Watch CBS News

Alice Walker writes a poem inspired by Jesse Williams' BET Awards speech

Jesse Williams has already moved many with his passionate speech at the BET Awards on Sunday and now he has inspired Alice Walker, the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of "The Color Purple," to pen a poem in response to his message.

Walker's new work addresses the "fear of blackness in white culture."

Her poem, "Here It Is," has already been shared thousands of times since she posted it on her website on Thursday. Read the poem in full below.

Here it is
the beauty that scares you
-so you believe-
to death.
For he is certainly gorgeous
and he is certainly where whiteness
to your disbelief
has not wandered off
to die.
No. It is there, tawny skin, gray eyes,
a Malcolm-esque jaw. His loyal parents
may Goddess bless them
sitting proud and happy and no doubt
amazed
at what they have done.
For he is black too. And obviously
with a soul
made of everything.
Try to think bigger than you ever have
or had courage enough to do:
that blackness is not where whiteness
wanders off to die: but that it is
like the dark matter
between stars and galaxies in
the Universe
that ultimately
holds it all
together.

Williams, who delivered his politically-charged speech after be honored with the BET Humanitarian Award, elicited one of the loudest standing ovations of the evening, with many in the crowd brought to tears.

However, the rousing message was not without controversy. After Justin Timberlake praised Williams' words, many slammed the "Can't Stop the Feeling" singer for missing his message of equality and cultural appropriation entirely.

And actress and Fox News commentator Stacey Dash wrote a blog post on Wednesday calling the Grey's Anatomy star a "Hollywood plantation slave" and saying his speech was "an attack on white people."

View CBS News In
CBS News App Open
Chrome Safari Continue
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.