In the elegiac documentary “After Sherman,” cameras glide along waterways, soar above marshes, contemplate churches and travel down Southern roads lined by trees, the moss hanging like braids.
Under the director Jon-Sesrie Goff’s gaze, these places are sacred, even as they remain haunted by a nation’s grievous racial history.
“I’m Gullah, born in exile,” says Goff, who is based in New York, describing his place among the Gullah Geechee people of South Carolina.
Dr. Norvel Goff Sr., a descendant of formerly enslaved people who purchased land in South Carolina after emancipation.
Reverend Goff, who owns property in the Lowcountry, was also the interim pastor at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, after a self-identified white supremacist killed nine Black parishioners gathered for Bible study one evening in June 2015.
Persons:
Sherman, Jon, ”, Goff, Norvel Goff, Reverend Goff
Organizations:
Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church
Locations:
Southern, New York, South Carolina, Charleston