Connect with us

Star Tribune

Minneapolis Interview Project tells the city’s story through 92 of its residents

Avatar

Published

on


For seven years, in coffee shops and at her kitchen table, Anne Winkler-Morey interviewed dozens of Minneapolis residents, recording their personal histories. There were no research assistants. There was no grant.

There was just her curiosity.

And, it turns out, her patience. “I had no idea just how much work this was,” Winkler-Morey said. “What I learned is, the only way to make something like this happen, especially if there are no funds, is to be extremely patient.”

For her Minneapolis Interview Project, the 65-year-old historian, author and south Minneapolis resident collected oral histories from 92 people, ages 17 to 90, living in neighborhoods across the city. Among them are activists, artists and educators, people of different races and economic classes.

Recently, the stories found a permanent home at the Hennepin History Museum. And this week, they’ll get an audience at the Capri Theater in North Minneapolis.

Together, they tell a complex history of the city — knotty, luminous, alive.

“It’s such a beautiful tapestry of stories of how we all got here and what we all do here,” said Irna Landrum, whose history is included in the project and who will act as a narrator for the Thursday event.

Those stories are the kind the Hennepin History Museum is telling more often. The museum’s recent exhibitions have dug into redlining and the resulting enduring housing disparities, as well as the construction of Interstate 35W and its displacement of communities of color.

The well-worn tales of the territorial pioneers are “increasingly less relevant to people today, unless you’re a real history nut,” said John Crippen, the museum’s executive director. “But telling the stories of the last 50, 60, 70 years, that’s what gets people going because they can see that immediate impact on their daily life.”

Including the Minneapolis Interview Project in the museum’s archive was “a fairly obvious decision for us,” he said. “It’s a great way to document history as it’s happening.”

Winkler-Morey has lived in Minneapolis for 48 years. But growing up, she moved from place to place, year after year. It taught her to notice differences.

Moving to Durham, N.C., at age 8, she saw that the city was segregated block by block. An unpaved, red clay road on one block, mansions on the next. “I was able to see, ‘Wow, this is different,'” she said. “And I’m grateful for that. ‘Why are things this way?’ I started to ask those questions very young.”

Curious about the country, Winkler-Morey trekked in 2011 and 2012 around the United States’ perimeter on a bike. With her book, “Allegiance to Winds and Waters: Bicycling the Political Divides of the United States,” she was “anxious about getting these places right that I had stayed in for 24, 36 hours.”

She wondered: “What do I know and not know about Minneapolis, where I live?”

As an adjunct professor at Metropolitan State University, Winkler-Morey always assigned her students autobiographical writing. When she started her interviews, too, she looked first to her former students. She began with a list of questions, which she abandoned very quickly.

“Really, I just let people tell their stories,” she said. “They were much, much better interviews if I kept my mouth shut.”

People talked about their family histories, about their political awakenings, about their mentors and mentees. They talked about Jamar Clark and George Floyd.

“I’ve tried to pass on the need to develop a genuine historical consciousness in which you understand that the struggle for freedom is transgenerational,” writer and award-winning professor John Samuel Wright said in a personal history that spans decades and continents. “It is ongoing and unceasing.”

In 2019, as the interviews accumulated, picking up energy and drawing in people who wanted to share, photographer Eric Mueller reached out. He began photographing the people Winkler-Morey had interviewed in places they chose, places that held meaning.

Landrum, 43, stood beside the Mississippi River. She rides her bike there “so regularly, a friend of mine called it my church.” In New Orleans, she told Winkler-Morey, she lived a mile and a half from the same river. “Sometimes I weep about not having had this kind of relationship with the river as a child.”

Winkler-Morey invited Landrum into her home. They sat in her kitchen. Landrum had seen the folks she’d interviewed already — “people I deeply respect and admire.” And she knew Winkler-Morey’s work and writing. So she trusted her with her story.

Together, they explored “what it means to be a child of this water,” Landrum said by phone. What it means to be from land that was once the site of slavery. Land that her family sharecropped. “I’ve continued wrestling with being in that story,” she said, “and finding ways to write my way through it.”

Archives have helped. Taking a course with writer Erin Sharkey, Landrum has used archival documents to learn more about her family’s history. So she loves that Winkler-Morey has created an archive that captures activists’ stories, including her own.

“There’s something that feels really tender and fierce and important and sort of magical about that,” she said. “That we’re also part of the archive.

“We’re still making it for future generations.”

