Film spurs hate mail from those
who say she is attempting to turn kids into Christian terrorists
By Gina Piccalo
Tribune newspapers: Los Angeles Times
September 29, 2006
"Jesus Camp," a documentary feature film that follows evangelical
Christian children at a religious summer camp, won prizes and
critical praise on the summer festival circuit, but it wasn't until
its quiet opening in the Midwest two weeks ago that a news clip
about the film hit YouTube.com, inciting a whirlwind of controversy.
Already the movie, which opens nationally Oct. 6, has split the
Christian community and horrified those who fear the ascendance of
the religious right on the national stage.
Bloggers of all stripes have been so disgusted by the bits of the
film they have seen on the Web that the film's central subject, camp
founder Pastor Becky Fischer, has become a public figure, bombarded
with hateful e-mails and bracing for media appearances, including a
scheduled appearance on ABC's "Good Morning America."
The film follows Rachael, 10, Levi, 13, and Tory, 11, engaging and
articulate children from Midwestern towns who attended Fischer's
Kids on Fire Bible camp in Devils Lake, N.D., in 2005. The
filmmakers, Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady, take a straightforward
look at their subjects.
The film's cherub-faced children cheer when asked if they'd be
willing to give up their lives for Jesus, pray over a cardboard
cutout of President Bush and sob as they plead for an end to
abortion. One is home-schooled by a mother who teaches that "science
doesn't prove anything."
`This is war'
At one point in the film, Fischer shouts to the children, "This is
war! Are you part of it or not?" She proudly compares her work to
the indoctrination of young boys by extremist Muslims in Pakistan
and elsewhere. The film intersperses footage of Fischer and the
children with clips of radio talk-show host Mike Papantonio, a
liberal Methodist, excoriating conservative Christians like Fischer.
Fischer is disappointed by the way she appears in the film. "I do
understand they're out to tell a story and they felt they found it
with some of the political things," she said by phone from her home
in Bismarck, N.D. "And they're out to show the most dramatic,
exotic, extreme things they found in my ministry, and I'm not
ashamed of those things, but without context, it's really difficult
to defend what you're seeing on the screen."
More controversy over the film erupted last week when Rev. Ted
Haggard, whose constituency at the National Association of
Evangelicals is 30 million strong, took a public stance against it,
saying that the film makes evangelicals look scary. His condemnation
apparently chilled the film's opening in 13 theaters in Colorado,
Kansas, Texas, Oklahoma and Missouri on Sept. 15.
Even before its release, lurid fascination with the film's trailer
bloomed on the Internet. A Sept. 17 ABC News report on the movie
turned up on YouTube.com shortly after it aired, and by the next
day, the segment was the Web site's most-viewed clip, with about
200,000 downloads in a matter of hours.
When Fischer arrived home Tuesday after a few days touring with the
filmmakers, her e-mail inbox was loaded with hate mail. She spent
the next two days writing lengthy explanations to the most common
accusations--"How dare you brainwash those kids!" and "Are you
raising up Christian terrorists or another Hitler Youth
movement?"--then posted them on her Web site Thursday.
"I've gotten thousands of hits on my Web site from those people,"
she said. "I'm wearing sunglasses in the airports. It's really
making me nervous."
Haggard, who appears in the film noting that when evangelicals vote,
they determine an election, acknowledged he hated the film and
called it propaganda for the far left. He said the filmmakers take
the charismatic, evangelical jargon too literally and portray the
children's and Fischer's "war talk" as violent and extremist, when
it's just allegorical.
`None of it's clarified'
"It doesn't mean we're going to establish a theocracy and force
people to obey what they think is God's law," he said. "None of
that's clarified in the movie."
Ewing and Grady said they want the film to make a broad statement
about how politics and faith have become inexorably intertwined in
America. Yet the conversations that have been sparked by the movie
are less about the stark differences between people with different
ideologies and more about the interest in bridging them.
"No one's going anywhere, and no one's going to change their minds,"
Grady said. "So some sort of compromise has to happen, or we're just
going to become more and more divided."
All the controversy surrounding the film, Grady said, "speaks to the
fact that this is a conversation that people are dying to have."
Grady and Ewing, who last year won awards for their documentary "The
Boys of Baraka" about a group of inner-city American kids attending
a school in Africa, said everyone was enthusiastic about
participating in the project. But as Fischer explained, no one,
including the filmmakers, expected the film to be so political.
The Bible, she said, instructs people to "pray for those in
authority over us and in government positions so we can live a
peaceful life."
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