In July 1978, during the military dictatorship, the Unified Black Movement (MNU) was born in São Paulo. On the occasion, thousands of people went to the steps of the Municipal Theater asking for an end to police violence and structural racism. The movement inspired generations and, even at that time, it also inspired people like Asfilofio Filho, Dom Filó. Born in Rio de Janeiro, the engineer and journalist not only participated in the MNU, but also started, together with other creators, the biggest project to record what happened and what would happen to those events. Black culture, historically rejected by the national media, as well as the struggle of the MNU, is now stored in the largest collection of digital culture in Latin America, CULTNE (Cultura Negra). In this episode, Filó, a guardian of our memory, shares his memories and talks about the immeasurable value of these records for the black Brazilian community.