When the revolution doesn't come
- What are black people in America?
- They shot through that house
- Chairman Fred Hampton Jr
- It's a battle
- I feel lucky
- Ericka Abram
- Living in the dorm
- We felt safe, we felt in peril
- It's not about you
- Malkia Cyril
- You can't kill a revolution
- The first step is to grieve
- Credits
They are the children of the Black Panther party – the self-styled Panther cubs. Born into the 1970s revolutionary movement for Black equality and self-determination, they have lived in the shadows of a promised land that was never attained. We join them as they continue to wrestle, 50 years later, with the dichotomy of their extraordinary childhoods: the enormous pride and love it gave them as members of the Black Panther family, and the booming loss they endured – of parents, of security, and of the hope for radical change that did not materialise. That hope lives on in the cubs, and their reflections on America’s current crisis offers burning lessons for today.
For more on this story read Ed Pilkington's in-depth essay, here.
- Producer: LaTajh Simmons-Weaver
- Original Journalism: Ed Pilkington
- Director of Photography: Sachi Bahra
- Additional Cinematography: Leo Maco
- Editor: Aurora Brachman
- Assistant Editor: LaTajh Simmons-Weaver
- Sound Mix: David Sandwisch
- Color: Ben Neufeld
- Music: Promises, FLOATING POINTS / PHAROAH SANDERS / THE LONDON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA, BMG, LUAKA BOP
- Archive researchers: Gail Fletcher, Hannah Ratcliffe (Shanakee Archive Agency)
- Graphic Design: Harry Fischer
- Motion Design: Alex Purcell
- Creative Director, The Guardian: Chris Clarke
- Executive Producer: Ekaterina Ochagavia
- Head of Documentaries: Lindsay Poulton
- A Guardian Documentary
- Length: 26mins
- Source: The Guardian
Key credits
Director: Aurora BrachmanThe Guardian Live
Online
Coming soon
undefined
undefined
undefined
A police officer's story of racism, remorse and resistance