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Black Lives Matter in context: Standing on My Sisters’ Shoulders showing at Clark Park Saturday

August 14, 2015

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From left: Fannie Lou Hamer, Victoria Jackson Gray and Annie Devine in Washington in 1965. Devine is featured in the documentary Standing on My Sisters’ Shoulders, which will be shown in Clark Park on Saturday evening at 8 p.m. (Photo from The New York Times)

Here’s a chance to see a film that will help put the Black Lives Matter movement, particularly the role of women, in some historical context. The International Action Center is hosting a free outdoor screening of the award-winning documentary “Standing on My Sisters’ Shoulders” on Saturday evening in Clark Park.

The film shows the Civil Rights Movement through the eyes and deeds of women from Mississippi, including a sharecropper who went on to become the state’s first black female mayor.  It also recounts the remarkable stories of Fannie Lou Hamer, Victoria Gray Adams and Annie Devine, who were the first black women to be seated on the floor of the U.S. House of Representatives.

The film is a celebration of the role of strong women in the Civil Rights Movement, which in many ways has continued in Black Lives Matter. 

Standing on My Sisters’ Shoulders was directed and written by Laura J. Lipson, produced by Joan Sadoff and distributed by Women Make Movies.

The film gets underway at 8 p.m. at the park right after the Community Unity Music Festival.

Here’s the trailer.

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