Through Survivors' Eyes: Charlottesville, Greensboro, and the Fight to Resist White Supremacy
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Description
The speakers, Sally and Paul Bermanzohn, are survivors of the Greensboro Massacre when a group of KKK and Neo-Nazis opened fire on demonstrators about to begin a march against the KKK. Five people were killed, 9 injured. This was on November 3, 1979.
They focus their talk on the Greensboro Massacre, Charlottesville, the history of white supremacy, and, perhaps most importantly, what we can do as a community to combat this hate and move towards a more just society. Included in the talk is a short 10-minute film of the Massacre (live footage from November 3, 1979). The program ends with a Q&A / discussion with the audience.
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CCTV Receives NEH Grant to Support Community Archives
CCTV Center for Media & Democracy is pleased to announce receipt of a National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) Humanities Collections and Reference Resources grant alongside 32 peer archival institutions across the country. This $49,927 grant award will support efforts to preserve and expand access to audio/visual community history materials in the CCTV Archives. Read more about this opportunity here!