About the film

Thank you for your support!

The premiere of “A Forgotten Injustice” at Instituto Cervantes of Chicago was a huge success.  Six days of intense work, high emotions and passionate debates paid off with four sold-out nights.  Thank you to those who made it from October 1st until October 8th, and for you that could not come we have good news: More screenings of “A Forgotten Injustice” are scheduled at Instituto Cervantes every Saturday starting October 25 until the end of the year except the Saturday after Thanksgiving and the Saturday after Christmas.

We have two presentations every Saturday, at 4 pm and 6:30 pm. You are going to be able to buy your tickets online in this website soon. So please, help us spreading the word and invite your friends and relatives to uncover together “A Forgotten Injustice”.

If you can’t come to Downtown or you are interested in taking “A Forgotten Injustice” to your school, non profit organization or the local theatre contact us via email at Mechicanofilms@gmail.com or call us (312) 493-7780. You can check here the scheduled stops as part of a tour we are going to start very soon in Chicago and the suburbs.

About the film

“A Forgotten Injustice” is Vicente Serrano’s opera prima, and the first documentary that uncovers the story of almost two million Mexican Americans and U.S. citizens, who were forced out of the United States during the Great Depression in the 1930s. These people were forced to leave because of one reason: They were of Mexican descent. In order to avoid making the same mistakes in our efforts to find a solution to today’s immigration problem, we have to look back and learn from “A Forgotten Injustice.”

In the 1930s, the United States was devastated by the crash of the stock market and many officials thought that Mexicans were taking jobs and public services from “real” Americans. They came up with the idea of solving the economic problems of the country by deporting as many Mexicans as possible.

“So, Mexicans in many respects became scapegoats after the crash of the stock market” Says Friedrich Katz- Professor of History from the University of Chicago.

“What the authorities didn’t take into consideration was that many of the Mexicanos had been here for thirty years or more. Many of them without papers, because before 1924, when the border patrol was established, you didn’t really need papers,” Says Raymond Rodriguez, Co Author of the book “Decade of Betrayal”.

“A Forgotten Injustice” is the result of an extensive investigation headed by journalist Vicente Serrano. Serrano traveled across the country and Mexico to capture the experiences of these men and women, many still living in extreme poverty in rural areas in Mexico. Some of the survivors are coming back to the U.S almost 80 years later. “They should apologize for what they have done to us before we die and before the government commits the same mistakes,” exclaimed Emilia Castañeda who was born in Los Angeles and forced to leave the U.S with her family in the 30s.

“A Forgotten Injustice” premiered in October at Instituto Cervantes of Chicago with an impressive response, four SOLD OUT screenings.

“A Forgotten Injustice” includes interviews with historians, politicians and survivors. Among them, Former California State Senator Joseph Dunn, John Coatsworth, Dean, School of International and Public Affairs at Columbia University, Hilda Solis, US Representative, Raymond Rodriguez, Professor of History, emeritus, Long Beach City College, Francisco Balderrama, co-author of “Decade of Betrayal”, Ernesto Nava Villa, Son of Pancho Villa, and John Eastman, Dean, Chapman University School of Law.