Saturday, February 11, 2017

Not In Our Town


I came across a link to “Not in Our Town” on Facebook toward the end of December.  I watched the five-minute video (click here) and was most impressed by the work of this group.  A brief history of the organization is below.  Their website is a wealth of information on how communities can, and have, dealt with hate crimes and intolerance.  It’s worth your time to take a look.  
 
Not In Our Town and Not In Our School are both projects of The Working Group, an Oakland-based nonprofit founded in 1988. Not In Our Town was launched in 1995 with our landmark PBS film that documented the heroic efforts of Billings, Montana citizens who stood up for their neighbors after a series of hate crimes. They inspired hundreds of communities in the United States and around the world to take action against hate.


We could have never guessed a single story would launch a movement. Nearly 20 years ago, The Working Group sent a film crew to Billings, MT to document a story about working people, ordinary people, who stood up for their neighbors when they were under attack by white supremacists.

After attacks on a Native American woman’s house, an African-American church, and a Jewish family’s home, the entire town refused to be silent and fearful. They stood up together. They said, "Not In Our Town." That became the title of our landmark media and engagement project, “Not In Our Town.”

… The Billings story opened up a conversation about how we deal with hate crimes. Few states had hate crime laws back then; it was an issue that often surfaced but was not dealt with. The Billings story demonstrated that the responsibility for dealing with intolerance lies with all of us.

We first screened the film in a small California town, curious to see what happened when a community unlike Billings watched the film. There were teachers, students, rabbis, priests, and city councilmembers. When the film ended, they didn't want to talk about Billings, they wanted to talk about their town. They wanted to talk about how people were treated in their community.

It was exciting. We took our film to town hall meetings across the country. …

Like Billings, the solutions came from the ground up. They countered division with unity. There were songs and flashmobs. Signs and pledges. They went to their city council and human relations commission meetings. They wrote to their local newspaper. They raised the issue of hate crimes, said that no resident should be targeted because of who they are. ….

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