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I'm Back  . . .

After several months away traveling around the country and through Central America, I'm back home to my favorite place in the world!

I was home during the Great Flood of 2024, and like you, we struggled with no utilities, no internet and little connection with the world.  Hopefully your damage was as minimal as ours was, but if it was not, I hope you are getting the help you need.

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Floods are never one-time events

As you know, we produced a film about the 1916 flood at its 100th anniversary 8 years ago.  The focus of that film was to tell the cautionary tale that we live in a flood-prone and landslide-prone area and that although we cannot control the weather, we can control how we live, where we build and how we prepare ourselves whenever nature shows us her ferocious side.



We brought that film to dozens of communities throughout Western North Carolina, to policymakers in several counties, to emergency responders to help them better prepare for weather events like the 1916 flood and ultimately to PBS so that thousands of people could understand the full extent of what elders who lived through major floods had learned. 



I know oral histories and films don't fix roofs or put food on the table, but I truly believe that the better we understand the past and how folks coped with similar situations in the past, the stronger we become and the better prepared we are.



Behind the scenes, we have been working diligently to insure many of the oral histories we produced during film production on Come Hell or High Water, Remembering the 1916 Flood are available to you.  You can find them at our Elder Wisdom Oral History Archive here: 

https://saveculture.org/elder-...

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A New Flood Project

Given all that's transpired over the past month or so, we've been talking with local filmmakers about how best to chronicle this storm, how people responded and what lessons we can glean from what our community is going through.



We will be coordinating with the Henderson County Genealogy and History Center and Blue Ridge Community College to record current flood oral histories. Our focus will be on long-term elders to this area, but we will open this up to the wider community as well soon. If you have a story to tell, want to help with this project or become a sponsor, please let us know HERE

 https://saveculture.org/contac...

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Current Projects In The Works

Before I left, the Center had completed most of its production of a new film on Hendersonville's black history with a focus on its thirst for education, with the upcoming 60th anniversary of school integration commemoration in 2025.



Even though I've lived here awhile, filming this project opened my eyes to inequities I never realized as well as the strength of the black community to overcome many of these challenges despite being surrounded by discrimination and disdain.



This film will be released in 2025 but it will require raising the funds to pay for our editor, graphics person and other elements for this to become a professional and enduring legacy to our community.



I fully understand that many of us are picking up the pieces from Helene and generously supporting the stellar relief work going on.  So why support local films? 



I truly believe that culture is not something we need to live, but culture gives us something to live FOR.  That's why we're kicking off the Center's End of Year Campaign this month to help support the work of the black history film mentioned above, the flood project which we hope to start shortly as well as a bonus film about the role river cane played in Cherokee history.

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End of Year Campaign

We'll be announcing our End of Year Campaign shortly, but there's no reason to wait!  Every donation of $50 or more makes you eligible for a beautiful painting by Matt Wyland which has been generously donated to us by the estate of Dr. Matthew Young. This beautiful nature art inspires us to the richness of our natural heritage and why keeping these cultural and nature-based stories alive is important.



Donors of $500 or more are eligible to take one of these beauties home with you!  Please support our films, oral history work and more by donating now HERE. Or mail your tax deductible donation to us at:

Center for Cultural Preservation

PO Box 1066

Flat Rock, NC 28731



Thank you!

Pass on our newsletters to your friends and family or give the give of culture by giving them a DVD of one of our films today! Find our store HERE

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