Advertisement
You are here: Sun HomeCollections

`White' cities built on ugly past

Raising awareness of past `racial cleansing'

February 02, 2008|By GREGORY KANE

Sherrilyn Ifill stood in front of the group assembled in the moot court room at the University of Maryland Law School and gave a synopsis of what the film Banished is about.

For six decades, black Americans were systemically driven from towns and cities across America. Not all of those towns were in the South. In Banished, filmmaker Marco Williams visited Pierce City, Mo., Forsyth County, Ga., and Harrison, Ark. He talked to blacks and whites about how blacks were driven from those places, and what the chances are for reconciliation today.

"It's an important phenomenon," Ifill said of what has been called the "racial cleansing" of blacks from communities that have remained virtually lily-white, even in the 21st century. "Important in how we see the geographical landscape today."

Advertisement

It's important for another reason: The issue of "racial cleansing" might well reinvigorate the reparations movement, one that is sorely in need of reinvigorating.

That dreaded "R-word" is indeed dredged up in Banished. When blacks were driven from Forsyth County in 1912, many left behind land that they owned. They were never paid for that land. It was simply gobbled up and sold by whites who saw an opportunity to make a quick - and easy - buck. Neither the blacks who lost land nor their descendants have been compensated.

Now we have a discussion that moves beyond "reparations for slavery," which is how reparations advocates defined the issue. When opponents of reparations countered that there were no living slaves to collect, and that descendants of Americans who never owned slaves shouldn't have to pay for the sins of Americans who did, reparations advocates were left with little to stand on.

In Banished, Williams laid the issue squarely at the feet of those who are most culpable and the ones who should pay: the residents of those towns and counties living on land that, to put it kindly, was stolen.

Williams put the question of reparations to Mark Peters, the mayor of Pierce City.

"I didn't think of this in terms of reparations," Peters said. "I thought of it in terms of money being asked to do what money can't do. No matter what's said, it'll be too little or too late. Dollars? How do you take a subject that serious and translate it into dollars? Who do you pay? I don't know."

Ifill moderated a question-and-answer session after the showing of Banished. Peters' response was part of the discussion.

Baltimore Sun Articles
|