NA02790049
CHAVEZ RAVINE: A LOS ANGELES STORY
Don Normark's haunting photographs bring back to life a Mexican American village razed in the 1950s to build Dodger Stadium.

CHAVEZ RAVINE tells the bittersweet story of how an American community was betrayed by greed, political hypocrisy, and good intentions gone astray.

In 1949, photographer Don Normark stumbled on Ch¨˘vez Ravine, a closely-knit Mexican- American village on a hill overlooking downtown Los Angeles. Enchanted, he stayed for a year and took hundreds of photographs, never knowing he was capturing on film the last images of a place that was about to disappear.

The following year, the city of L.A. evicted the 300 families of Ch¨˘vez Ravine to make way for a low-income public housing project. The land was cleared, homes, schools, and church razed to the ground. But the real estate lobby, sensing a great opportunity, accused the LA Housing Authority's Frank Wilkinson of being a communist agent. The city folded and instead of building the promised housing, it sold the land to baseball owner Walter O'Malley, who built Dodger Stadium on the site.

Fifty years later, Normark's haunting black-and-white photographs reclaim and celebrate a lost village from a simpler time.

Awards
~ Best Short Documentary, International Documentary Association Awards
~ Grand Jury Award for Best Documentary Short, Florida Film Festival
DVD (Color, Closed Captioned)
Grades 4-12, College, Adult
24 minutes
2004
USD 195.00
 
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