News documentary from 1968 hosted by George Foster, exploring the legacy of oppression that remains over 100 years after the abolition of that peculiar institution. In Part 1, Foster visits Charleston, SC, and speaks with both descendants of slaves and slave owners. The cameras capture a sermon by Rev. Henry Butler of the Mother Emmanuel AME Church (where Denmark Vesey planned an unsuccessful slave revolt in 1822 and Dylan Roof would later kill 9 church members in 2015). In Part 2, the cameras go to Mississippi to speak with former sharecroppers and political activist FANNIE LOU HAMER. In the final segment, we travel to Chicago, where Prof. JAMES TURNER and activist CALVIN LOCKRIDGE educate young people about revolution. Ebony Magazine editor and historian LERONE BENNETT offers a poignant analogy to describe the times we are in today.
Peter Davis
Writer, Director
George Foster
Self - Reporter
Lerone Bennett Jr.
Self - Senior Editor, 'Ebony' Magazine (as Lerone Bennett Jr.)
Henry Butler
Self (as Rev. Henry Butler)
Fannie Lou Hamer
Self
James E. Turner
Self -Political Sociology Instructor, Northwestern University
The Birth of a Nation65%
12 Years a Slave79%
The Butler73%
The Great Debaters72%
Medium Cool67%
Beastie Boys Story74%
Free State of Jones67%
Pretty Baby69%
Emancipation78%
The Best of Enemies73%
Belle71%
I Am Not Your Negro77%
Django Unchained81%
A Time to Kill73%
Mandingo66%
13th78%
Bombshell67%
42 Up75%
Room 23761%
Sympathy for the Devil62%