Ken Burns’ Message of Warning to America

His new documentary The U.S. and the Holocaust isn’t just about the past.

Micah Sifry

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The final minutes of the last episode of the new three-part documentary “The U.S. and the Holocaust,” produced by Ken Burns, Lynn Novick, and Sarah Botstein, are not about the Holocaust.

Instead the filmmakers show us the following montage: the signing of the 1965 Immigration Act, which abolished the national quotas on immigrants that had kept so many Jews out during World War II (but still imposed restrictions on people from the Americas, the narrator notes), followed by images of diverse groups of newly naturalized citizens smiling at their good fortune, and then old black and white photos of Ku Klux Klan marchers filling the streets of Washington DC in the 1920s, an American Nazi Party rally, white southerners jeering black children entering newly desegregated public schools, the beating of protestors at the Selma march, and then — the present.

While historian Nell Irvin Painter talks about the recurring waves of white supremacy and anti-Semitism in America, the images turn to color. We see anti-immigrant and anti-Muslim graffiti followed by the hate-filled face of Dylann Roof (the Charleston mass murderer who, the narrator reminds us, wanted to set off a race war) and then the voice of Donald Trump…

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Micah Sifry
Micah Sifry

Written by Micah Sifry

Co-founder Civic Hall. Publisher of The Connector newsletter (theconnector.substack.com)

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