ANACOSTIA RIVER

Budding Filmmakers Take On the Roles Of Expert, Advocate

During a break in shooting along the Anacostia River in the District, Robert Hopkins, 20, and Joniqua Hutchinson, 13, search for rocks to skip across the water.
During a break in shooting along the Anacostia River in the District, Robert Hopkins, 20, and Joniqua Hutchinson, 13, search for rocks to skip across the water. (Photos By Robert E. Pierre -- The Washington Post)
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By Robert E. Pierre
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, April 23, 2007

Tourists and tall ships at the Baltimore Inner Harbor filled the lens of student videographer Robert Hopkins as he lined up the perfect camera angle.

A fellow student noted that the tall ships that once plied the Anacostia River brought slaves across the ocean.

"Some slaves jumped off the ships because they would rather be dead," Rinita Hutchinson, 14, said knowingly. "And they would throw the bodies of slaves who died in the water. The sharks ate them."

The past year has been filled with revelations for Rinita and a handful of other District youths who have produced a video about the Anacostia River and the neighborhood that shares its name. The budding filmmakers speak confidently about the river's past, its present-day pollution and the cleaner future that many envision.

Their documentary, "Lessons From the Waterfront: The Anacostia," will have its first showing today during a $100-a-ticket river cruise. The cruise will raise money for the Multi-Media Training Institute, a private organization that has been teaching young people the intricacies of making videos for 25 years. It is expected to draw local dignitaries, including Mayor Adrian M. Fenty (D) and D.C. Council member Marion Barry (D-Ward 8).

The documentary is the fruit of script-writing classes at the institute, which also offers courses in sound production, entrepreneurship and Web design. Some of the students on this shoot are veteran filmmakers; last year, they produced a documentary about fighting and gunplay among young girls.

That video, like the one about the Anacostia, was written and directed by the students, tapping into a priority for environmental groups.

"The goal is that since it's produced by kids, maybe it will resonate more with a younger audience," said Jim Connolly, executive director of the Anacostia Watershed Society, a sponsor of the project. The society also holds pontoon and canoe tours on the Anacostia, which meanders from near Bladensburg through Southeast Washington to the Potomac River.

For the documentary, the students interviewed conservationists, old-timers who swam in the river as children and young people unaware of its history. They shot their film at numerous locations, including the Frederick Douglass house in Anacostia, the waterfront near Bladensburg and Baltimore's Inner Harbor.

"We did shoots on boats to get a glimpse of how sewage companies dump into the river," said Hopkins, 20, of Congress Heights. "We talked to residents that have lived near the river all their lives and want to return it to its glory."

And glory it had. Bladensburg was the busiest port town in Maryland during the 18th century. Pierre Charles L'Enfant, the designer of Washington, wrote in the 1700s that Anacostia's harbor was "in every respect to be preferred to that of the Potomac." Ships sailed up the Anacostia to load tobacco for voyages across the ocean to Europe.

No longer. That's why the students ventured to Baltimore recently -- to photograph the kind of traffic the Anacostia once supported.


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