‘Tribal Justice’ to air on POV

SALISBURY — Anne Makepeace’s film “Tribal Justice” has been screened at The Moviehouse in Millerton and at film festivals and law schools across the country and in Canada. But it will get a much larger audience next Monday, Aug. 21, when it airs as part of the PBS series POV.

Makepeace, a Lakeville resident, said “Tribal Justice” is about two tribal courts in California and the women who are the chief judges in those courts.

It’s not surprising that Makepeace focused the film on two individuals.

“I don’t make films that are obviously issue films. I make films about people who draw me in and who are involved in things that I think are compelling and dramatic — and also important.”

The two judges, Abby Abinanti of the Yurok tribe in Northern California and Claudette White of the Quechan Tribe in Southern California, are involved in nothing less than reforming the criminal justice system.

Both judges are, in Makepeace’s words, “shifting the paradigm of the criminal justice system away from a punitive system that results in mass incarceration to a system that focuses on restoring both the victim and the perpetrator. They are trying to adapt their traditional forms of justice and dispute resolution to the modern world.”

What’s more, their efforts have had ramifications beyond the tribal courts. Some U.S. state courts — Makepeace cited one in Brooklyn and one in Cook County, Ill. — are attempting to institute restorative justice, in some cases going so far as to bring in tribal judges to help train them.

Since its release at the beginning of this year, “Tribal Justice” has garnered praise and positive reviews. But airing on POV raises things to a new level.

“It’s just the best thing that has happened for this film. POV, for me, is the best place on television for documentaries. It’s not just that they’ll broadcast it, and they’ll stream it for free for 30 days during and after the broadcast. That’s fabulous. But even more fabulous is the outreach they do. 

“They have hired experts to create a discussion guide and a tool kit, and those are free and available on the POV website for anybody. And they are making DVDs available, as a loan, to many institutions across the country. They create educational materials. They hold screenings. They want people to see these films because they think they’re important.”

Makepeace has written, produced and directed a total of eight documentaries, and three of them have been shown on POV, which is impressive when you consider the odds each film faced.

“POV only runs in the summer, so they only take 15 or 18 films a year, and I think they receive something like a thousand submissions, maybe more. So it’s a huge honor to have the film there.”

She is also delighted with the air date this film happened to get.

“I love that it’s on the day of the solar eclipse. Watch the eclipse and then that night you can watch ‘Tribal Justice.’” She laughed. “I’m not sure what the symbolism is. Maybe: The return of the sun is a harbinger of a great viewing night.”

For most of the country, maybe. But in keeping with its usual contrariness, CPTV does not air POV on its main channel. Viewers in the Northwest Corner will be able to see “Tribal Justice” on CPTVSpirit, which is channel 966 on Comcast and not available in HD, on Wednesday, Aug. 23, at 10 p.m.

For more information about Makepeace’s films, go to www.makepeaceproductions.com.

For materials related to “Tribal Justice,” go to www.pbs.org/pov/tribaljustice.

For information on setting up a screening, go to that URL or to www.makepeaceproductions.com/tribaljustice/outreach.

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