The film's trailer opens with chilling quotes from American eugenicists like Sanger. Her attitude toward the "inferior" black race is startling for a woman born in Corning, New York, to a devout Catholic family of eleven children.
Priests for Life has kept a close eye on this issue for many years.
Rev. Frank Pavone's African-American outreach is led by Alveda King, a niece of Dr. Martin Luther King. King and Day Gardner, head of the National Black Pro-Life Union, are the country's most visible black opponents of abortion. Their combined efforts had been slow-going until this recent breakthrough by Georgia Right to Life and the inroads made by Crutcher's film.
A telling detail at the end of the New York Times article helps illustrate just how much progress has been made on this front. Maafa 21 was shown at the historic Morris Brown College in Atlanta, which has been graduating black leaders in business and politics for decades. It made an impression.
"Before we saw the movie, I was pro-choice," said Markita Eddy, a sophomore.
But were she to get pregnant now? "It showed me that maybe I should want to keep my child no matter what my position was," Eddy said, "just because of the conspiracy."
Not long ago, I listened to a lengthy discussion among several pro-life leaders about abortion in the African American community. Some believed that this was where the pervasive culture of death could actually be turned back. I responded that winning that battle, given the alignment of African American leadership with the Democratic Party, would take a very long time and had a low probability of success. Maybe I was wrong.