For the next three years, Mia—with the help of many partners, including the King estate, executive producers Viola Davis and Julius Tennon, and the immersive storyteller Alton Glass—developed and built The March, a traveling exhibit that features a groundbreaking VR re-creation of the 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom. Produced by TIME Studios, our Emmy-winning film and production division, it is the first virtualization of the “Dream” speech and the most lifelike re-creation of a person ever released in VR. The exhibit will open at Chicago’s DuSable Museum of African American History on Feb. 28, and more details can be found at time.com/the-march.
Step Into History: Learn how to experience the 1963 March on Washington in virtual reality
In all, about 300 people have worked on this project over the years. That is in addition to scores of people across the TIME staff, including Ian Orefice, president of TIME Studios; senior editor Lily Rothman, who oversaw this special issue; and art director Victor Williams, who with the artist Hank Willis Thomas created the cover. You can read more about the journey in these pages, along with reporting and reflections by writers, leaders and activists on the abiding meaning of the march and the state of equality in America today.
Through thousands of hours of research, we have endeavored to be true to the history of that August day. But we at TIME also see the project as a call to each of us for all that is yet to be done in the unfinished fight for equality, including in our own work. Our hope is that it will not only change the way we see history, but also help awaken in all of us an understanding of the power of our own voice to have a positive impact on the world.
“In a day where division defines our country,” notes Mia, “the March reminds us of what can be accomplished when we come together.” Or as 9-year-old Ashlin C.—one of the many students across the nation we asked to reflect on what they would march for today—puts it: “I stand up for everyone to get along and be treated equally.”
This article is part of a special project about equality in America today. Read more about The March, TIME’s virtual reality re-creation of the 1963 March on Washington and sign up for TIME’s history newsletter for updates.