By Way of Canarsie
Special | 14m 15sVideo has Audio Description, Closed Captions
An experimental series of vignettes exploring Canarsie’s unique relationship to water.
A portrait of an oft-neglected community imagining possible futures at odds with the present. Using various formats, these vignettes explore Canarsie’s unique relationship to the water through recreation, brief encounters, and expressive use of analog film, granting an understanding of this predominantly Black neighborhood’s shared desires for recognition and respect.
See all videos with Audio DescriptionADMajor funding for POV is provided by PBS, The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, the Wyncote Foundation, Reva & David Logan Foundation, the Open Society Foundations and the...
By Way of Canarsie
Special | 14m 15sVideo has Audio Description, Closed Captions
A portrait of an oft-neglected community imagining possible futures at odds with the present. Using various formats, these vignettes explore Canarsie’s unique relationship to the water through recreation, brief encounters, and expressive use of analog film, granting an understanding of this predominantly Black neighborhood’s shared desires for recognition and respect.
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Every two weeks, we curate a selection of POV docs, old and new, around a central theme. Stream while you can — until the next Playlist!Providing Support for PBS.org
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Providing Support for PBS.org
Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorship♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ [ Train cars rumbling ] ♪♪ ♪♪ -This is a Ro ckaway Parkway-bound L Train.
The next and last stop is Canarsie Rockaway Parkway.
[ Train door dings ] [ Seagulls calling ] -This is the last stop on this train.
Everyone please leave the train.
Thank you for riding with the MTA NYC Transit.
[ Beeping ] -♪ You are not alone ♪ ♪ You are not alone ♪ [ Cars honking ] -So we want to get the ferry to come to Canarsie.
And the meeting is about as to why we're not getting it at this time.
-Okay.
-Okay?
May I offer you a flier, miss?
-They ain't bringing no damn ferry over here.
-Flier?
-No, thank you.
-For the L train being out?
For the ferry?
-Well, we would hope that, um, it happens during that time.
But if it doesn't happen this year, we're certainly hoping it's going to happen sometime.
-In my pocket.
-Thank you.
-Yeah, they overlooked us and went to Far Rockaway.
-Yeah.
-When is this?
-The 24th.
-I will be there.
Thanks.
-You're welcome.
-Okay.
-Yeah, we need the ferry.
-Need it!
-Thank you.
-I've been going to the meetings!
I went to the councilwoman, they said Amazon was coming.
Amazon ain't coming there no more.
-Ah, which one is nicer?
Let's go over here.
Ah, look how nice and serene this is.
So beautiful.
[ Seagull calling ] ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ -Yeah, whoo!
[ Clapping ] -Pull toward the right side, right side!
Make it go out towards John.
-Pull the water, yeah, side to side!
-Is that how it usually works?
-Well, you push yourselves in, but we're being nice to you today.
-Thank you.
-We don't push you in.
-Okay.
-Okay.
I'm not out there stroking for ya!
You gotta paddle together, together, left, right.
Two people in a boat is a riot.
Together, people!
♪♪ You go out on that water and nothing... nothing bothers you anymore.
Because you become at peace with yourself and the water.
And you just... it's just tranquil and there's nothing like it.
[ Seagulls calling ] -This was our home.
This was our quiet place.
You just see and hear the birds and the wildlife.
Which is really... a unique place to live in Brooklyn.
But if you get these people coming in here through the ferry, a lot of people now is going to be looking at our community with dollar signs.
They will take away our privacy.
♪♪ I'm very proud of where I live and I want to...
I want to keep it like this.
I want to maintain it.
And I tell everybody I'm not going anywhere.
So make it your business, this is my business.
[ Fishing bells ring ] -All done.
-[ Indistinct ] -Clams, squid, shrimp, chicken, hot dogs.
People never thought about using hot dogs, but they bite on hot dogs too!
That's the bait.
Fish is fish, you know?
The fish going to do what they want to do, and you got to be here to either catch them or not.
