Article on "Jesus Camp" Documentary
Little terrors on rampage in 'Jesus Camp'
By Sheri Linden
LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - Few personality-trait combinations are
more obnoxious than narrow-mindedness and condescension - especially in
children.
The compelling documentary "Jesus Camp," which Magnolia Pictures opened in
select cities Friday ahead of its New York and L.A. bows Sept. 22,
demonstrates how those qualities are being cultivated in a generation of
pintsize proselytizers. Beyond their deadly earnestness, these children of
the evangelical Christian right are being groomed as soldiers in a
self-declared culture war to reclaim America for Christ.
Those who have been born only once might find it easy to laugh off
Jesus-themed hip-hop numbers or Adam & Eve Barbie dolls. But filmmakers
Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady, who also focused on children in last year's
poignant "The Boys of Baraka," provide a fascinating glimpse of kids' role
in the evangelical movement's political agenda.
Pastor Becky Fischer granted the filmmakers access to her Kids on Fire summer
camp, a 5-year-old program in North Dakota where first-graders to teens are
variously entertained, broken down and preached to. Wielding everything from
PowerPoint to plush toys to illustrate the wages of sin, the impassioned
Fischer has a clear-eyed view of children as malleable material, ripe for
the inculcating. When they're not speaking in tongues, pledging allegiance
to the Christian flag or blessing a cardboard cutout of George W. Bush, the
kids rally round to hear Fischer and others entreat them to "join the war,"
"fix the sick world" and fight abortion (tiny fetus dolls serve as
preachers' aids).
At the center of "Jesus Camp" are three home-schooled Missouri kids:
12-year-old mullet-haired Levi, saved at 5 and already preaching;
10-year-old soldier's daughter Tory, who loves dancing to Christian heavy
metal, not always solely for the spirit; and the smuggest member of this
brigade, 9-year-old Rachael, who breathlessly approaches strangers to talk
about Christ. Perhaps she'll get that nail-salon job she shrewdly envisions
as a good way to Bible-stump; perhaps grown-up life will temper her
single-mindedness. Or maybe Rachael will end up as resolute as the "enemies"
she's being trained to oppose - martyrdom for Jesus, she enthuses, would be
"really cool."
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