‘Best of Enemies’ tells true story of friendship between civil rights activist and former KKK leader

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'Best of Enemies' tells the true story of friendship between a civil rights activist and a former KKK leader in North Carolina. Watch Taraji P. Henson talk to NBCNightlyNews about working on the upcoming film.

In 1971, black residents in Durham, North Carolina, were fighting for school integration. White families in the city pushed back, hoping to keep schools segregated. Locally, the government organized a charrette — a 10-day meeting where both sides were forced to come together and find a solution. Based on a true story, Bill Riddick was the moderator who traveled to Durham and appointed a bold civil rights leader, Ann Atwater, and a local KKK leader, C.P. Ellis, to be co-chairs of the board.

Somehow, through conversations with one another, Ellis changed his mind. At the end of the meeting he ripped up his KKK card, renounced his Klan membership and eventually became lifelong friends with Atwater. In 2005,“Ann Atwater taught me to fight for what you believe in,” Henson said. “And change is worth fighting for. Because you’re fighting for generations that [are] coming behind you. You’re fighting to make this world a better place.

Henson hopes that after watching the movie, people will feel compelled to listen to those they disagree with. Ellis has been part of other headliner stories including the attacks on the World Trade Center. She was the first person to identify the attack on the air as “Nine-Eleven." She’s reported on Hurricane Katrina, the death of Michael of Jackson and the Haiti earthquake.

 

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NBCNightlyNews But ignore all the good Ben Carson does. Here’s Today. He’s been doing phenomenal things never reported by MSM. Why do you hide it?

NBCNightlyNews Imagine a black civil rights activist being friends with a member of the kkk, I was shocked when I heard about this movie

NBCNightlyNews 'Nope. The KKK dude must never have a semblance of peace in his life. The fact that the, so called, 'civil rights activist' would even think being friends with someone like that makes them evil too.' -Liberals today

NBCNightlyNews All this stem's from the parents in childhood. Many kids learn hateful & bigoted ways from their parents. This is how some grow up to join the KKK or to become a Skin Head. When they get older some realize that they made a big mistake by listening to their parents bigotry.

NBCNightlyNews Hey Hollywood, Stop with the white male racist redemption stories.

NBCNightlyNews That's also the name of a similarly titled and themed book about Israel and Palestine that came out in the 1990s. It was written by a former PLO member and Mossad agent who became friends: I quite liked it as a college student.

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‘The Best of Enemies’ tells story of a civil rights activist and KKK leader who overcame hateThe new film is based on the true story of a civil rights activist and a KKK leader were forced to co-chair a school committee in Durham, N.C., in 1971. “You can’t fight hate with hate,” actress Taraji P. Henson says of what she hopes audiences will take away from the movie. FakeNews FakeNewsCNN
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