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On  the second Friday evening of each month, ESFL screens a labor history  film. 

In  this video ESFL's Peter Rachleff discusses the historical context for  "Finally Got the News" with David Colman, Associate Professor of African  American History, Ramapo College of New Jersey, and James Robinson,  Assistant Professor of Ethnic Studies, Metropolitan State University.

This  film traces the activities of the League of Revolutionary Black Workers  inside and outside the auto factories of Detroit. Through interviews  with the members of the movement, footage shot in the auto plants, and  footage of leafleting and picketing actions, the film documents their  efforts to build an independent black labor organization that, unlike  the UAW, will respond to worker’s problems, such as the assembly line  speed-up and inadequate wages faced by both black and white workers in  the industry. It provides a rare opportunity for African American  industrial workers to represent themselves on film and for a  self-identified revolutionary organization to provide their own  perspective on the past, the present, and the future.

The  late historian Manning Marable wrote: “The League [of Revolutionary  Black Workers] was in many respects the most significant expression of  black radical thought and activism in the 1960s. The League took the  impetus for Black Power and translated it into a fighting program  focusing on industrial workers.”

Oral  historian and filmmaker Dan Georgakas (author of Detroit: I Do Mind  Dying) wrote: “Ideological in the best sense: it is a film about ideas  [and] presents a serious strategy for mass working class action… It  speaks of a specific time and specific experiences in terms that will  remain relevant as long as working people are not able to control their  own lives.”

To view the video with closed captioning: YouTube.com/eastsidefreedomlibraryorg