"Putting the Movement Back into Civil Rights Teaching" Book LaunchCommunity Cinema [DC] is happy to be working with Teaching for Change as a community partner for our January screenings of DAISY BATES: FIRST LADY OF LITTLE ROCK. Executive director Deborah Menkart, Jenice View (assistant professor of Educational Transformation at George Mason University), and Alana Murray are co-editors of the highly acclaimed education resource book Putting the Movement Back Into Civil Rights Teaching. (photo: from L-R Jenice View, Alana Murray, Deborah Menkart)

Putting the Movement… is a collection of essays, articles, analysis, interviews, primary documents and interactive & interdisciplinary teaching aids on civil rights, movement building, and what it means for all of the inhabitants of the planet. With sections on education, economic justice, citizenship, and culture, it connects the African-American Civil Rights Movement to Native American, Latina, Asian-American, gay rights, and international struggles; while highlighting the often-ignored roles of women in social justice movements.. Packed into nearly 600 oversize pages are photographs, songs, statements, and work from the likes of such writers, historians, and activists as Bill Bigelow, James Loewen, June Jordan, Grace Lee Boggs, Herbert Kohl, Bayard Rustin, Rita Dove, Malcolm X, George Jackson, Ward Churchill, Leonard Peltier, Thurgood Marshall, Gwendolyn Brooks, Elizabeth Martinez, Sonia Sanchez, Eric Foner, Marcus Garvey, Manning Marable, and dozens more.

Julian Hipkins is the 11th grade social studies teacher at Capital City Public Charter School. Hipkins is using Howard Zinn’s A People’s History of the United States as the text for his American History class.

Deborah Menkart, Jenice View and Julian Hipkins will be guest speakers following the Community Cinema screening of Daisy Bates: First Lady of Little Rock Saturday, January 21 at 5 PM (Busboys and Poets); Menkart, Hipkins will lead the discussion after the screening Sunday, January 22 at 3 PM (Washington, DC Jewish Community Center). Additional speakers are TBA.

Additional Resource:
Teaching for Change is a coordinating organization with non-profit publisher Rethinking Schools on the Zinn Education Project. One of the Zinn Education Project’s recommended civil rights resources is Warriors Don’t Cry, a memoir by Melba Pattillo Beals (one of the Little Rock Nine). Download a Teaching Activity PDF by Linda Christensen from this link. The PDF includes role play and writing activities for language arts and social studies on the Little Rock Nine, Brown v. Board, and schooling in general. Designed for use with the memoir, Warriors Don’t Cry. (FYI – you must register on the Zinn Education Project site to download the PDF.)

Community partners for the Community Cinema [DC] presentations of Daisy Bates: First Lady of Little Rock



Rose Powhatan

Rose Powhatan is co-founder/director of the Powhatan Museum of Indigenous Arts and Culture. She is descended from the Pamunkey (mother) and Tauxenent (father) Indian Tribes of Virginia. Ms. Powhatan also works as an artist/historian/storyteller.

Rose Powhatan is a mixed-media artist, educator and cultural practitioner. She earned her honors undergraduate and graduate degrees in studio arts, art history and education from Howard University in Washington, D.C., and completed graduate studies at University of London (in the UK). As a visual artist, Ms. Powhatan has created paintings, murals, installations, prints, and totem poles- all infused with culturally-based Eastern Woodlands symbolism. She is also a storyteller whose film work includes her appearances in “The New World”, the HBO mini-series “John Adams”, and Jamestown Settlement’s “1607:A Nation Takes Root”.

Ms. Powhatan’s work as an educator and curriculum writer includes her having taught studio arts, theatre and humanities courses in the United States and the United Kingdom for over 25 years, in addition to her authorship of new courses and instructional materials. Her creative writing consists of autobiographical and historical material, as well as staged plays.

Numerous awards have been presented to Ms. Powhatan in recognition of her diverse achievements in the arts, education and community service. Select board memberships include the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in the Nation’s Capital, the Intertribal Women’s Circle, and ATLATL National Native Arts Network (the nation’s premiere Native American arts organization).

Ms. Powhatan is also a former Cafritz Foundation and Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Fellow, whose membership in the British Fulbright Scholars Association underscores her support for promoting positive international solidarity. She is the Assistant Chief of the Tauxenent Nation of Fairfax County and the tribe’s 2007 co-founder.


(photo – above) 2005: Rose Powhatan with her contemporary Eastern Algonquin totem. The sculpture, made from wood, vines, clay and adorned with wild turkey feathers, honors her ancestor Keziah Powhatan. Keziah Powhatan was the leader of a Northern Virginia Indian band of Tauxenents (Dogues) whose “hostile actions” led to the removal of the first Fairfax County courthouse at Tyson’s Corner, VA in 1752 (she claimed ownership of the land). The D.A.R. plaque (right) was erected to record the incident (near Chain Bridge Road and Courthouse Road in Fairfax County).


