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Dear Jackie

  • Heritage Hall 83 Essex Street Guelph, ON, N1H 3K9 Canada (map)

Henri Pardo | CANADA
90 min | Full Captions
Supported by Guelph Black Heritage Society

Dear Jackie is a cinematic letter to Jackie Robinson, the first Black man to play in Major League Baseball, after a stint with the minor-league Montreal Royals, and a key contributor to the civil rights movement in the United States. When, in 1946, Jackie broke the colour barrier in Major League Baseball, the impossible seemed possible in a segregated North America. But did Montréalers use this historic moment to perpetuate a myth of a post-racial society? 

The film addresses Robinson directly and recounts the current situation of the Black community in Little Burgundy, once known as the “Harlem of the North,” drawing interesting parallels between the two eras. Through eloquent interviews, testimonies, and powerful verité moments in black and white, Dear Jackie paints a portrait of racism and racial inequality in Montreal and Quebec as a whole. The film unfolds as an intimate correspondence, presenting a unique historical and social perspective that unravels the myth of a post-racial Quebec society.

Time: 7:30pm
Venue: Heritage Hall
Tickets: $12/PWYC
Event: Post-screening discussion with director Henri Pardo, moderated by Justin Reid.


DIRECTOR BIO

Henri Pardo

Born in New Brunswick of Haitian parents, Henri Pardo is a Quebecois director, screenwriter, actor, editor, and creator-producer. His twelve years of experience following his graduation from the “Institut National de l'Image et du Son” have enabled him to tackle ambitious projects, including feature fiction films, shorts, and documentary series. With MAtv, a partner of Quebecor, he developed much needed content to help promote Montreal entrepreneurs. It is with the Black Wealth Matters documentary series that Henri has managed to capitalize on all of his many entrepreneurial talents. He recently completed the one-off documentary Afro-prosperit for Radio-Canada. He consistently promotes business men and women, researchers, activists, entrepreneurs and artists by drawing attention to the techniques they use to boost prosperity within the black community in the Montreal region.


 
 
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