04/27/2023
Last Sunday, our group of Operation Understanding DC fellows convened on zoom to advance our goal of familiarizing ourselves with the experience and relationship of Black and Jewish Americans. First, we were presented with the extraordinary opportunity to collectively hear from and interview Mr. Anderson Flen, community advocate for Africatown, Alabama. Each fellow had previously taken time to watch the Netflix documentary Descendant, which covers the story of the community, known as Africatown, built by passengers of the Clotilda, the last slave ship to reach American shores.
We were inspired by Africatown residents’ unique resilience and disappointed to hear how local governments have devalued their community and imposed industry on the area with unhealthy proximity to its residents. We discussed the recurring pattern of segregation leading to underserved Black communities, and Mr. Flen was careful to point out that people complicit in this system are as guilty as those who perpetrated this injustice. Mr. Flen, who moved us with his commitment to serving the community of Africatown, encouraged each member of our group to “find your passion, and hopefully that will include helping make a difference in your environment.” His advice tied in coherently with our previous discussions regarding ways we can each channel our personal talents into activism.