Rosa Young
film debuts in Selma, Ala.
By
Paula Schlueter Ross (paula.ross@lcms.org)
Famed
educator-missionary Dr. Rosa Jinsey Young was known for many things in her
lifetime. She was a high-school valedictorian who urged listeners to serve
others. A teacher who helped start 30 schools for black children in Alabama. A
church planter who helped found 35 Lutheran congregations in the South. An
author who penned Light in the Dark Belt,
her autobiography.
To
the Rev. Dr. McNair Ramsey, one of her former students, “she was always a
recruiter for the church.” If she told a young lady, “You’re going to be a
teacher,” Ramsey recalls in the new docudrama, “The First Rosa,” “there was no
question about it. If she spoke those words over you, somehow the Holy Spirit
and the Lord just worked it out” and the young woman would, indeed, become a
teacher, he said.
With boys, Young “would place her
hand upon their heads and say, ‘You are going to be a preacher.’ And, of
course, there were those who didn’t want to be a preacher who would duck and
run to keep Dr. Young from placing her hands upon their heads,” Ramsey laughed.
Because if she did, “it was almost a given that you were going to be one of
those preachers of hers.”
To the Rev. Dr. Ardon Albrecht —
who wrote, produced and directed the new film — Rosa Young was “a true
theologian” and a bonafide “hero.” Her life reflected prayer, meditation and
trial — the three things that make a theologian, Albrecht said, quoting Martin
Luther. And, he added, she displayed courage, strength and morality as she
withstood adversity — the traits of true heroes, as noted by Russian novelist
and philosopher Fyodor Dostoyevsky.
“All Christian heroes are shadows
of Christ,” Albrecht said, echoing theologian John Piper. “Rosa Young was truly
a shadow of Christ,” and making the film about her life — what the 78-year-old
director calls his “swan song” — gave him an “opportunity to lay a figurative
wreath at the tomb of someone who to most people has been an unknown Christian
hero.”
A ‘fitting’ premiere
Some 300 people were treated to the
first public showings of “The First Rosa,” which highlights the struggles and
successes of Young, known as “the mother of black Lutheranism in central
Alabama.”
Fittingly, the film premiered
during the June 4-5 convention of the LCMS Southern District in historic Selma,
Ala., on the campus of Concordia College Alabama — the same grounds where Young
had served the last 15 years of her career as a teacher and adviser to black
students, both there and at the former Alabama Lutheran Academy and College.
(She had helped found the academy in 1922.) Young retired in 1961 and received
an honorary doctorate from Concordia Theological Seminary that same year. She
died 10 years later, at age 81, and is buried in front of the first church she
helped plant: Christ Lutheran Church, in her birthplace of Rosebud, Ala.
Two
LCMS women were early advocates for producing the film — Susan Hill of Mount Clemens,
Mich., who came up with the idea, says she is overjoyed that her “hoping,
planning and praying for five years” paid off, and Kaye Wolff of Southfield,
Mich., who calls the film “a class act,” especially in light of its tight
budget, and said, “Many thanks go out to the dedicated volunteers from Selma.”
With
a nod toward civil-rights icon Rosa Parks — who famously refused to give up her
bus seat to a white passenger on Dec. 1, 1955 — the completed 42-minute film,
“The First Rosa: Teacher, Confessor, Church Planter,” dramatizes the life of
Young amid quotes from her autobiography, on which the new docudrama is based.
Three
actresses portray Young at different ages in the film:
- Jordan Alexis Donegan plays Young as a child — smart, teaching her siblings how to read, studying the Bible, praying often and vowing to God that “if He would give me a higher education, I would serve Him with it.”
- Jasmine Gatewood is the young-adult Young — starting her first school on her family’s property at age 22, writing to Booker T. Washington for help after boll weevils destroyed the cotton crops and nearly closed her school, and serving alongside Rev. Nils Bakke, a missionary with the Synodical Conference (which included the LCMS), to start schools and congregations throughout central Alabama.
- Yvette Jones-Smedley plays Young in her older years — sharing some of the thoughts and feelings she expressed in her book.
The
film includes comments from several of Young’s actual students, now retired,
such as Ramsey, quoted earlier.
Also
featured, the Rev. John H. Davis Sr. of Robertsdale, Ala., says, “I never lost
the dream nor forgot the commitment that I made in 1927 to Rosa J. Young to
become a Lutheran minister.”
Recalling
Young’s “humble spirit” and “tenacity,” the Rev. James B. Marshall of Mobile,
Ala., calls her “a lady who knew what she wanted and was not going to take no
for an answer.”
