Melrose
Veterans Memorial
Middle School students on
Team 8A viewed Stanley Nelson’s “Freedom Riders” in the auditorium of January 13, 2012. Later in the classroom, the students wrote their reviews of the documentary. The student reviews were very insightful. Freedom Riders is about the Civil Rights
Movement in the United
States. “In 1961, the Civil Rights Movement was at a turning point -- while the
Supreme Court had ruled that racial segregation was illegal, in many parts of
the South public facilities were still divided into areas for blacks and
whites, and while president John F. Kennedy spoke out in favor of civil rights,
his administration had done little to practically remedy the situation.
So a group of student activists stepped forward to force the issue of
desegregation -- dozens of college students, both black and white, began
traveling together by bus through the segregated South, and simply by sitting
together, eating together and sharing motel rooms, they raised controversy
(often followed by violence) for flouting conventions that had been held for
generations.
The young civil rights activists became known as "Freedom Riders,"
and as their actions became national news, they played a vital role in finally
putting an end to Jim Crow laws in the South and eliminating the "separate
but equal" doctrine. Filmmaker Stanley Nelson combines newsreel footage,
rare photos and new interviews with the activists who faced danger to fight
prejudice in the documentary Freedom Riders, which was an official selection at
the 2010 Sundance Film Festival." For
more information, contact Mrs. Baline at nbaline@melrose.mec.edu.
Posted by Principal Brow - 01/18/2012
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