AccessMyLibrary provides FREE access to over 30 million articles from top publications available through your library.
Create a link to this page
Copy and paste this link tag into your Web page or blog:
FILMMAKER PAM HARRIS thinks it's important to cover the problems besieging the Black community, but when it came time to make her first film, "I wanted to counterbalance the pathology of Black people that's portrayed often in the media," she says. "We lack the piece of when we're really doing well."
Her documentary Land of Promise: The Story of Allensworth is that counterbalance. It takes the story of the only town in California founded by and for Blacks (many such towns were established in other states after the Civil War). One of Allensworth's residents, Ed Pope, who recently passed away, touchingly describes in the film how he arrived in a town where everyone from the judge to the teachers were Black: "It was like coming from hell and falling right into paradise."
The film won the Best Documentary award at ...