In
the film’s introduction, LCMS President Rev. Dr. Matthew C. Harrison says
Young’s “is a story that can’t help but inspire you, as it has me.”
‘Story
had to be told’
The
maker of the film, Albrecht, said he was “hooked on this project” after reading
just two chapters of Young’s Light in the Dark Belt: “I realized that
Rosa Young, a woman I had never heard of, was a giant among 20th
century Christians, a true Lutheran hero whose story had to be told.”
Having
produced and directed hundreds of TV shows for the Synod and its auxiliary, the
International Lutheran Laymen’s League, during his career, Albrecht spent some
three years on “The First Rosa,” which gave him “the opportunity to do it all:
write, produce and direct.” He says he’s “very pleased” with the completed
film, which included editing assistance from the “enormously talented” Ben
DeSousa of NBC’s “Today Show.”
At
the recent premiere in Selma, the “positive response” of viewers was “universal
and overwhelming,” Albrecht told Reporter.
And
he’s “convinced,” he added, “that the LCMS can repeat today what Rosa Young
accomplished nearly a century ago. If this film inspires a new generation to
devote themselves to missionary outreach like she did, pray unceasingly like
she did, meditate on the Gospel like she did, and refuse to bow under the load
of trial like she did, there will be a spiritual fire in the LCMS like we’ve
not seen since her day.”
Young’s
great-niece, Mary Jones Wise of Minneapolis, agrees that “this is a story that
needs to be told” and she hopes the new film will impress upon today’s
mission-minded Lutherans what one person can accomplish, with God’s help.
Although
Jones Wise admitted that some scenes in the film might be “unsettling” for some
blacks to watch, “this is a documentary that is very important to The Lutheran
Church—Missouri Synod as it seeks to serve all people, especially blacks and
the larger community,” she said.
And
she hopes the film might be shown on public television at some future date, she
added, to let others know about Young’s contributions to education and
religion.
The
Rev. Thomas Noon, pastor of Zion Lutheran Church, an African-American
congregation in Bessemer, Ala., and a voting delegate to the Southern District
convention, said watching “The First Rosa” was a “highlight” of the gathering.
Noon
said he liked how the film explains the “spiritual legacy” of Young: “What a
debt of appreciation” the LCMS owes her for bringing “the Gospel message
through education to the Black Belt of Alabama,” he said. “The lifetime
dedication of this woman to that end was phenomenal!”
And
he “definitely” believes all LCMS congregation members would benefit by seeing
the film. “So often we see missions as ‘somewhere else’ rather than in our own
backyards. And we see very few stories involving people of color leading the
charge like Rosa J. Young,” Noon told Reporter. “I believe this cannot
help but to bring a new awareness and support for African-American
congregations and missions in our midst.”
Southern
District President Rev. Kurtis D. Schultz said the film “brought to life a
sister in Christ who I have grown to greatly admire” and Young’s “passionate
living was a true reflection of our convention theme, ‘Hope: Jesus Changes
Everything.’ “
For
many, Schultz added, “the showing of the film enriched their visit to the Dr.
Rosa Young Museum on campus.”
Nancy
Kaul of Hattiesburg, Miss., a member of the Southern District board of
directors, said she “knew very little about Rosa Young’s many contributions”
before she saw the film. “As a retired librarian, it was heartwarming to learn
of her tenacity and her passion for literacy and education for all people,
especially as it applied to opening up the Word of God so that more people
could learn about the saving work of Jesus.
“I
highly recommend this film to all LCMS congregations, members and friends.”
More
showings this fall
Plans call for “The First Rosa” to be shown at various
locations this fall, and then for the film to be distributed to Synod
congregations and schools, along with accompanying materials, in January 2016.
It’s
Albrecht’s dream for every LCMS Lutheran to see the film — and to be
inspired by it.
After
the district convention closed, he invited students from two local
congregations who had served as “extras” in the film to two additional
showings, asking them to come see him after the show “if they felt even a faint
nudge to become a pastor or teacher.” Several students sought him out
afterwards, so — perhaps just as Rosa Young might have done — he talked with
them and asked them to stay in touch.
“How
exciting it would be if the Lord uses the initial screenings of this
documentary to begin drawing today’s young people into full-time pastoral and
teaching ministries!” Albrecht said. “And what a grand adventure it will be if
He continues to do so with each successive showing.”
(To see
photos of the September 2014 filming of “The First Rosa,” click here.)
Posted
June 25, 2015 / Updated July 13, 2015
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