Keepers of the Dream: Seattle Women Black Panthers [Online]

Available for viewing on this page, from
April 1, 6pm PST – April 5, 11:59pm PST.

Sliding scale admission: $0–25

Please pay what you can; proceeds support our move to a virtual platform!

 


 

Northwest Film Forum is SCREENING ONLINE! NWFF’s physical space is temporarily closed in light of public health concerns around COVID-19, but community, dialogue, and education through media arts WILL persist.

• • HOW TO WATCH • •

  • Purchase a ticket through Brown Paper Tickets
  • Your email receipt from Brown Paper Tickets will contain a link and password for viewing, under “Ticket Details”. (Don’t see it? Check your spam filter.) The password will expire at midnight PST on the last date of the screening.
  • If you encounter any issues logging in, please contact louie@nwfilmforum.org for a quick follow-up. (But please, check your confirmation email!)

Discussion

This screening will be followed by a prerecorded Q&A and panel discussion with Vanetta Molson-Turner, Youlanda Givens, Winona Hollins Hauge, SassyBlack, and Phyllis Noble Mobley, facilitated by Malika Lee on February 7th, 2020.

About

Frances Dixon, mother of the founders of the Seattle Black Panthers for Self Defense (SBPP), got phone calls saying, “We’re gonna kill your son.” She replied, “You go ahead and try it.”

Vanetta Molson-Turner stepped over combat sandbags at the SBPP office to arrange for supplies for the first free clinic.

Phyllis Noble Mobley joined the party at the age of 15. She and others like Youlanda Givens and Winona Hollins Hauge sold Black Panther newspapers and collected donations to run breakfast programs to feed children before school. They studied the BPP teachings and stood strong as Black Women for the rest of their lives.

This series of 5 short documentaries shares their individual stories in varied Seattle settings significant to the SBPP, featuring an original score by SassyBlack.

The Seattle chapter of the BPP was the first chapter created outside of California. The first chief of the FBI, J.Edgar Hoover, labeled them as one of the three most dangerous chapters outside of Oakland. The women as “keepers of the dream” worked alongside the men in the office, implemented free community programs that still exist today like the Carolyn Downs Community Clinic and free breakfasts before disbanding nearly four decades ago.

Cast and Crew
Produced by Patricia Boiko and Tajuan LaBee
Assistant Director: Malika Lee
Cinematography: Omar Willey and Kamaria Daniels


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1515 12th Ave,

Seattle, WA 98122

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