Let's go back 40 years:On October 21, 1967, 70,000 demonstrators came to Washington, D.C. to "Confront the War Makers." This was the first of the biannual Anti-War demonstrations to fuse protest with the whimsicality of the counter culture and to take civil disobedience to new levels of confrontation. It would become the prototype for the demonstrations at the 1968 Democratic Convention in Chicago -- except that the latter was marred by extensive police violence.
Initiated and organized by "the Mobe" (the National Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam), a loose coalition of 150 groups, some of the events of the weekend were planned and some were not. They provided something for everyone, from committed pacifists to Vietcong sympathizers, united only by the common aim of ending the war.
--Jo Freeman
Then there's this famous picture to remind us of the day. According to The Human Flower Project, "Marc Riboud took the picture outside the Pentagon during a demonstration protesting the U.S. war in Vietnam. How fresh, and necessary, it looks today.
Riboud was a member of Magnum, the French elite of documentary photography. The girl was 17 year old Jan Rose Kasmir, a foster child from Maryland who “just hopped on a D.C. transit bus and went down to join the revolution.”
Kasmir told Andrew Curry of Smithsonian magazine, “All of a sudden, I realized ‘them’ was that soldier in front of me—a human being I could just as easily have been going out on a date with. It wasn’t a war machine, it was just a bunch of guys with orders. Right then, it went from being a fun, hip trip to a painful reality.”
On Monday, May 3rd, 1971 one of the most disruptive actions of the Vietnam War era occurred in Washington, DC, when thousands of anti-war activists tried to shut down the Federal government in protest of the Vietnam War. The threat caused by the May Day Protests forced the Nixon Administration to create a virtual state of siege in the Nation’s Capital. Thousands of Federal and National Guard troops, along with local police, suppressed the disorder and by the time it was over several days later, over 10,000 would be arrested. It would be the largest mass arrest in U.S. history.
It was essentially over at that point. The war was "winding down" and the draft was all but gone. The Watergate break-in was a little less than a year away. The world was shifting, quickly. The 60s were over.
As a result of all that I personally wondered for years about those days. Were they simply a reflection of youthful energy and fear or was there something more? Was it truly a statement about war and peace, or was it some fun and games and then we moved on to more serious things like making a living, having families, growing older?
...and from today's headlines: Bush Asks Congress for $46 Billion more for Iraq War.
ReplyDeletePerhaps that pricetag will bring back the practice of tax resisters.
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ReplyDeleteI am jan rose and I STILL CARE! I do not believe that committing war is an answer that works. I sat with friends tonight and listened to them justify the troops that are being sent to Afghanistan. IT IS MORE OF THE SAME. If those war dollars were spent creating peaceful solutions, another baby or soldier will not have to die because we don't get it right. I am sick of the nay-sayers - I am sick of the fighting and mostly I am sick of waiting for Peace. The impossible can be done when we are all willing to believe it can be done.
ReplyDeleteMost importantly - you must be good to the people you meet and give to your community. Be willing to work for peace. Just keep believing. Shalom.