February Is Black History Month- Hats
Off To Heroes of the Civil Rights Movement
DVD Review
From The Pen Of Frank Jackman
Free at Last: Civil Rights Heroes, film
documentary, Image Entertainment, 2005
[This documentary was produced and
reviewed well prior to the rightly well-received Martin Luther King biopic, Selma, but still holds up well to
acknowledge the man other who made the struggle down South the defining event
of those times-Frank Jackman-2015
Every major (and most minor)
progressive social struggle in America from the struggle for independence from
Great Britain through to the struggle for slavery’s abolition up to the
struggle for women’s rights and gender equality today has had more than its
share of heroes and martyrs. The purpose of the documentary under review, Free At Last: Civil Rights Heroes, rightly, highlights some of those lesser known
heroes and martyrs from the struggle for black civil rights that came to
national prominence in the1950s and 1960s (although arguably that conscious
struggle goes back to the 1930s and before).
Although, in the end the question of
black equality had to be addressed (and still has to be addressed) nationally
the thrust of the black civil rights movement that is featured in this film is
the struggle for something like a democratic revolution by blacks and their
supporters in the police state-like American South. That barbaric de jure and de facto Jim Crow system officially, as a matter state and social
policy, held blacks in second class citizenship (or lower). The struggle to
overcome that ingrained (and profitable, profitable for whites of almost all
social strata) was almost, of necessity, going to create more than its share of
heroes and martyrs.
The case of fourteen- year old Chicago
resident Emmett Till and his horrible murder at the hands of white marauders in
Mississippi in 1955, the first of the three separate segments that make up the
film graphically highlights the problem. For the mere allegation of “whistling
at a white woman while black” (if that allegation had any substance) young
Emmett was brutally mangled and thrown into the local river. When his mother,
righteously, made a cause out of this bestial murder all hell broke loose, at
least on the surface. And the case galvanized blacks and whites nationally,
alerting many for the first time to the hard fact that something was
desperately wrong down in Mississippi (and not just there). But justice,
Mississippi justice, to paraphrase poet Langston Hughes, is justice deferred.
As detailed in almost all the cases highlighted in the film those directly
responsible for the actions against the civil rights workers were either never
brought to justice or only after something like a long drawn out legal civil
war. No one should forget that aspect of the struggle either.
The other cases highlighted from the
assassinated Medgar Evers to the four Birmingham girls murdered in their church
when it was bombed to the three civil rights workers slain in Philadelphia,
Mississippi that drew nation-wide attention to slain white civil rights workers
Viola Liuzzo and Reverend James Reeb, murdered for “being white while working
for black civil rights” exhibit those same kinds of sickening results. Let me
put it this way after viewing the film footage here, especially Bull Connor’s
attack dogs being let loose on civil rights demonstrators in the streets of
Birmingham, Alabama that was one of the first visual images that drove me into
the civil rights struggle, I still wanted to throw something at the screen. And
you wonder why fifty or so years later I still say Mississippi (or fill in your
preferred state) goddam. Kudos here.
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