People come here from all over... Staten Island, Howard Beach, Far Rockaway.
That's the main thing I like about it.
You meet different people, you know?
You meet a lot of friends.
-You gotta play with it, make it go like this.
-No.
-For real.
-No.
-[ Laughs ] -Gotta play with it, baby.
-Sometimes let it lay every now and again, too.
-That's how you teach people how to fish?
-Me, personally, I have better luck on the incoming tide.
Some people will see a place like Canarsie Pier and they'll instantly think, you know, the water is so horrible.
A lot of people, they don't know that the fish in New York, yeah, it's high in, like, metals like mercury and stuff like that.
But the same fish that a lot of people would catch, like, in a boat... it's the same fish that you'd catch here.
-When the fish are here... they're plentiful.
Porgies, striped bass, bluefish.
You can catch anything you want here.
And it's good fish.
You can go home and eat it.
The water dictates everything.
If the temperature of this water... gets above 60 to 65 degrees, all kinds of fish are here.
-Every now and then you get new people.
When they come here, you show them how to fish this pier because the tide moves so fast and so strong.
If you're using the wrong weights, you tell them, "Look.
That ain't going to work over here.
It's too light."
As soon as you throw it in [whistles] it's gone or it's going this way.
Either way.
All these guys, I've known them for 25 years, almost 30 years.
I've been fishing here with them ever since I was a kid.
But this pier, as far as the atmosphere of it, it's the same, you know?
[ Water lapping gently ] -What's now New York City was made up of a variety of small villages.
One of which was Canarsee.
The Canarsee were some of the first people to be in contact with the Dutch when they first arrived.
Obviously the face of New York City has changed significantly and what was land that had many streams that were used as routes, avenues... those are gone.
We still use the waters for transportation and commerce.
And for native people, including centuries ago the Canarsee, it had a spiritual value.
The indigenous people here, the Canarsee, the Lenape, the Munsee, the Minisink, understood the value of what the waterways provide to them.
Using traditional knowledge, these ways were used to strike an ecological balance.
There have been some that said... "Better watch out.
Climate change may cause the seas to continue to rise, and you're going to find places...
underwater."
♪♪ The waters have swallowed up civilizations in the past, and there's no reason to believe that it couldn't happen again.
♪♪ [ Train cars clattering ] -I don't think people know the extent of the damage of the L train, and that's the only train that comes into Canarsie.
And I don't think people knew or still don't know how we had to rebuild this community.
♪♪ -Sandy hit.
After Sandy, most people realized that we was underserved.
-So, um...
I'm not sure if everyone can read this, but this is what... -I can't see the display.
[ Crowd murmurs indistinctly ] -Excuse me!
You're part of a New York City agency, right?
-That's correct.
-So you know that the L train is going out of service?
Was that taken into consideration when you did your study?
-One of the reasons why you decided against Canarsie, it was a seven-minute difference.
-It wasn't meaningfully faster.
-No, no, no.
I'm still within my sentence.
-Sorry.
-Parking for the pier.
We need this ferry in this community.
I'd love to take my kids on it and go on the water and enjoy our beautiful waterways.
As you know, we need that here.
We are at a disadvantage in this community.
There's no reason why we should not have been considered over Coney Island.
They have more accessibility to direct transportation than we do.
[ Cheers and applause ] -That's right!
♪♪ ♪♪ [ Indistinct conversations ] [ Seagull calling ] -Mommy, I'm doing it!
[ Children laughing ] -Three, two, one.
-So it's like duh, duh-duh?
[ Clapping and stomping ] Okay.
[ Clapping and stomping ] [ Laughing ] -Imagine what it would be like there was a ferry over here.
♪♪ [ Water lapping ] ♪♪ ♪♪ [ Train cars clacking ] ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪
Major funding for POV is provided by PBS, The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, the Wyncote Foundation, Reva & David Logan Foundation, the Open Society Foundations and the...