Dominican Republic Global Film Festival Organizers Attend the Berlin Film Festival
Berlin, February 20, 2011
Dominican Republic Global Film Festival Attending the 33rd International Court Métrage Festival in France
Santo Domingo, February 8, 2010
Dominican Republic Global Film Festival Celebrates the Nominations of 127 Hours
Santo Domingo, January 25, 2010
An Even Grander Finale than Ever Newly Honored Liza Minnelli brings down the Curtain on Fourth DR Global Film Festival
Santo Domingo, November 21, 2010
Closing Film of the 4th Dominican Republic Global Film Festival Delights Audiences, Young and Old
Santo Domingo, November 21, 2010
Jury Chooses First, Second and Third Place
Winners in the Second Annual Short Films Competition
Santo Domingo, November 21, 2010
Actors workshop: Jimmy Jean Louis's Method
for Acting Success and Getting Haiti and DR Together
Santo Domingo, November 21, 2010
Short Films: The Beginning of Everything
Santo Domingo, November 21, 2010
"Waste Land,” a documentary defending the
environment
Santo Domingo, November 20, 2010
A Dominican Passion
Outsourcing Baseball Development: Anthony Alcade’s "Buscón"!
Santo Domingo, November 20, 2010
Web 3.0 is coming!
And the possibilities for small film producers are exciting!
Santo Domingo, November 20, 2010
Profile of an actor: From the Stage to the
Screen
Santo Domingo, November 20, 2010
“Traces of the Trade: A Story from the Deep North” Personal Story of Discovery, History and How one Family Faces the Sins of their Ancestors
Santo Domingo, November 20, 2010
“Traces of the Trade: A Story from the Deep North” Personal Story of
Discovery, History and How one Family Faces the Sins of their Ancestors
Santo Domingo, November 20, 2010
When Katrina Browne learns that her ancestors in the United States were the biggest slave traders in US history, she decided to tell that story by following the so-called Triangle Trade, the route that operated from the late 16th to early 19th centuries, carrying slaves, cash crops and manufactured goods between West Africa, the Caribbean or the American colonies.
In her research, Katrina learns that her family, the De Wolfs, owned 47 ships and had transported more than 10,000 Africans into New World slavery. That represented about 60 percent of all slave voyages from her ancestral home of Bristol, Rhode Island.
When the US government, under Thomas Jefferson, outlawed the practice in 1808, the De Wolfs continued shipping slaves from Africa to Cuba. After all, business was booming and the family had become extremely wealthy. In 1812, the De Wolfs owned more ships than the US Navy. By the end of his life, James De Wolf had held the post of Senator and was the second richest man in the United States.
In the film, Katrina and her nine relatives (from siblings to distant cousins) take a life-changing journey as they trace their ancestor’s steps from Bristol to the slave forts on the coast of Ghana to the De Wolf family plantation in Cuba.
“It made me look at the amazing, total sense of privilege I was raised to expect,” said Ms. Browne who, along with her producer Juanita Brown, attended the 4th Dominican Republic Global Film Festival. Speaking at the crowded opening night reception, Katrina told this reporter that her attitude toward African Americans “has changed forever.”
She said the trip to Africa and Cuba and back presented her family with issues that many had never confronted up to that point in their lives. Questions were raised and at moments resentments surfaced, said Katrina. They faced questions such as: who, if anyone, should offer material and spiritual reparations to descendents of slaves?
“Traces of the Trade,” like another important documentary at the DR Global Film Festival, tackles the emotional question about how to deal with the sins of our fathers, sins of our past, sins of our country.
Katrina, who devoted nine years to the research and making of “Traces of the Trade,” said making it was liberating, healing and difficult at times.
The film showed at the National Cinemateque on Friday but for those who missed their chance, “Traces of the Trade” will be showing again on Wednesday, November 23 at 9 pm at Santo Domingo’s the Blue Mall Cinema.