Harm to Children Was Part of the Point’: New Film Examines US Family Separations

Harm to Children Was Part of the Point’: New Film Examines US Family Separations

“It’s interesting how things have radically changed,” Morris says via Zoom from a book-lined office in Cambridge, Massachusetts. “The movie, which presumably is recounting past history, seems to be a crystal ball into what may happen next and that was not clearly imagined at the outset. But it is clearly suggested now.”

Separated is based on the NBC News correspondent Jacob Soboroff’s book Separated: Inside an American Tragedy (“one of the best collaborations I’ve ever had”, says the Oscar-winning Morris) and premieres on the MSNBC network on 7 December. It is an excruciatingly timely reminder of how Trump ripped 5,500 children from their parents (up to 1,400 of whom are not yet confirmed as reunited).

The 93-minute documentary forensically details how the first Trump administration’s policy of family separations was deliberate, systematic and intentionally inhumane, leaving children in wire-mesh cages with feelings of fear and abandonment. Trump said with casual cruelty: “When you have that policy, people don’t come. I know it sounds harsh but we have to save our country.”

Wearing white shirt and spectacles, sipping from a white coffee mug and speaking slowly in honeyed tones, Morris reflects: “The separations was an abomination. It was racist, was cruel, was unnecessary. As one of the interviewees in my film says, there were other levers that we could pull. This seemed to be something we did not need to do.”

Donald Trump had campaignod on a crackdown on illegal

Could revisiting the topic of family separation instigate⁢ further division and inflame tensions surrounding immigration debates?

**Interviewer:** Errol Morris, your new documentary “Separated” dives into a dark ‍chapter of recent American history – the Trump administration’s ⁢family separation policy.‍ Given the current political climate and ongoing debates around immigration, do you ​think revisiting this issue now will spark a ‌productive dialog or further inflame tensions?

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