American Dignity: a documentary

American Dignity (2025) TRT 20:00 Documentary — Hanson Hosein director

In the shadow of a divisive election, a young organizer seeks wisdom from a civil rights elder—and takes to the streets to rekindle a movement rooted in courage, memory, and the unshakable pursuit of dignity.

In the aftermath of the 2024 U.S. presidential election, voting rights activist Charles Douglas III is disquieted and questioning the future of his community and the movement he has helped lead. Seeking clarity, he turns to civil rights veteran Charles Mauldin, who, at just 17, was sixth in line during the historic 1965 “Bloody Sunday” march across Selma’s Edmund Pettus Bridge.

The two men wrestle with what it means to keep going when history seems to repeat itself, especially during a pivotal interaction as they walk across the bridge. Their conversations unearth hard-won lessons and bitterness from young activists who, sixty years earlier, refused to pause their peaceful struggle for democratic dignity for themselves and their families, even in the face of violent resistance and deep uncertainty.

Director’s Q&A with Douglas and Mauldin

Determined to honor that legacy, Douglas returns to the streets—not just to reflect, but to act. In early January 2025, during the first major election since November, he knocks on doors across Virginia, urging voters to show up for their state’s future. His organizing unfolds in real time, a testament to the unglamorous but vital work of democracy.

Filmed during the first weeks of 2025, American Dignity captures a nation in flux, culminating on the streets of Washington, D.C., where Inauguration Day and Martin Luther King Jr. Day converge. This short documentary is both a snapshot of a critical moment and a meditation on the enduring tension between progress and backlash. It explores the weight of history on those who carry it, the cost of standing still, and the quiet resolve it takes to keep marching—no matter what lies ahead.

I was drawn to make American Dignity because history doesn’t simply live in the past—it moves through us, shaping how we act today. In this film, Charles Mauldin and Charles Douglas III stand at opposite ends of history yet walk the same road: one, a foot soldier on Bloody Sunday who never stopped marching, the other, a modern organizer who knocks on doors to protect the hard-won right to vote. Their present-day inquiry drives the story, making it clear that movements cannot depend on singular heroes. They must be sustained by the many, by those willing to step up—again and again.

With American Dignity, I wanted to explore how we lead during historic, transformative moments, and the responsibility each generation inherits when doing so. The work is never finished, and what we do now will determine what remains. 

Discussing the film on NYT Readalong

I’m an Emmy Award-winning journalist, filmmaker, and storytelling strategist focused on leadership, resilience, and transformative movements. Born in London and raised in America and Canada, I have reported from conflict zones as an NBC News war correspondent in the Middle East and have spent my career exploring the power of narrative in times of change. Now settled in Seattle, I directed the critically acclaimed documentaries Independent America and Rising from Ruins, which examine self-reliance, recovery, and community-driven change. With this latest film, I continue my examination of how history, courage, and community leadership shape our democratic future.

Hollywood theatrical event

FESTIVAL AND PRIVATE EVENT SCREENINGS

August 21: Sidewalk Film Festival — Birmingham, AL

August 7: Northwest African American Museum — Seattle, WA

June 20: Cinema Village — New York City, NY

May 29: Laemmle Noho 7 — Hollywood, CA

April 18: Winthrop Public Library — Winthrop, WA

April 16: Lynwood Theater — Bainbridge Island, WA

April 4: Selma Cinema Festival — Selma, AL

Here’s a podcast conversation I had with Kevin Lynch, from the Historic Lynwood Theater about the film and other subjects (including my favorite movie of all time).

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