WHEN: Sunday, November 20 at 3 PM
WHERE: Washington, DC Jewish Community Center, 1529 16th Street, NW
Register

This is a Women and Girls Lead event, a media initiative of ITVS. Girl Scouts (GSCNC) can earn patch points by attending a “We Still Live Here” Community Cinema event. Sign-in sheets will be available at the venue.

This post is UPDATED

Deaf Jam

a film by Judy Lieff

Preview

FREE ADMISSION

OPEN CAPTIONED

ASL Interpretation

Saturday, October 22 at 5 PM with performance by Quest Visual Theatre – (Busboys and Poets, 2021 14th St., NW)
Register for ITVS Community Cinema presents  Deaf Jam  (Busboys and Poets) in Washington, DC  on Eventbrite

Sunday, October 23 at 3 PM
Guest artists: Connell Crooms aka “Bam Bam” (rapper, spoken word poet); Fred Beam (dancer, choreographer, actor, and founder of Invisible Hands); other TBA
– Washington DC Jewish Community Center, 1529 16th St., NW
Register for ITVS Community Cinema presents  Deaf Jam  (DCJCC) in Washington, DC  on Eventbrite

or call 202-939-0794
…or dial 711, 202-855-1234 for Relay (ask for Michon, ITVS Community Cinema) or email info.itvs@communitycinema-dc.org

Download a flyer from this link


Deaf Jam, the story of deaf teen Aneta Brodski’s bold journey into the spoken word slam scene.Longing to explore and fully participate in the hearing world, Aneta dives into ASL poetry, a vibrant three-dimensional art form where body movements convey meaning. ASL poetry liberates a deaf poet from the confines of spoken language. There is no paper or text. Rhymes are measured in hand shapes and meter in movements. Images cut and dissolve as its verses transcend all spoken word.


In a remarkable twist of fate, Aneta, who is Israeli, meets and then collaborates with Tahani — a hearing Palestinian slam poet. They create a hearing/deaf duet touching on their shared personal and cultural experiences — generating a new form of slam poetry that speaks to both the hearing and the deaf. Deaf Jampremieres on the Emmy® Award-winning PBS series Independent Lens on Thursday, November 3, 2011 at 10 PM (check local listings).


Trailer

Deaf Jam Trailer from DeafJamdoc on Vimeo.



Download a discussion guide from this link.


Community partners:

Special Thanks: Johanna Dobbs, Event Organizer with ASL Bridge and Consultant with Hands to Inspire and Gallaudet University

Watch the full episode. See more Women War and Peace.



Community Cinema kicks off the new season with Abigail E. Disney, Pamela Hogan, and Gini Reticker’s Women, War & Peace, a bold new five-part PBS mini-series challenging the conventional wisdom that war and peace are men’s domain. A co-production of THIRTEEN and Fork Films, Women, War & Peace places women at the center of an urgent dialogue about conflict and security and reframes our understanding of modern warfare. Featuring narrators Matt Damon, Tilda Swinton, Geena Davis, and Alfre Woodard, the series reveals how the post-Cold War proliferation of small arms has changed the landscape of war, with women becoming primary targets and suffering unprecedented casualties. Simultaneously, they are emerging as necessary partners in brokering lasting peace and as leaders in forging new international laws governing conflict.


The screening will feature a one of five episodes from Women, War & Peace, Pray the Devil Back to Hell, the astonishing story of the Liberian women who took on the warlords and regime of dictator Charles Taylor in the midst of a brutal civil war, and won a once unimaginable peace for their shattered country in 2003.


Special thanks to our Community Cinema series partners and our local community partners for the ITVS Women & Girls Lead initiative (Girls Scouts Council of the Nation’s Capital, Institute for Policy Studies, OneBlue.org, PeacexPeace). “Pray the Devil Back to Hell” is one of several Community Cinema WGL events for 2011-2012. See our special page for the DC fall schedule of WGL films.


COMMUNITY CINEMA [DC] EVENT INFORMATION
WHAT: FREE screening of Pray the Devil Back to Hell, part of the Women, War & Peace mini-series coming to PBS beginning October 11, 2011. Film and Q&A engage public about the political situation in Liberia and the upcoming elections later this year (speakers TBA).
WHO: Presenters: ITVS Community Cinema [DC], WHUT, Busboys and Poets, Washington DCJCC, Center for Social Media at American University, Girl Scouts Council of the Nation’s Capital, Institute for Policy Studies, OneBlue.org, PeacexPeace

WHEN: Sun., September 18 at 3 PM – Washington DCJCC (1529 16th Street, NW at Q) – Reserve
Sun., September 25 at 5 PM – Busboys and Poets (2021 14th Street, NW) – Reserve


SHARE & DISCUSS

Download a flyer from this link.
Download the discussion guide from this link.

WATCH Abigal Disney on Women, War & Peace and the value of public media to tell these stories.