Freedom Summer:An Interview with Naeem Douglas, the Brookladelphian
The summer of 2020 marks an incredible moment in history, seeing the birth of one of the largest civil rights movements the world has ever known. After years of what seemed like an endless cycle of Black death and white apathy, something new has happened. Cries of support for Black lives have begun to come from places that were once deathly silent as the terrifying immunity with which the police could kill Black people was proven over and over, one video at at time. The outrage of a community used to suffering alone has been felt by others and together they are beginning to stand up, not in one city or one nation, but all over the world.
AphroChic: What inspired you to go out and capture what’s been happening around Black Lives Matter in New York?
Naeem Douglas: The reaction to George Floyd’s death was unlike anything I’ve ever seen. It sounds absurd to say, but Black people dying at the hands of police is something this country has been okay with for a long time. This latest incident has seemed to wake up America. Black people aren’t the only ones upset. I wanted to document what was happening.
It ended up being a little too much for me. So I broke off the march and tried to get myself situated. I was straddling my Citi Bike trying to put my phone away, load film in my camera and get a bearing on what was going on. I was about a block away from the protest. Suddenly I feel a tap on leg which turned into pounding. I looked up and saw a bicycle officer and he’s hitting my leg with his front wheel and yelling at me to move. It was so bizarre and unnerving. I was the only person on the street, between two parked cars and clearly just trying to put myself together. Before anything could really happen, his fellow officer pulled him away and he went back to the group.
AC: What role can photography play in amplifying movements?
ND: Photography is pivotal because one photograph can tell many stories. With video, you have a lot going on. However, a photograph is one moment in time. No sound, no music, and in my case no color (I mostly shoot black and white film). One moment and one subject can sum up years of frustration, ignorance, exhaustion, etc. The simplicity of it is powerful to me. I’m reminded of the photo from the late 1950s of a Black student walking to school in Arkansas and you see these white women and students behind her screaming insults at her. That one moment captured the vitriol of racism during that time and the struggle for us to be treated like humans.
AC: Is there one moment or image that stands out in your mind?
ND: One is a man praying at The Barclays Center. He’s so peaceful in his prayer. It moved me in the moment and when I saw the photo later. The second photo is of a young Black woman leading a march through Brooklyn. It was inspiring to see her putting her voice to the rally, so it was particularly moving to see her and be able to document it.
AC: What do you hope will come out of this moment? Could we see real police reform, or something even bigger?
ND: I hope a real change comes from this. America has had a hard time facing its original sin (slavery) and the effects it continues to have. This country definitely needs to address it in a meaningful way.