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What would you do? |
Add new commentby: Caitlin JohnsonThe line that separates parents from advocates is often paper-thin. Latara Isom, a 27-year-old single mom lived this, long before she could ever express it. As a teenage mother growing up in a Chicago housing project, she says all she wanted was to make a better life for herself and her children. She moved to Milwaukee to do just that. More than a decade later, she's raising four children, working at Head Start and planning to someday open a shelter for teen mothers. This year, she graduated from nursing school with honors. A year ago, Isom could be found touring her Milwaukee neighborhood with a video camera, asking neighbors questions like, "What are some of the things you'd like to see changed in our neighborhood?" and "What do you think you can add to the community if you want to see a change?" It was for a documentary film called My Family, My Neighborhood, My Story. The movie chronicles the lives of Isom and four of her neighbors, but with a twist—the four women, none of them professional filmmakers, shot the footage themselves using video cameras provided by the Wisconsin Council on Children and Families and the Annie E. Casey and W. K. Kellogg Foundations. For more than two weeks, they documented their lives, 24 hours a day. An 8-minute short version of the film is included in the 2002 MediaRights.org film festival, which selects the year's best films inspiring action for social change. Connect for Kids honored this excerpt of My Family, My Neighborhood, My Story with our first-ever Fight Family Poverty award. This film takes a look at ordinary people finding motivation to transform their families' struggles and strengths into action for their neighborhood, in big and little ways. In addition to Isom, who is featured in the short version, the hour-length film profiles Emma Harring Smith. Smith has two grown daughters, and is raising five grandchildren. Her only son was murdered in 1991. Bao Vang, a student at the University of Wisconsin, is the daughter of Hmong immigrants who came to the United States from Thailand five years ago. Anne Hazelwood is a single mother of two who was a victim of sexual abuse and struggled with drug addiction. She now runs a transitional program for women and is a vocal advocate for low-income families in her neighborhood and beyond. We spoke with producer Eileen Littig of Northeastern Wisconsin In-School Telecommunications and project manager Tamara Grigsby of the Wisconsin Council of Children and Families (WCCF) to get a sense of what the project has meant for those in the field. How did the idea come about? Instead of just coming out with another film that shows how bleak and dreary things are in the inner city, the film highlights the many strengths the people in the neighborhood have, that are often overlooked. They're just like other families. They have the same goals and aspirations for their kids, there are just a few more barriers and obstacles in their way. Often [advocates and service providers] come in and diagnose people in neighborhoods. We say, "Here's your problem, here's what you need." This gave them voice and opportunity to say what they thought was most needed in their communities. Littig: You know we always say well, you never get low-income women at the table … well now the women are and that's what was so fascinating. You heard directly what the issues were. It's interesting because people think this neighborhood in Milwaukee is very violent, that's got to be the main concern, but the main issues [raised by the participants] happen to be sanitation and housing. There's not enough coming from the city. What was the most surprising aspect of the project? Also, the attention has been surprising. Since the film aired on public television, people have called wanting to donate computers, or sit and talk, or offer different resources. Latara Isom says people come up to her and tell her how touched they were by her story and her strength. How will you build on what you've learned from this project? How will it change or affect your work? A lot also talked about jobs, that there are very few available for families in the neighborhood. If we want people to work, we have to have jobs available for them to work at. It's not that we hadn't thought about it, but it was good to hear it first-hand. It's advocacy that I hope will continue to be a legacy of this film. After all is said and done, it's about making sure families have ability to advocate for themselves.
Learn More The Annie E. Casey Foundation is hosting screenings and discussions in various communities. To host a screening in your home town, you can rent ($50) or purchase ($195) the film and accompanying materials by contacting Kristel at 920-465-2599. Screen the film online. Look for My Family, My Neighborhood, My Story. Caitlin Johnson is a contributing writer to Connect for Kids. Reply
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