HISTORY + VIDEO: Four Little Girls > Zinn Education Project

FOUR LITTLE GIRLS
Photo: We will never forget Cynthia Wesley, Carole Robertson and Addie Mae Collins--all 14 years old, and 11-year-old Denise McNair. They were murdered in the 16th Street Baptist Church bombing in an act of terrorism by a Klan related group on Sept. 15, 1963 in Birmingham, Alabama. The Birmingham Public Library has an online digital collection of photos and news clippings: <a href=
We will never forget Cynthia Wesley, Carole Robertson and Addie Mae Collins--all 14 years old, and 11-year-old Denise McNair. They were murdered in the 16th Street Baptist Church bombing in an act of terrorism by a Klan related group on Sept. 15, 1963 in Birmingham, Alabama. The Birmingham Public Library has an online digital collection of photos and news clippings: http://bit.ly/cezq1X Also see the film 4 Little Girls by Spike Lee, the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute, and a lesson from Teaching Tolerance: http://bit.ly/9U5FHj

http://bit.ly/cezq1X Also see the film 4 Little Girls by Spike Lee, the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute, and a lesson from Teaching Tolerance: http://bit.ly/9U5FHj" width="400" />

 

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GO HERE TO VIEW SPIKE LEE DOCUMENTARY

4 Little Girls (1997)

1:42:26 - 3 years ago

 

There are many remarkable things about the documentary 4 Little Girls. Spike Lee's striking, beautifully realized film is a cinematic lesson of what kind of material is better suited to the documentary format. In his first documentary, Lee shares an attribute of Ken Burns: the major event in his documentary is not seen on camera. Except for four quick glimpses of black-and-white autopsy photos, the picture stays clear from the bombing. Lee remains with the faces, the girls' friends, families, and the historic figures of the era. They've all grown up since the bombing but their memories haven't faded. The vital facts of the case are certainly here: the troubled history of Birmingham, the court proceedings, friends' last run-ins with the girls. What touches us deeper though are those witnesses telling us of living through the core era of segregation and bigotry: a father explaining to his child why she can't have a sandwich in a cafeteria and a woman offering up tears of past events. There's even an interview with George Wallace, the prince of segregation, that belongs in a David Lynch feature. Lee's film asserts the bombing energized the civil rights movement and when the voice of America, Walter Cronkite, echoes those sentiments, you believe he may have it right. From the director of ' 'Do The Right Thing' ' and ' 'Malcolm X' ' comes ' 'a masterpiece.' ' (Chicago Tribune) When a bomb tears through the basement of a black Baptist church on September 15, 1963, it takes the lives of four young girls. This racially motivated crime, sparks the nation?s outrage and helps fuel the civil rights movement sweeping across the country.

>via: http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-3302971953362876297