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Not in Our Town
Wayne Inman quoteIt began in Billings, Montana, in the fall of 1992. It started with hate-filled fliers slipped into newspapers, stuffed into mailboxes, tucked under windshields.

Then, on December 2, l993, the hatred turned into violence. Someone hurled a cinderblock through a child's bedroom window. Taped to the window was a paper menorah to commemorate Chanukah, a Jewish holiday.

The hate-filled fliers marked the start of a campaign to make Montana and other western states a "white homeland." Then came intimidation--racial slurs, death threats, and the harassment of Jews, Hispanic Americans, Indians, African Americans, and gays.

As the attacks escalated, people in Billings began to take a new look at their community and themselves. This is the story of what they saw and what they did.

Watch a clip from the documentary, "Not in Our Town"

Read the story

NEXT: 'The Choices One Community Made'

*You can visit the Not in Our Town website at www.pbs.org/niot/about/niot1.html
**Not in Our Town was created by The Working Group
 
   
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