November 15 Mobilization personal accounts


Recollections of the 1969 Moratorium


by David H. Finke

 My memory is specifically of events in the Washington, DC, mass gathering jointly sponsored by “The Moratorium” (which had started by observing one day per month away from “Business as Usual” to protest the Vietnam War) and the National Mobilization to End the War in Vietnam (“The Mobe,”) with which our national office of American Friends Service Committee had been affiliated. Some of their steering committee meetings had been held in the Chicago area.

 I was at that time the Peace Education Secretary (“Program Secretary for Peace/War Issues”) in the Chicago regional office of AFSC (1967-73.)  In that capacity our program and staff gave encouragement to a number of expressions of nonviolent witness and resistance to the war and the warmaking apparatus of the federal government.  One of the ventures we helped get started (for which I served as treasurer) was the “Nonviolent Training and Action Center,” for which Carl Zietlow (formerly AFSC College Program secretary) had been a staff person, also supported by Fellowship of Reconciliation.  We had a volunteer core of a dozen or so activists, mostly young but some going back to conscientious objection in the Second World War and Korea.  A modest office space was provided by a Quaker Meeting on Chicago’s South Side, “57th Street Meeting of Friends.”

 When it became clear that a large action was going to come about in Washington in November, our NVTAC group agreed to mobilize and share the experience we had acquired in the theory and practice of “Satyagraha” -- Gandhi’s word for active nonviolent resistance to social evils. (That was also the title of a publication we produced.)  Previously, we had worked with some of the original activists from India who were disciples of Gandhi’s and veterans of his struggle for independence and opposition to the caste system: an economic as well as political set of programs. 

Members of our group for some time had provided training and personpower for “marshals” at public demonstrations, and many had participated in the direct action of the “Chicago Freedom Movement” a few years before, headed up by Dr. Martin Luther King.  We also had study groups and social occasions: a trusting group of comrades who did our best to keep Chicago’s part of the Civil Rights and AntiWar movement nonviolent, focussed on the goals of Justice and Peace against which violence would be counterproductive and a distraction that “the establishment” could use to discredit us.

Many of us had also come to know each other and work together leading up to and during the demonstrations in Chicago at the Democratic National Convention in 1968.  We in AFSC had pulled together a “Nonviolent Caucus” with representatives of several national pacifist organizations, and became skilled in logistics for large-scale actions in coalition with like-minded groups.

Our national AFSC Peace Education Secretary Stewart Meacham had persuaded the steering committee of The Mobe to sponsor a dramatic several-day program of something he had helped pioneer at the local level in the Philadelphia area: reading the names of the dead American GIs who were victims of the war in Vietnam.  Whereas those actions had been at local draft boards, Stewart envisioned a “March Against Death” in Washington, leading up to the large rally at the Washington Monument on a November Saturday afternoon.  We from Chicago’s NVTAC, in cooperation with some pacifist activists from Philadelphia, took a major leadership role in this, which I’ll try to narrate.

Several carloads of us from Chicago converged on DC early in the week, staying at a downtown Washington church which also served as the meetingplace for the Mobe steering committee.  We prepared for the arrival of scores of busses from around the country who were directed to take their demonstrator-passengers to a parking lot on the Potomac River just across into Virginia at the Arlington Bridge.  The routine was that as each bus arrived, one of our team would greet the passengers and while aboard would give them an orientation to the events of upcoming days and nights.  The nonviolent discipline of the weekend’s events was stressed, and the participants pledged to observe the dignity and solemnity of what they were about to enter upon, honoring the leadership given by the marshals.

Some weeks before, I had secured some thousands of blank placards, which were shirtboards donated through the Chicago Peace Council by a local laundry.   Crews of volunteers then lettered on to each sign the name either of a dead American G.I. (from a list that had been read into the Congressional Record  and previously read at draft boards) or of a Vietnamese village that had been destroyed in the war.  One of these was given to each marcher to carry as our procession wound away from the busses, across the Arlington Bridge, around the Lincoln Memorial, and down Pennsylvania Avenue past the White House.  It was a silent, somber “March Against Death,” and went on non-stop for at least a day and a night and into the next day. (My own memory was of participating at night time; there may or may not have been candles that the participants carried, of which I’m not sure.)

As each marcher approached the fence outside Nixon's White House, they would break the silence by shouting out the name of the dead person or destroyed village whom they were representing with their sign.  I hope that news archives have some footage of this very moving portrayal of the human cost of war and the responsibility of those who dragged the U.S. military into it and perpetuated it.

The procession then proceeded up Pennsylvania Avenue to the U.S. Capitol building.  There, at ground level at the end of the Mall, were wooden caskets into which each placard would then be placed.  These were guarded by Vietnam Vets Against the War.  When the March Against Death was concluded, the vets then carried these filled caskets (at least half a dozen) at the head of a solemn line of march started mid-day on Saturday, and going down the Mall toward the rally which was gathering at the base of the Washington Monument.

I was not in the large crowd, which I recall being reported as in the hundreds of thousands.  Rather, I and others of our marshal corp, wearing identifying Peace Armbands, deployed along the sidewalks lining Constitution Avenue along which people were coming to assemble at the Monument.

