"Eleven years before Rosa Parks' famous act of civil disobedience on that Montgomery bus, she stood up for Recy Taylor," said Monique Linder.
"I had to bring 'The Rape of Recy Taylor' to the Twin Cities," said Linder, founder of OMG Digital Media Solutions and the force behind the film's local screening next week.
"The history books say Rosa Parks was this poor, tired seamstress on a bus, but she was a fierce activist, and we don't read that in history books," Linder said.
More will learn it in this documentary about Taylor, a black 24-year-old wife and mother from Abbeville, Ala., who was abducted and raped by a gang of white men who confessed to the 1944 crime but were never convicted. Taylor, who was 97 when she died in December, kept speaking out about the rape despite Jim Crow-era repression.
Parks traveled to Abbeville numerous times to investigate the rape for the NAACP. When the threats against Taylor and her family expanded to firebombing, Parks moved Taylor to Montgomery for months to keep her safe.
Linder laid the groundwork for the local screening last year when she worked with the film's director, Nancy Buirski, who also directed "The Loving Story," about the couple who helped abolish laws against interracial marriage. "I secured the rights for the exclusive screening at the University of St. Thomas March 24," said Linder. She is also producer of the day's black history and culture event, which will honor Taylor. Members of Taylor's family are expected to attend and speak, Linder said. "My conversations with Recy Taylor's family confirms the significance of telling her story, so no woman should ever have to go through life never seeing justice served," she said.
Tickets for the 3 p.m. screening are free and can be reserved through UjamaaPlace.org.
Recently, Linder and I met up in Alabama, where we went to Abbeville to interview Taylor's nephew Henry Murry and visited Tuskegee University to pay respects to Linder's famous relative Booker T. Washington. We also met at the nonprofit Ujamaa Place in St. Paul.