Incorrigible[videorecording] :a film about Velma Demerson /directed by Karin Lee.
Film about Velma Demerson

1 videodisc (46 minutes) :sound, colour ;4 3/4 inches

Based on Velma's memoir 'Incorrigible', published in 2004.

Title from container.

Gemini award winning filmmaker Karin Lee tells the heartbreaking and poignant story of Velma Demerson who was arrested under the Ontario Female Refuges Act (1897-1964) and incarcerated for falling in love with a Chinese man in 1938 at the age of 18 in Toronto, Canada. Pregnant and without legal counsel, Velma was sentenced to one year in prison where she was tortured by the prison's eugenicist doctor who attempted to abort her child. 60 years later Velma attempted to sue the Ontario provincial government for wrongful incarceration. She and paralegal activist Harry Kopyto worked to solve the puzzle of how to sue the government for a case which was past the limitation period. Velma was finally vindicated and won her case in 2003 at the age of 83. This is the story of an ordinary young woman who did nothing wrong, except to fall in love with a man of a different race. It is a story of how institutional racism ruined the lives of two young people in love and destroyed the possibility of their having a happy and healthy family. Most important, it is the inspirational story of a woman who fought back for decades to get justice and won. Velma never stopped trying to get justice for all the women arrested under the Female Refuges Act, and actively lobbied the government, until her death in 2019, to apologize to all women who were wrongly incarcerated. The message in this film to these women and their families is that "they did nothing wrong and it's not their fault."

E.

DVD.

For private home use only.

Canadian

1.Demerson, Velma,--1920-2019.1.Interracial dating--Ontario.2.Race discrimination--Ontario--History.3.Racism--Ontario--History.4.Women prisoners--Ontario--Biography.Dynamic Details
#661

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