CAs the social impact campaign for The Rape of Recy Taylor comes to a close, and in honor of Sexual Assault Awareness Month, Odyssey Impact and the NAACP Youth & College Division invite you to join a live town hall conversation on the legacy of Recy Taylor, the disproportionate discrimination faced by survivors of color, and why it is important to be a vocal ally against racism and sexual assault.
The Rape of Recy Taylor highlights the legacy of physical abuse inflicted upon Black women by examining the story of Recy Taylor who, in 1944, bravely identified her White rapists in racially segregated Alabama. Since 2018, the film has educated the public about sexual violence against women and the historical trauma faced by Black women in the Jim Crow South. Please join Odyssey Impact and the NAACP Youth & College Division for a live town hall conversation to celebrate the conclusion of the social impact campaign for The Rape of Recy Taylor documentary film.
Panelists
Jewel Cadet,
Director of Programs,
The Center for Anti-Violence Education
Nancy Buirski,
Director,
The Rape of Recy Taylor
Precious Freeman,
Executive Director,
The G. W. Carver Interpretive Museum
Reverend Jacqueline Lewis, PhD,
Senior Minister for Public Theology and Transformation,
Middle Collegiate Church
Frank Walker,
Youth Council Advisor for the NAACP Collier County in Naples, FL
Florida SouthWestern State College
Jane Manning,
Director,
Women’s Equal Justice Project
Moderators
Melissa C. Potter,
Head of Social Impact and Communications,
Odyssey Impact
Kyra Mitchell,
Eastern Michigan University,
Chair of the NAACP National Youth Work Committee