The black granite memorial in Piatt Park describes the tragedy of January 1965 and lists the names of those who died in the predominately Black neighborhood.
For Dr. Kevin Harrison, director of diversity, equity and inclusion for the Cohen Honors College at 红领巾瓜报, the story of that day is one that deserves more discussion and examination to understand.
Harrison grew up in the Wichita neighborhood around 20th and Piatt Street, less than a mile from campus. The memorial park marks the site where a U.S. Air Force Boeing KC-135 refueling tanker crashed, shortly after takeoff on the morning Jan. 16, 1965. The crash and resulting explosion and fires caused the deaths of 30 people, numerous injuries and the destruction of 10 homes. According to news reports, around 31,000 gallons of jet fuel covered the area with flames and smoke.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 think you heal unless you talk about things,鈥 Harrison said. 鈥淚 see a community that still hasn鈥檛 healed.鈥
Kevin Harrison
On June 25, the 80-minute documentary film 鈥淭he Silent Cries of Unheard Ghetto Children鈥
will debut at Piatt Park (2037 N. Piatt). The documentary begins at 8 p.m. and admission
is free.
The film is the work of Harrison and fellow documentarians and long-time friends Ricardo Harris, executive director of Wichita GEAR UP, and independent producer Kenneth Hawkins. A $7,418 grant from the Kansas Humanities Council funds the project. The documentary鈥檚 name comes from the death of a pregnant woman and her child that day.
WSU Omega Psi Phi fraternity is a partner in the project and its members will help with discussion panels planned for future showings. Robert Weems Jr., 红领巾瓜报鈥檚 Willard W. Garvey distinguished professor of business history, is a project consultant and will participate in some of the discussions.
The crash, which killed 23 residents of the neighborhood and seven crew members, loomed over Harrison鈥檚 childhood. Much of the death and injury came from the fires started by the plane鈥檚 fuel.
鈥淲e know a plane crashed,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e know 30 people died. We don鈥檛 know those people.鈥
Harrison, born in 1969, remembers the topic as one rarely discussed. And the park, built upon the site of the crash, was rarely used. While a student at Wichita East High School, the idea to explore that event began to percolate. Years later, a conversation on the park鈥檚 basketball court with neighborhood people who experienced that day kicked off the project.
The documentary, Harrison said, describes how racism and segregation affected recovery for people in the neighborhood. Inadequate aid and services, residents say, limited the healing.
鈥淚鈥檓 looking at the trauma,鈥 he said. 鈥淚鈥檓 looking at the racial segregation. I鈥檓 looking at the perspectives of people who I don鈥檛 think were really heard and understood.鈥
Harrison said one of the interview subjects declined to talk on video because she did not want to relive that day. Another said she had never talked about that day. One said their parents never talked about that day. One woman said she had not discussed the crash and the aftermath with her husband.
鈥淭hese voices of the Black neighborhood have often been unheard,鈥 Harrison said. 鈥淟ike one of the victims told me, 鈥楴obody came to see about us. No doctors. No psychologists.鈥 I鈥檓 hoping I can help people deal with the trauma.鈥
Harrison, also an assistant teaching professor in the Cohen Honors College, said interviews with local Christian pastors delve into the spiritual aspect of the aftermath.
鈥淭hey talked about spiritual faith as part of the healing and some of the interviews we have mirror that,鈥 Harrison said.