Minneapolis Interview Project
What: An Evening of Real-Life Stories about Social Justice in Minneapolis
When: 6 p.m. Thu., Sept. 14
Where: Capri Theater, 2027 W. Broadway, Mpls.
Tickets: Free, but reservations required
More info: bit.ly/RealLifeStoriesMpls



Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

GIPHY App Key not set. Please check settings

Star Tribune

Kamala Harris campaigns in La Crosse, Wis. as election nears

Avatar

Published

on


“I honestly think he used to understand how tariffs work,” Cuban said. “Back in the 90s and early 2000s, he was a little bit coherent when he talked about trade policy and he actually made a little bit of sense. But I don’t know what happened to him.”

Speaking in Pittsburgh on Thursday, Trump’s running mate, Ohio Republican Sen. JD Vance, pushed back against the Harris campaign’s claims that tariffs would hurt the economy. Vance described the tariffs as a way of discouraging imports and boosting American manufacturing.

“If you are a business, and you rely on foreign slave labor at $3 a day, the only way to rebuild American manufacturing is to say, if you want to bring that product made by slave labor back into the United States of America, you’re going to pay a big fat tariff before you get it back into our country,” Vance said.

Back in Wisconsin, Amara Marshell, freshman at UW-La Crosse, said she showed up to support Harris because she is concerned about what a second Trump presidency could mean for reproductive rights. Like her friend, sophomore Avery Black, Marshell is also excited about the possibility of electing the nation’s first female president.

“Women deserve to have power over their own bodies,” Marshell said. “We shouldn’t have to not be able to get an abortion just because of a president.”

Mary Holman, an 80-year-old retiree from Fort Atkinson, Wis., said she hasn’t been to a rally since former President Barack Obama’s first campaign in 2008. But Holman said she decided to get off the sidelines this cycle because she views the election as a fight to preserve democracy.



Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

Star Tribune

Minnesota offering land for sale in northern recreation areas

Avatar

Published

on


The Minnesota Department of Natural Resources will auction off state lands in popular northern counties next month.

The public land — in Aitkin, Cook, Itasca, and St. Louis counties — will go up for sale during the Department of Natural Resource’s annual online public land sale from Nov. 7 to 21.

“These rural and lakeshore properties may appeal to adjacent landowners or offer recreational opportunities such as space for a small cabin or camping,” the DNR said in a statement.

Properties will be available for bidding Nov. 7 through Nov. 21.

This all can trim for print: The properties include:

40 acres in Aitkin County, with a minimum bid of $85,000

44 acres in Cook County, minimum bid $138,000

1.9 acres in Itasca County, minimum bid $114,000



Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

Star Tribune

Razor wire, barriers to be removed from Third Precinct

Avatar

Published

on


Minneapolis city officials say razor wire, concrete barriers and fencing will be removed from around the former Third Precinct police station – which was set ablaze by protesters after George Floyd’s police killing – in the next three weeks. The burned-out vestibule will be removed within three months with construction fencing to be erected closer to the building.

This week, Minneapolis City Council members have expressed frustration that four years after the protests culminated in a fire at the police station, the charred building still stands and has become a “prop” some conservatives use to rail against city leadership. Most recently, GOP vice presidential nominee JD Vance made a stop outside the building and criticized Gov. Tim Walz’s handling of the 2020 riots.

On Thursday, the council voted 8-3 to approve a resolution calling for “immediate cleanup, remediation, and beautification of the 3000 Minnehaha site including but not limited to the removal of fencing, jersey barriers, barbed wire, and all other exterior blight.”

Council Member Robin Wonsley said the city needs to acknowledge that many police officers stationed in the Third Precinct “waged racist and violent actions” against residents for decades.

Council Member Aurin Chowdhury said the council wants the building cleaned up and beautified “immediately.”

“We cannot allow for this corner to be a backdrop for those who wish to manipulate the trauma of our city for political gain,” Chowdhury said.

Council Member Katie Cashman said the council shouldn’t be divided by “right-wing figures posing in front of the Third Precinct and pandering to conservative interests.”

“It’s really important for us to stay united in our goal, to achieve rehabilitation of this site in a way that advances racial healing and acknowledgement of the past trauma in this community, and to not let those figures divide us here,” she said.



Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

Copyright © 2024 Breaking MN

Log In

Forgot password?

Forgot password?

Enter your account data and we will send you a link to reset your password.

Your password reset link appears to be invalid or expired.

Log in

Privacy Policy

Add to Collection

No Collections

Here you'll find all collections you've created before.