*** DEBUG START ***
*** DEBUG END ***

TV review: The Quilters and Unforgotten: The Bradford City Fire

19 May 2025

Netflix

The documentary The Quilters (Netflix, released on Friday) shows prisoners trying “to give something back”

The documentary The Quilters (Netflix, released on Friday) shows prisoners trying “to give something back”

A SHORT documentary about the power of restorative justice, The Quilters (Netflix, released on Friday) features the men of a maximum-security prison in Missouri who design and sew beautiful personalised quilts for foster children. The prisoners work from 7.30 a.m. until 3.30 p.m., five days a week, engaged in this meticulous and painstaking work, creating items of immense beauty. According to Jimmy, one of the prisoners, who is serving a life sentence, it is a way “to give something back”.

This all sounds very cuddly and quaint, until you remember that these men are imprisoned for the most violent and heinous crimes. In fairness, this reality isn’t denied by the prisoners, some of whom speak openly about their actions and their consequences, such as Ricky, a lifer who was first imprisoned at the age of 20 and is now 64: “I’m guilty for what I did. . . I messed up bad.” He has found purpose and a way to live with terrible remorse: known as the “sewing sensei”, he teaches the other men how to do the highly technical and intricate work of quilting.

This is therapeutic and calming for the men, allowing them a form of escapism, but also enabling them to use the same hands as carried out terrible violence for gentle and creative work, something that is a source of pride. It is a way for the prisoners, themselves lost and forgotten people, to tell damaged children: “We care about you, even when the world tells you that you’re no good.”

How do you recover the humanity of violent criminals, in an unforgiving and punitive world? Through purpose, through community, and through a creative process of redemption, whereby broken men learn to forgive themselves before seeking forgiveness from others. As Ricky says, “The people who can’t forgive themselves are the ones who can’t change.”

It is 40 years since the disaster that destroyed the main stand of the Valley Parade football stadium, in Bradford, taking the lives of 56 people and leaving many others with life-changing burns. In Unforgotten: The Bradford City fire (BBC2, 11 May), survivors, families, and first responders tell their story. The programme contains upsetting scenes of what can be described only as a towering inferno, a scene from hell, where even “the pitch was smoking.”

The fire, which broke out when Bradford City were playing Lincoln City, is thought to have been caused by a smouldering cigarette that ignited rubbish beneath the wooden stands. Despite making world headlines at the time, it is a disaster that is largely forgotten, other than by those who, like Hazel Greenwood, cannot ever forget. She lost her two young boys and her husband. “You don’t get over a trauma like that; you get used to it.”

This film is a fitting memorial for the deceased, and a touching homage to Bradford and its people.

Browse Church and Charity jobs on the Church Times jobsite

Church Times Bookshop

Save money on books reviewed or featured in the Church Times. To get your reader discount:

> Click on the “Church Times Bookshop” link at the end of the review.

> Call 01603 785905 (Mon-Fri, 10am-4pm).

The reader discount is valid for two months after the review publication date. E&OE

Forthcoming Events

 

Festival of Preaching: Preaching Truth to Power

13 September 2025

Join us at London's Southwark Cathedral for this one-day event — a transformative gathering of bold voices, prophetic vision, and Spirit-led conviction..

tickets available

 

Finding inspiration in the Psalms : a Church Times one day festival

2 October 2025

Join us in York for this one-day event exploring the gift of the Psalms through poetry, art, liturgy and music.

tickets available

  

Visit our Events page for upcoming and past events 

The Church Times Archive

Read reports from issues stretching back to 1863, search for your parish or see if any of the clergy you know get a mention.

FREE for Church Times subscribers.

Explore the archive

Welcome to the Church Times

 

To explore the Church Times website fully, please sign in or subscribe.

Non-subscribers can read four articles for free each month. (You will need to register.)