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Please join the Harriman Institute for a screening of Black Russians: The Red Experiment and following Q&A session with filmmaker Yelena Demikovsky.
Filmmaker Yelena Demikovsky will present Part One of her new, much talked about documentary film project "Black Russians: The Red Experiment." The film centers on the life trajectories of Black American sojourners in the Soviet Union during the first half of the 20th century. Inspired by the antiracist rhetoric of Soviet communists, these individuals fled American racism and Jim Crow segregation. But did they find the freedom they sought? Did they and their descendants harbor any regrets about that fateful decision to leave the United States? The film brings up the historical and personal complexities of these incredible life stories.
Part One (1-hour length) introduces the main character, Yelena Khanga, a well-known Black Russian TV personality of the 1990s through mid-2000s whose grandparents were among the hopeful migrants. Her historical narrative unfolds throughout the film. This journey begins with the turbulent historical events in the Soviet Union and America in the 1920s and 1930s.