki Roshi, Trungpa Rimpoche, Lama Tarchin and others. She often attended meditation retreats and she studied and worked on translations of both Sanskrit and Tibetan texts. In the 1980’s di Prima founded the San Francisco Institute of Magical and Healing Arts (SIMHA.)
She is survived by a large family who adore her.
Diane di Prima was the loving mother of five children : Jeanne, Dominique, Alexander, Tara and Rudi. She was the grandmother to five: Christopher, Chani, Julie, Maceo and Ruby and she was a Great Grandmother to three: Maya, Niomi and Anahla.
Diane is also survived by her two brothers Frank and Richard DiPrima.
She was the wife and soulmate to her loving husband Sheppard Powell who is an artist and healer. They share a deep commitment to Tibetan Buddhism and to each other.
There will be a small private prayer service and virtual memorial. A public tribute to Diane di Prima is planned for as soon as CoVid permits.
Octobre 26, 2020 à 7:41 h
Dominique,
Will the virtual memorial be available to her friends and students? Si c'est le cas, when and
how?
Diane: Blessed Journey. I hope you have packed all of your words with you
to keep you warm and safe. Open books have always been yours to love.
All of the “Sunday Scholars” send their love and poems, hot coffee and bagels.
Gayle Leyton
Octobre 30, 2020 à 6:53 à la
Hi Gayle,
I believe the virtual memorial is only family. However we are planning a big tribute to her in San Francisco either this August or August 2022 (depending on CoVid) around the time of her birthday. That will be open to all.
Thanks for the love,
dominique
Octobre 27, 2020 à 11:50 à la
Many blessings to Dominique and Alex, my two old friends from John Woolman School, and the rest of Diane’s family. She was a wonderful poet and so will always be with us. Thank you for sharing this tribute to her. Amour, Kate
Octobre 27, 2020 à 6:18 h
Thank you so much for this clear and beautiful tribute. My heart goes out to you & all of Diane’s family as we celebrate and grieve…
Ammiel Alcalay
Octobre 29, 2020 à 6:45 à la
My deepest condolences to you, Dominique DiPrima ♥️
and your family. When I got the news, I immediately thought of
you. Your Mom(and Dad) were creative geniuses -and they passed
that right in to you♥️. Creative. Innovative. Free.
xo Dominique
Kimberly Arceneaux (SFSU,For Colored Girls sister👯♀️👯♀️)
http://www.twitter.com/itgirl100
I’d love to hear from you ♾
Novembre 2, 2020 à 4:41 h
Thanks for making this statement public. Although grief is intensely personal, Diane DiPrima has meant so much to so many people, and that collective spirit hopefully helps to sustain and uplift her family during this time.