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ProfessionalLeftist

(4,982 posts)
Sat Mar 10, 2012, 12:12 PM Mar 2012

"Take This Hammer" - short film w/ James Baldwin in SF in 1963

"KQED's mobile film unit follows author and activist James Baldwin in the spring of 1963, as he's driven around San Francisco to meet with members of the local African-American community. He is escorted by Youth For Service's Executive Director Orville Luster and intent on discovering: "The real situation of Negroes in the city, as opposed to the image San Francisco would like to present." He declares: "There is no moral distance ... between the facts of life in San Francisco and the facts of life in Birmingham. Someone's got to tell it like it is. And that's where it's at." Includes frank exchanges with local people on the street, meetings with community leaders and extended point-of-view sequences shot from a moving vehicle, featuring the Bayview and Western Addition neighborhoods. Baldwin reflects on the racial inequality that African-Americans are forced to confront and at one point tries to lift the morale of a young man by expressing his conviction that: "There will be a Negro president of this country but it will not be the country that we are sitting in now."

https://diva.sfsu.edu/bundles/187041

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"Take This Hammer" - short film w/ James Baldwin in SF in 1963 (Original Post) ProfessionalLeftist Mar 2012 OP
he really immersed himself in the civil rights movement bigtree Mar 2012 #1
Wow!! Number23 Mar 2012 #2

bigtree

(86,002 posts)
1. he really immersed himself in the civil rights movement
Sat Mar 10, 2012, 01:31 PM
Mar 2012

. . . and forged a remarkable and extensive legacy of activism and advocacy, in addition to his wonderful and insightful writings. He was an outstanding citizen.

Really cool archive, ProfessionalLeftist. Thanks for posting.

Number23

(24,544 posts)
2. Wow!!
Sat Mar 10, 2012, 07:25 PM
Mar 2012
"There is no moral distance ... between the facts of life in San Francisco and the facts of life in Birmingham. Someone's got to tell it like it is."

Tell it. Coming from the South and having lived everywhere, I've had to tell so many Northerners and folks from California this same thing. They have convinced themselves that all racism and racial inequality dwells in one area -- the South. Just like Baldwin said "someone's got to tell it like it is."

"There will be a Negro president of this country but it will not be the country that we are sitting in now."


Powerful stuff.
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