MOVE

The Things that Put Powelton on the Map

Producer of the Work / Filmmaker: 

Powelton Village Civic Association with Scribe Video Center

Year released: 
2006
Length: 
10 min 4 seconds
Price: 

This video is available for purchase as part of a Precious Places Community History Project Vol.2 compilation DVD.

Powelton Village has long been an incubator of progressive Philadelphia politics and counterculture. Neighborhood activism, communal living, national politics—Powelton Village residents have done it all, especially if it was the 1960s and 1970s. "If Philadelphia had any equivalent to Haight-Ashbury," says resident Sandra Mohberg, "Powelton Village was it. This was where the revolutionary types lived." Among other honors, the neighborhood was rumored to be the hiding place for documents that activists stole from an FBI office in Media, PA in 1971.

The Bombing of Osage Avenue

Film Still: 
Osageweb.JPG
Producer of the Work / Filmmaker: 

Produced & Directed by Louis Massiah for WHYY-TV 12, Written & Narrated by Toni Cade Bambara

Year released: 
1986
Length: 
58 minutes

On Mother's Day, 1985, a virtual army of city and state police converged on a quiet block in historic Cobb's Creek, a blossoming neighborhood of parks and children, aluminum siding and basketball stars nestled in the heart of Philadelphia's African American community. By the next day, 61 homes were destroyed and 11 people were dead, all members of the communitarian MOVE organization. In this, the winner of 1987's Global Village Best Documentary Award, Massiah establishes the setting for the tragedy early on, and Toni Cade Bambara's poetic narration draws us deeper into the drama.

Quote: 

"...an excellent film which explores the social and politcal context in which the confrontation between MOVE and the City of Philadelphia developed." -- Bettye Collier-Thomas, Director, Center for African American History and Culture

"This extraordinary documentary is an intricately woven story of government overkill and its impact on the innocent." -- Beverly Guy-Sheftall, Women's Resource and Research Center, Spelman College

Filmmaker's Name: 
Louis Massiah and Toni Cade Bambara
Filmmaker's Bio: 

Louis Massiah is the founder and executive director of Scribe. He also produced and directed the documentary works Louise Thompson Patterson: In Her Own Words, two films for the Eyes on the Prize II series, and W.E.B. Du Bois: A Biography in Four Voices.

Toni Cade Bambara wrote several books of fiction, including The Salt Eaters, The Sea Birds Are Still Alive, Gorilla, My Love, and Those Bones are Not My Child: A Novel, and taught writing workshops at Scribe for many years and collaborated on numerous productions. She died in 1995.

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