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- When documentaries are filmed, produced, and then viewed, the audience is left with
- more knowledge and awareness than before having watched it. When I watch a National
- Geographic documentary on exploitation of indigenous peoples, I become aware of their
- situation and further understand the cruel world around me. Also, my emotions are stirred up.
- With the awareness that documentaries bring, also comes the waves of emotional buildup.
- This is why documentaries are most effective in grabbing an audience’s attention on a subject
- matter having to do with exploitation, injustice, and racism; they show the cruelty and disrespect
- the victims are faced with. Four Little Girls, a documentary directed by Spike Lee, is an
- example of this. He interviews those that were involved or held knowledge of the bombing at
- 16th St. Baptist Church in Birmingham, Alabama in 1963. He speaks with officials and
- professionals, preachers, family members and childhood friends of the four girls killed at this
- incident. At the same time that these interviews are going on, there are clips from the 50’s and
- 60’s of black protesters, marches, and beatings relevant to the political and social crisis of the
- day. Also included are picture shots of the girls, including their gravestones. Lee incorporates
- the ongoing Civil Rights Movement with the story of the bombing incident and the four girls that
- died as a result.
- The Civil Rights Movement becomes more real to us when the protagonists are also
- made real. The victims’ parents tell the audience through their words, stories, and pictures, of
- who the girls were and how they lived. They also display the girls’ badges, awards, certificates,
- and Bible that one had in her pocketbook the day she was in the church basement attending
- Sunday school.
- The white officials, who were more or less viewed as the antagonists, spoke of that
- same era from their point of view. Through intercutting photos of lynched black men wearing a
- sign that read “This Nigger Voted”, white men made common yet hypocritical remarks of how
- Birmingham was a pleasant place to raise a family.
- The films goes through a series of events and attempts by black leaders to build an
- effective civil rights coalition between local leaders like Reverend Fred Shuttlesworth and
- national leaders like Martin Luther King, Jr., and James Bevel. But the forces of the older black
- population slowly digressed as white leaders, like “Bull” Connor, Police Commissioner, strode
- around through black neighborhoods in his white army tank.
- The struggle moved on to the younger generation. Police men were even arresting them
- and placing them in jail cell’s. The quick inclusion of students into the movement allowed for a
- massive amount of young people to come together and protest full strength. It began first with
- the high school students, then junior high, and finally grade school students. When a younger
- child had been asked by her mother where she had been that day, the child proudly said, “In
- jail.” “In jail? What were you doin in jail?”, asked her astonished mother. The child answered,
- “For freedom.”
- Testimonies from the black citizens of Birmingham were intertwined coherently. Hope
- as well as fear spoke from their words as they invested courage into the populace’s young
- people who proudly marched to jail. Subtle encouragement of the young was the way the black
- community supported their role in the movement. One teacher had said that when she told her
- class about the protests and demonstrations that were attracting students to the streets, she told
- them, “I hope that when I turn my back to write on the blackboard that I don’t turn around and
- find all you gone.” The whole class was gone when she turned back around. There is a scent
- of pride in her voice when she remarks about the empty classroom.
- Birmingham had history of bombs being used to make political points. The existence of
- the steel mills, industry, and foundries, made accessibility to dynamite quite efficient and easy.
- When black families began to build substantial homes on a hill, the homes were destroyed by
- “honkies” that felt that they did not deserve to live too well. “Dynamite Hill” as the area was
- called, prepared for the events at 16th St. Baptist Church in 1963.
- The 16th St. Church had become a meeting place for all people involved in the civil
- rights struggle. It was an immediate target for the Klu Klux Klan to slow the momentum of the
- movement. The people who bombed the church chose the basement as its target site, where
- children were gathered for Sunday school, as opposed to the main room which contained all the
- adults in congregation. By doing this, shock and hatred was given to the perpetrators when the
- crushed bodies of the four little girls were removed from the rubble. A white officer, known to
- be a klansmen, even said that he didn’t believe it would come this far. More momentum was
- given to the movement and more people were enamored in gaining rights, especially voting
- rights, to protect their children. And so began the Selma movement which was successful in
- including black citizens as voters. But responsibility for the bombing was not given to anyone
- and the families had to wait for years in sorrow for justice to prevail.
- Walter Conkrite states that the whites didn’t realize until the tragic bombing how cruel
- their intentions were. It was then that America understood the real hatred there existed in the
- movement towards integration. He says this was an “awakening.” Bill Cosby adds that these
- “four lovely children” could’ve grown up one day to be doctors, lawyers, and Harvard
- graduates, but alas, due to ignorance and bigotry, their lives have been taken. Jesse Jackson
- states that although this was a tragic incident, it did not go without its purpose. This incident
- was turned “from a crucifixion into Resurrection.”
- The film goes on to include clips of recent, modern day bombings of churches, as if a
- new fad were back from the past like bellbottoms. Around 1994, 22 churches had been
- blasted. Ever since the Civil War, the KKK began to destroy the religious sanctuary of its
- enemies. A man stated that they (the KKK) could keep on blasting the churches, but that they
- would “rebuild the churches stronger than before”, and that they couldn’t bomb as fast as they
- could rebuild. This statement targets the fueling energy people had received from ill incidents.
- That instead of giving up hope, as the KKK thought would happen, they burned with more
- intensity.
- Four little Girls reminds us that in a horrendous and sad time in history, “the choir kept
- singing of freedom.” It was displayed that the black citizens of Birmingham would not give up.
- That they would not give in until they gained their rights they felt they rightfully deserved, and
- they won. They had many obstacles along the way, and these only made them angrier and more
- tied to the movement in terms of accomplishing their goals; goals which they have rightfully won
- and should’ve had from the beginning.
- <br><br><b>Bibliography</b><br><br>
- Documentary: Four Little Girls, Directed by Spike Lee
- <br><br>
- Words: 1179
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