Click here to view Come Hell or High Water encore at DCEFF co-presented by Race Forward. The film and panel become available March 16 at 6 pm EDT. You’ll have 10 days to start watching. Once you begin, you’ll have 48 hours to finish watching….
Historic Black community fights military project on Coast land fouled by arsenic, lead Sun Herald, February 8, 2021 “It’s sort of a never-ending struggle. I’ve told my clients as long as the city has this land zoned industrial, they’re going…
February 17, 2021 HEINZ HISTORY CENTER – Virtual screening & discussion with Derrick Evans A free, public screening of Come Hell or High Water: The Battle for Turkey Creek will be followed by a conversation with protagonist Derrick Evans, Camila Rivera-Tinsley, director of…
ENCORE BROADCAST APRIL 21, 2020, FOLLOWED BY TWO MONTHS OF FREE STREAMING THROUGH JUNE 30: http://bit.ly/TurkeyCreek On the eve of the 50th anniversary of Earth Day, the WORLD Channel presents a story from the frontlines of the climate justice movement. The film holds urgent…
The journey chronicled in “Come Hell or High Water: The Battle for Turkey Creek” begins when Mrs. Eva Skinner explains that the destruction of the community cemetery where her young son was buried happened because no one was there to stop…
(Crossposted from Teaching for Change. For the full article, go here) In July 2017, fifteen middle and high school English and social studies teachers from across the state of Mississippi participated in a teaching institute at Tougaloo College (in the historic Woodworth…
(Please see the April 2017 Come Hell or High Water newsletter for the full post.) Public officials in Come Hell or High Water: The Battle for Turkey Creek deny the reality of inconvenient truths – a cemetery is not a cemetery, a…