I have a vivid memory of my wife and myself helping direct people, and having friendly chats with local D.C. police who also were deployed along the street, on foot.  But we could see that something troublesome was developing some blocks away, down Constitution Avenue closer to the Capitol.

“Students for a Democratic Society” (which by that point was breaking into various factions, some of which were promoting revolutionary violence) had called for a noisy, militant demonstration in front of the Justice Department, protesting the prosecution of “The Chicago Seven” [originally Eight] in the Conspiracy Trial some sessions of which I had witnessed in Chicago at the federal building, a block from our AFSC offices.  We had information that some (many?) of those responding to SDS’s call were prepared for a violent confrontation, some actually spoiling for a fight in attempting to close down the Justice Department.  I recall hearing that two different groups from Ann Arbor, Michigan — “The Mad Dogs” and “The Motherf*ckers”  — would be there, attired with face masks, helmets, and equipped with sticks.  We were grateful that the leadership of The Mobe, while not made up primarily of pacifists, had structured the Moratorium/ Mobilization’s march and rally to exercise “the right of the people to peaceably assemble for redress of grievance,” getting permits for our activities, and had promulgated the tactical nonviolent discipline which we were there to embody and enforce.

A dramatic scene was unfolding many blocks away, far down the street. We could see clouds of tear gas being unleashed upon the Justice Department demonstrators/combatants.  Most of the rally-goers were probably unaware of this, with their attention focussed on the speakers at the Washington Monument.  But we knew that things would become more tense and volatile as those running from the teargas headed our way. 

A sure sign of the change in tenor and demeanor was when the local police, on command, all started putting on gas masks which they had brought in bags.  Our mission, at that time, became to help the peaceful rally-attenders leave the grounds in an orderly manner and get to the safety of their awaiting busses.

 An indelible recollection that my wife and I have is the sound of the cast of the musical Hair, over a gigantic P.A. system,  singing their chorus, “Let the Sun Shine In”.... over and over and over again. We later learned that the Chicago labor leader Sid Lens, from the Mobe steering committee, had directed the cast to keep up the music in an attempt to keep the rally participants together and not scatter into the melee of those fleeing the violent demonstration at the Department of Justice.

A personal recollection which over the years I’ve enjoyed sharing was, as I would dramatically recount, “When I negotiated a ceasefire with the military.”  As people, in some confusion and desperation, were trying to leave the rally grounds with the teargas getting closer, I approached an Army or National Guard jeep which had the flag of its commander. (I’m uncertain of the rank, but he clearly was in authority.)  I approached the Captain or Major or Colonel, introduced myself as a marshall in the civilian peacekeeping corps, and asked his assistance in clearing a way for the innocent but seemingly entrapped rally-goers to have safe passage to their busses some blocks away.  He agreed that would be a good idea, and swung into action in creating a safe escape from the panicked confusion.  I wish I could hear accounts from those who had that new-found official protection.

My next recollection was of finding our way to some of the houses that were set up as post-rally rendezvous points.  The location that we found had a large stack of tear-gas soaked clothing and gear piled up outside, and a friendly welcome within as people decompressed and got ready for their return rides to the various towns and cities from which they had come.

It is, of course, difficult to realize that this was all a half-century ago.  Then again, I’ve had the same sense of amazement last year when we were reliving and recounting our activities at and around the Democratic Convention in Chicago… or the earlier marches for Open Housing and other civil rights.  My approaching 79th birthday, however, validates that the calendar is indeed correct.

Thank you for your interest in all this, and congratulations to all those who, at the grass roots, made these events happen with ordinary people during extraordinary times.

    —DHF   10/9/19

111 S. Professor St., Apt. B

Oberlin, Ohio 44074

573-673-7783        dhfinke@gmail.com

Moratorium Anniversary Observances

Honoring the 50th Anniversary of the Moratorium and Mobilization


Please add your event here.


October 11

9:30 a.m.  Ball State University, Muncie, Indiana  Cardinal Hall B;  Vietnam Moratorium Committee 50th Anniversary (program here); livestream at 11:30 a.m. of David Harris keynote address here; Michael Doyle  mwdoyle@bsu.edu

7:00 p.m  University of Massachusetts, Amherst, E470 South College;  Panel Discussion: Moral Injury and the Traumas of War (program here), final day of exhibit Waging Peace in Vietnam in the main lobby of the Integrated Learning Center; Chris Appy  appy@history.umass.edu


October 13

6:00 p.m. The Orpheum Theater, 216 State St., Madison, WIsconsin, 40th Anniversary Benefit Screening of The War at Home, followed by panel discussion with Glenn Silber “The War at Home: Then & Now: Lessons of the Antiwar Movement”, details here 


October 15

3:45 pm  Wayne State University, Detroit Community Room in Undergraduate Library;  talk by Mel Small, author of numerous books on the Vietnam War and the anti-war movement;  sponsored by Honors College, WSU; Fran Shor  <drfran45@gmail.com>  (248) 506-8128

