[Ccpg] VIDEO this black soil: a story of resistance and rebirth
Wesley Roe and Marjorie Lakin Erickson
lakinroe at silcom.com
Tue Dec 28 07:50:34 PST 2004
this black soil:
a story of resistance and rebirth
Chronicles the successful struggle of Bayview, VA, to pursue a new vision
of prosperity.
58 minutes
(DVD version also available - See below)
Color
Grade Level: 10 -12, College, Adult
US Release Date: 2004
Copyright Date: 2004
ISBN (VHS): 1-59458-050-2
ISBN (DVD): 1-59458-085-5
Directed by teresa konechne
Produced by Working Hands Productions
"Destroy(s) the myth that being poor means ignorance, apathy or surrender."
Cleveland International Film Festival
This inspiring and provocative new film chronicles the successful struggle
of Bayview, Virginia, a small and severely impoverished rural
African-American community, to pursue a new vision of prosperity.
Catalyzed by the defeat of a state plan to build a maximum-security prison
in their backyard, the powerful women leaders and residents created the
Bayview Citizens for Social Justice, a non-profit organization, secured $10
million in grants, purchased the proposed prison site land and are now
building a new community from the ground up.
Under the leadership of visionary women, this new rural village challenges
all conventional ideas of community development and includes not only
improved and affordable housing, but a sustainable economic base to earn a
living wage, a community center for educating its residents, a daycare
center, laundromat, and a community farm, which not only provides jobs and
income for the organization, but returns them to their roots, working on
the land.
Bayview's story has been featured in national and international media
including: CBS' "60 Minutes", the New York Times, Washington Post, People
magazine, and the BBC.
DVD Version: This program is recorded on DVD-R, which is not compatible
with some older DVD players. See the new DVD page for more details. Besides
the enhanced video and audio characteristics of the DVD version, there are
no additional features on this disc.
Awards:
Director's Citation, Black Maria Festival
Audience Award, Best Documentary, Central Standard Film Festival, Minneapolis
Bronze Plaque, Columbus International Film & Video Festival
Cleveland International Film Festival
Hazel Wolf Environmental Film Festival
Finger Lakes Environmental Film Festival
The Green Film Festival
Bulldozed! Film & Video Festival
James River Film Festival
Downstream International Film Festival
The Green Festival, Washington DC
Reviews:
"The tendency of today's policymakers to serve up prisons as the answer to
rural America's economic plight comes with devastating consequences...The
story of Bayview, Virginia provides a much-needed example of what can
happen when indigenous rural leaders reach beyond the boundaries of race,
class, and geography to fight back against the prison industrial complex.
Teresa Konechne's inspired and inspiring chronicle of one community's
successful struggle to defeat a plan to locate a prison in their town and
pursue a sustainable future instead should be in the toolkits of all
educators, organizers, economic developers, advocates for justice, and
founders of innovation across the nation seeking an answer to the question:
'If not prisons, what?'" Tracy Huling, Author, "An Analysis of the
Economics of Prison Siting in Rural Communities", Founder/Co-Director,
National Resource Center on Prisons and Communities
"This is the story of people who help themselves and destroy the myth that
being poor means ignorance, apathy or surrender." Cleveland International
Film Festival
"Teresa Konechne puts the Bayview residents at the center of her
documentary, telling their hard won story without the intrusion of a
narrator. We see both the obstacles and victories, making this an inspiring
primer of grassroots organizing from the bottom up. This film is truly an
example of what REAL democracy looks like! ...this black soil honors the
struggle of 'ordinary' people seeking economic justice, improving their
lives and discovering their own power through activism." Lydia Howell,
Print/Radio Journalist
"A model for grassroots organizing, but it also speaks to the importance of
local governance...This sort of human triumph makes for an inspiring
experience, but Konechne ensures that her doc also provides the tools for
others who wish to follow in the footsteps of Bayview's activists."
Caroline Palmer, City Pages (Minneapolis/St. Paul)
"A potentially incisive template for social activism, Teresa Konechne's
This Black Soil spans almost a decade and stands as a heartening shot
across the bow for everybody who imagines the poor can't come together to
seize power." Central Standard Film Festival Program
"This black soil is unique in that the filmmaker is able to document a
decade long process of American activism at the grassroots level. It serves
as a motivational and inspirational story for all social activists. Highly
Recommended" Monique Threatt, Educational
This Black Soil: A Story of Struggle And Change
http://www.ruralpolicyforum.org/ruralmatters/online_chat_media.htm
(Documentary, 2001, 58 minutes)
This inspiring and provocative film chronicles the successful struggle of
Bayview, Virginia, a small and severely impoverished rural African-American
community, to pursue a new vision of prosperity. Catalyzed by defeating the
state's plans to build a prison in their backyard, and with leadership by
women in the community, the residents created the Bayview Citizens for
Social Justice (BCSJ) non-profit organization, secured $7 million,
purchased the prison site land and are building a new community from the
ground up.
Against formidable odds -- which at times included state and county
governments, the funding process, and themselves -- the community developed
and now manages a complex and innovative development project. This is the
story of people who help themselves and destroy the myth that being poor
means ignorance, apathy or surrender.
This Black Soil was produced by Teresa Konechne and her students at
Virginia Commonwealth University. Konechne is an interdisciplinary artist,
educator and activist. Growing up on a South Dakota farm and her life-long
passion for the land resonates throughout her eclectic creative
expressions: video, performance, installation and writing. Her new
one-woman performance, Folding Prairie, is constructed from the images and
voices of the rural women of South Dakota as well as her own biographical
writings, movement & video projections. This Black Soil will be available
beginning in spring 2003 from Bullfrog Films.
For more information:
Visit the Virginia Commonwealth University site, scroll down to "VCU
Documentary Traces Struggles of Bayview"
http://www.vcu.edu/uns/ucn/archives/2001/021901/other021901.htm
In the Spotlight, A Community's Poverty By Sylvia Moreno Washington Post
Staff Writer, Sunday, May 10 1998
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/local/daily/aug98/bayview051098.htm -
An article on the condition in Bayview, Virginia, the setting of This Black
Soil.
Gilmore Pledges to Help Bayview By Sylvia Moreno Washington Post Staff
Writer, Wednesday, August 12, 1998
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/local/daily/aug98/bayview081298.htm -
An article on the Governor Gilmore's reaction on a visit to Bayview,
Virginia, the setting of This Black Soil.
Rebuilding Bayview: Community Design as Catalyst for Social Change Maurice
D. Cox, Assistant Professor, School of Architecture, University of Virginia
http://urban.arch.virginia.edu/site-mem/abstract1.html
Related Titles:
In Our Own Backyard: First brush the U.S. had with toxic waste at Love Canal.
Store Wars: Looks at the impact on a small town when Wal-Mart plans to
build a mega-store there.
Save Our Land, Save Our Towns: Examines the causes and effects of -- and
then remedies for -- suburban sprawl.
Livable Landscapes:: How growth and sprawl affect the quality of life in
New England, and some possible solutions.
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