By Van Williams
Long before the infamous Civil Rights Act of 1964 championed by Parks and King, Schenck and Peratrovich spearheaded an Alaska Native movement that led to the passage of the state’s Anti-Discrimination Act, the first of its kind in the United States.
It’s a forgotten movement that doesn’t get the national attention it deserves, according to Anchorage filmmaker Jeff Silverman. So he made a documentary telling their remarkable story called, “For the Rights of All: Ending Jim Crow in Alaska.”
The film will air on Public Broadcasting System TV next month.
It was Peratrovich’s passionate testimony to the Alaska territorial Senate in 1945 that reportedly swayed Gov. Ernest Gruening to sign the equal rights bill into law—18 years before King’s famous “I Have a Dream” speech.
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