Kindly join US for the screening and discussion of TRUE JUSTICE: BRYAN
STEVENSON'S FIGHT FOR EQUALITY. The film follows the work of BRYAN
STEVENSON, the author of the New York Times Bestseller Just Mercy, and
the founder and executive director of the Equal JUSTICE INITIATIVE
(EJI). BRYAN AND THE EJI HAVE FOUGHT FOR THE EQUAL RIGHTS OF THE POOR,
the marginalized, the incarcerated, and the condemned.
Following the screening, a discussion will be led by Justin Steil,
PhD, Associate Professor or Law and Urban Planning, in the Department
of Urban Studies and Planning, at the School of Architecture and
Planning; and Mimi Wahid '21, a third-year undergraduate student, also
in the Department of Urban Studies and Planning, at the School of
Architecture and Planning.
AGENDA:
4:30 PM to 5 PM (Pizza)
5 PM to 6:45 PM (Film Screening)
6:45 PM to 7:15 PM (Discussion)
ABOUT THE FILM
Told primarily in his own words, True Justice shares Bryan
Stevenson’s experience with a criminal justice system that “treats
you better if you’re rich and guilty than if you’re poor and
innocent.” The burden of facing this system is explored in candid
interviews with associates, close family members, and clients.
This feature documentary focuses on Bryan Stevenson’s life and
career—particularly his indictment of the U.S. criminal justice
system for its role in codifying modern systemic racism—and tracks
the intertwined histories of slavery, lynching, segregation and mass
incarceration. Highlighting watershed moments involving cases and
clients, True Justice offers a rare glimpse into the human struggle
that is required when the poor and people of color are wrongly
condemned or unfairly sentenced, and explores the personal toll it
takes.
The film chronicles [Equal Justice Initiative's (EJI's)], work in
Alabama as well as the early influences that drove Bryan Stevenson to
become an advocate for the poor and the incarcerated. As a young
lawyer in the 1980s, he witnessed firsthand how courts unfairly
applied the death penalty based on race and how the Supreme Court
ultimately declared that racial bias in the administration of the
death penalty was “inevitable.”
Tracing the trajectory of the Court since the 1857 Dred Scott
decision, which ruled that African Americans are not citizens, True
Justice shows how the Court has long sanctioned inequality,
oppression, and violence. Illuminating the power of memory in cultural
change, the film instills hope for a brighter American future.
The film also documents the monumental opening of EJI’s Legacy
Museum and its National Memorial for Peace and Justice, which is
dedicated to the more than 4,400 African American victims of lynching.
These sites are part of EJI’s effort to engage the nation in a new
era of truth and justice. As part of the campaign, EJI is working with
communities to recognize lynching victims by collecting soil from
lynching sites and erecting historical markers.
True Justice: Bryan Stevenson’s Fight for Equality reveals a history
that can’t be forgotten in the pursuit of genuine justice.
Source: Equal Justice Initiative
*CONTENT WARNING. This documentary has scenes that some viewers may
find disturbing or triggering. These include, but not limited to
violence and lynching.*
culture
1223
Views
21/03/2020 Last update