The Sun (San Bernardino)

Biden hosts screening of film about Emmett Till’s lynching

- By Darlene Superville

WASHINGTON >> President Joe Biden on Thursday hosted a screening of the movie “Till,” a wrenching new drama about the 1955 lynching of Emmett Till, who was brutally killed after a white woman said the Black 14-year-old had made improper advances toward her.

“History matters,” Biden said in brief remarks before the lights in the East Room came down on invited guests, including members of Till’s family. He noted that while some might want to ignore the nation’s history, “Only with truth comes healing and justice.”

Biden said he’s come to learn that “hate never goes away,” and that the only thing that stops it is for the entire country to condemn it.

“There’s only one thing that stops it: all of us,” Biden said. “Silence is complicity.”

Among the members of Till’s family was a cousin who is suing in federal court to force a Mississipp­i county sheriff to serve a recently discovered 1955 arrest warrant on the now nearly 90-year-old woman who complained about the young man.

Biden did not comment on the suit but thanked members of Till’s family for “never, ever, ever giving up” in the pursuit of justice.

Others attendees included actors Danielle Deadwyler, who stars as Emmett’s mother, Mamie

Till-Mobley; Jalyn Hall, who plays Emmett; Whoopi Goldberg, who had the supporting role of Emmett’s maternal grandmothe­r; and Chinonye Chukwu, the Nigerian American filmmaker who directed “Till.”

Also in the audience, where popcorn and candy were passed out and a pack of tissues placed on each seat, were students, civil rights leaders, historians and families of victims targeted by hate-fueled violence.

Karine Jean-Pierre, the White House press secretary, said this week that it was important to the president to host the screening during Black History Month “to lift this movie up” and to make sure that Till’s story is not forgotten, he added.

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