Film: Gina's Journey: Commemorating the 400th year since 1619
Event Information
Description
Join us on Sept. 11th for a film screening of Gina's Journey at Morrison Library on UC Berkeley's campus.
This event is part of a campus-wide initiative, planned to commemorate the 400 years since the first slaves arrived in North America. Led by the Haas Institute for a Fair and Inclusive society along with other campus units (Departments of African American Studies and History; Black Faculty and Staff Organization; African American Student Development Center), we invite you to come to learn and reflect on the contributions of black Americans and our country's history.
About the Film: Visit https://www.ginasjourney.com/
"This film will resonate with all who have struggled to expose truths and find meaningful connections to their own past and America's past too."
This documentary film is based on the Afterword of the book, Life of William Grimes the Runaway Slave, written by Regina Mason. The Afterword, “My Long Road Back to William Grimes” reveals Regina’s long path to authenticate her ancestor’s story and the intense personal sacrifices that made editing and re-publishing his original book possible.
In the film, Regina’s path is retraced as she visits historical locations and key points of interest along her 15-year path of discovery. The film features special visual effects to create scenes during the 1800s when her ancestor, William Grimes, was enslaved in the South and endured a life of hardship as a free man in the North. This footage is blended with interviews from Regina Mason, her coeditor, Dr. William Andrews, scholars, and others who were a part of her journey.
The two stories, Regina’s personal journey and selected William Grimes re-enactments, are intertwined throughout the movie as they move toward Regina’s recovering and publishing of her ancestors original 1825 autobiography, thus fulfilling her great, great, great grandfather’s desire to get his story to a mass audience, while creating a sense of identity and profound purpose for herself.
Organizer Othering & Belonging Institute
Organizer of Film: Gina's Journey: Commemorating the 400th year since 1619
The Othering & Belonging Institute at UC Berkeley brings together researchers, organizers, stakeholders, communicators, and policymakers to identify and eliminate the barriers to an inclusive, just, and sustainable society in order to create transformative change. We are a diverse and vibrant hub generating work centered on realizing a world where all people belong, where belonging entails being respected at a level that includes the right to both contribute and make demands upon society and political and cultural institutions.
The Othering & Belonging Institute responds to issues that require both immediate action and long-term strategy. The Institute engages in innovative communications, arts and cultural strategy, and strategic narrative work that attempts to re-frame the public discourse from a dominant narrative of control and fear towards one that recognizes the humanity of all people, cares for the earth, and celebrates our inherent interconnectedness.