![]() |
|
|
RENEGADE PREACHER PROFILED ON PBS NASHVILLE--Will Campbell, ordained as a Baptist preacher in backwoods Mississippi, was the only white minister present at the creation of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. He escorted nine black students through angry mobs at Central High School in Little Rock. He was present at sit-ins, civil rights demonstrations, and strategy meetings with Martin Luther King.
"In all these years I can’t think of one thing I’ve actually, personally, accomplished," he once wrote. Yet he is considered by many people to be one of the nation’s most influential spiritual leaders. "God’s Will," an hour-long documentary about this enigmatic, provocative preacher, airs at 10 p.m. EDT, Friday, August 25, on PBS. (Alabama viewers please note: This program will not air on APT on August 25. It will, however, air Friday, August 18, at 9:30 p.m. and again on Tuesday, August 22, at 9:00 p.m.) Campbell is "a deeply religious man," President Jimmy Carter says of his friend who chews tobacco and wears cowboy boots. "One who has a great deal of spirit. Calm. Wise. Witty. Eloquent." Campbell’s memoir, "Brother to a Dragonfly," was nominated for a National Book Award. In his 13 books since he has continued writing about race, religion, and community. Campbell grew up poor in rural Mississippi, and when he preached his first sermon in his community’s church he read from a pulpit Bible that had been presented by the KKK. But he could never embrace his society’s preoccupation with keeping people segregated and groups apart. "I don’t know how to say this without sounding terribly presumptuous," he explains, "but I don’t recognize the concept of different kinds of people." "Will Campbell is an articulate and authentic witness to what is the best of humanity," says minister and civil rights activist James Lawson. "He should be one of the models that America lifts up for what it means to be an American. What it means to be a human being." "God’s Will" explores Campbell’s life, his efforts to repudiate racism and division, and his work to reach out to civil rights workers and avowed racists alike. The program includes interviews with the celebrities and writers who are among his friends, such as Tom T. Hall, Waylon Jennings, John Egerton, and Jules Feiffer.
"There is a little tavern we go to quite often," he says, talking about his rural home near Nashville. "I marry the people. Bury the people. Get them out of jail, or try to, and so on. Every one of them, without exception, would be at my house as quickly as they could get there. And I would be at theirs. "That is church." "God’s Will" was produced by Michael Letcher for The University of Alabama Center for Public Television and Radio. The program was funded in part by a grant from the Southern Humanities Media Fund. Additional funding was provided by the Tennessee Humanities Council.
Press Releases || This Month from CPT&R || The Alabama Experience Order Tapes || The University of Alabama Center for Public Television For more
information: |