Dear Colleagues,

Below is information about a powerful documentary on Hurricane Katrina
and its current aftermath.  It was selected for last year's Sundance
Film Festival and Rolling Stone magazine raves about it.  I found the
trailer powerful and am trying to convince the director of the Capri
Community Film Society to bring it to Montgomery.  Please follow the
link to see if it may have possible use in your media, political
science, sociology, economics, humanities, environmental sciences and
other courses.  You may also want to send an email to Capri Community
Film Society Director Martin McCaffery to urge him to bring the
documentary to Montgomery if you think you, your students and community
would find it useful and would attend. 

Kimberly Rivers Roberts, otherwise known as Blackkoldmadina, is the star
of the movie Trouble the Water.  My husband Scott and I never dreamed
that people would be responding to us in such a strong, joyful, positive
way, really feeling us and understanding the journey that we've been on.

Trouble the Water shows what can happen if you stay positive no matter
what environment you're forced to live in, or what negative influences
you have to deal with, and expect better out of life than what you see.
It shows that everyone makes mistakes and a mistake does not determine
the future, you do.

You can see the documentary trailer at
http://www.troublethewaterfilm.com/sharetrailer
<http://www.troublethewaterfilm.com/page/m2/25988451/d35619/2a06dfb4/51b
5c3ae/2586033446/VEsH/> 

In the past few months, Roberts has shaken hands with the richest of the
rich, and been introduced to the smartest and the brightest in their
field and slept in the most comfortable beds that money can buy.  She
says: "But no matter where I am, or who I meet, I can never forget where
I come from, and the people I love. I go back to New Orleans and see the
poverty, our neglected schools, our destroyed neighborhoods. Living in
these conditions, you feel like this is the world, and there's nothing
to lose. 

Had it not been for this movie, I would not have known that a positive
educational environment existed for me. I know now I can enjoy a better
quality of life. But where I'm from, it's not given to us, we have to
take it.

You might remember that I wrote a song called Trouble the Water that's
in the movie. The song describes what happened before, during and after
Katrina -- our attitude about survival and our pride in our community in
spite of being forgotten about, underprivileged, and overlooked. The
song says that the people of New Orleans deserve more then a
commemoration with a wreath -- we deserve the opportunity to be
educated. We are productive citizens who care about each other and are
passionate about our communities.

The song explains that with the right tools, we can have a positive
effect on the world. But we need the tools.

 

Know Justice, Know Peace,

Rev. Dr. E-K. Daufin, Professor of Communication

ASU FSA Co-VP for Faculty, AEJMC MAC Officer

Alabama State University, 915 S. Jackson St.

Montgomery, AL 36101-0271 PH:334-229-6885

Thanks in advance for your research & creative activity referrals:
http://home.earthlink.net/~ekdaufin

 

With all my  heart I want work that I love; for abundant pay; in a
beautiful, functional, comfortable environment; with/for kind,
competent, happy, supportive people who love, enjoy and appreciate me
and I they. Ashe.

 

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