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Razing Liberty Square

Miami is ground-zero for sea-level-rise. When residents of the historic Liberty Square public housing project learn about a $300 million revitalization plan for their neighborhood, which has long suffered from disinvestment, they know that this sudden interest comes from the fact that their neighborhood is located on the highest-and-driest ground in the city. Now they must prepare to fight a new form of racial injustice - Climate Gentrification.

Razing Liberty Square is set in the oldest segregated public housing project in the South: Liberty Square, at the heart of Miami’s Liberty City. Underserved for decades and suffering from chronic disinvestment, Liberty City has one of the highest poverty rates in the nation. But as rising seas threaten Miami’s luxurious beachfront, wealthy property owners are pushing inland to higher ground. Liberty City, which sits on a ridge, is now real estate gold.

Our story begins in 2017, when the first homes of Liberty Square are being razed to the ground and replaced by a new mixed-income development. Initially, there was hope in the community that this development would be different from past urban renewal projects, but residents cannot forget Miami’s long history of broken promises. For the past 5 years, we have been filming with the people that are impacted by the developers’ bulldozers.

Sam Kenley is a single mother of seven who has lived in public housing all her life and now has to decide what is best for her family, to stay or to go. Samantha Quarterman is the founder and principal of Liberty Square’s only alternative school who was promised by the developer that he would build her a brand-new school building. Local environmental activist Valencia Gunder sees educating her community about Climate Gentrification as a powerful weapon to achieve climate justice. Aaron McKinney is working as ‘community liaison’ for the developer. Aaron is convinced mixed-income housing is the solution to generational poverty, but he knows the ambiguity of his position: “My own family thinks I sold my soul to the devil.”

The stories of Razing Liberty Square originate at the intersection of race, climate, and gentrification. Our film interrogates assumptions of who matters—and who doesn’t—and about land and who controls it.

About the Filmmaker

Katja Esson is an Academy Award-nominated filmmaker based in Miami. Known for her intimate character-driven documentaries tackling race, class, and gender, her credits include FERRY TALES which turns the unlikely setting of the Staten Island Ferry Powder Room into a celebration of sisterhood (HBO 2004). In 2007, HOLE IN THE SKY – THE SCARS OF 9/11 received the Gold-Award at the World-Media-Festival. Her 2011 film SKYDANCER, about two Mohawk ironworkers torn between the Akwesasne reservation and New York City, received nominations for Best Film, Best Director, and Best Cinematography at the Shanghai Film Festival and premiered on PBS and ARTE in 2011. POETRY OF RESILIENCE was nominated for the Cinema for Peace Award in Berlin, in 2012. Her five-part documentary series BACKROADS USA (2014) and AMERICAN RIVERS (2016) premiered on ARTE and PBS in 2018. A Simons-Public Humanities Fellow at Kansas University, her films have screened at the Museum of Modern Art, American Museum of Natural History, and the Smithsonian. Recently she received a VR Equity Fellowship at the March on Washington Film Festival. Katja’s work has been supported by the National Endowment for the Arts, the Knight Foundation, ITVS, IDA, Doc Society NYSCA, the Redford Center, Sundance and the Ford Foundation.

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