7:00 p.m. Swords into Plowshares Peace Center & Gallery, 33 E. Adams, Detroit  "Fifty years later: The antiwar movement then and now" Frank Joyce co-editor of the book, People Make the Peace: Lessons from the Antiwar Movement, recently translated and published in Vietnam; member of VPCC


October 16                                                                                                                                                                                                            
7:00 p.m.  Bundy Museum annex, 129 Main St., Binghamton NY  showing the film "Sir!No Sir!"  about the anti war GI movement; fundraiser for Vets for Peace chapter November My Lai exhibit at the public library; Rick Sprout <sproutr15@gmail.com>  (607) 238-6892;  Rick was the high school representative speaker at the 1969 moratorium in Binghamton.  Sponsors: Broome Tioga Green Party/ Midstate Council Occupational Safety & Health/ Broome Peace Action/ Friends of MORENA  


October 18

12:00 p.m., Columbia University School of International Affairs, Room 1512, 420 W. 118 Street, NY Waging Peace book launch with activist veterans; speakers here 


November 11 - 15    50th Anniversary of the Mobilization


Waging Peace in Vietnam, George Washington University

An imaginative multi-dimensional program begins on Veterans Day at the Elliott School of International Affairs. (available here) In summary

* November 11 Opening of the Waging Peace exhibit, launching of the companion book on U.S. Soldiers and Veterans Who Opposed the War.

* November 12 "Sir! No Sir!" documentary screening with filmmaker David Zeiger

* November 13 The War Comes Home: Moratorium and Mobilization, 1969, a VPCC panel (speakers here); peace poetry workshop and open mic

* November 14 Screening of fine cut of The Boys Who Said No with filmmaker Bill Prince, Re-
enactment of the Cortright v Resor court court case,Screening of The Whistleblower of My Lai with
filmmaker Connie Field


* November 15 Full day symposium "The American War in Vietnam: Then and Now" with panels on The History of Diplomatic and Peace Movement Initiative to Bring About Peace in Vietnam, Teaching the American War in Vietnam, Mitigating the Legacies of War (Agent Orange, Unexploded Ordnance); Keynote addresses by Christian Appy and Cora Weiss; Candlelight vigil with re-enactment of March Against Death from GWU to the White House with comments by Rep. Jamie Raskin, (For information about the week and the walk to the White House, contact Terry Provance here.)




Chicano Moratorium

The Epiphany Peoples History Project in the Lincoln Heights barrio of greater East Los Angeles will post some of the chicano related developments of the October 15 moratoriums, especially in New Mexico that were covered by El Grito Del Norte Newspaper published in Albuquerque with articles appearing in other raza movement periodicals affiliated with the Chicano Newspaper Association.

The Peoples History Project may organize an event around the November 15, 1969 moratorium in San Francisco where several Chicano leaders spoke and later events and posting relating to some 25 Chicano Moratoriums against the Vietnam War from Dec 20, 1969 in East Los Angeles with some 2000 marchers leading up to the National Chicano Moratorium of 1970 where some 30,000 primarily Chicano and Latinos marched, rallied and were attacked viciously by local, state and national law enforcement and national security agencies along with much of the corporate media.

A 50th Anniversary Committee commemorating the event, background,  aftermath and legacy is organizing events next year especially in the end of August and has built a growing group with much grass roots, community groups, organized labor and progressive elected officials y mas.  Hopefully the history of the war and peace movement will be more widely projected to our nations and world peoples as a key part of the "Vietnam Syndrome" that helped end that war and is central part of the forces for peace and justice of our nation today.

-- Rosalio Munoz, director of the Epiphany Peoples History theProject and the steering committee of the 50th Anniversary Commemoration Committee of the August 29 1970 National Chicano Moratorium



The War at Home documentary film



The Oscar-nominated feature made history with its coverage of the mass movement that was launched by student protests on the UW campus.


About THE WAR AT HOME 
In the late 1960s, the U.S. anti-war movement fermented in America's heartland. Student protests at the University of Wisconsin escalated from civil disobedience to violent rebellion when a bomb exploded at the Army Math Research facility.

Praised by Michael Moore as "one of the best documentaries ever made," this 1979 film documents a turning point in American history using a treasure trove of 16mm newsreel footage from the 1960s. The Oscar-nominated film resonates today more than ever and reminds us of the importance of preserving media archives.

Speaking of the film, Glenn says: "The War at Home shows how political resistance against the war started small in 1963 and grew into a mass movement that helped bring the war to a close. Today, the Climate Crisis has emerged as the new 'war at home' and a new protest movement is taking action to protest the government and fossil fuel industry policies that threaten our planet.”
About the filmmakers
After co-directing THE WAR AT HOME, his first full-length documentary, Glenn Silber (left) went on to become a television producer, working on over 80 primetime news stories for network television, as well as producing long-form documentaries for PBS Frontline, 20/20 and 60 Minutes. His documentary El Salvador: Another Vietnam (1981) earned him his second Academy-Award nomination. He is also the recipient of two Emmy Awards.

Barry Alexander Brown (right) has continued to work as a director, producer and editor, mainly on narrative films. He is a long-time collaborator of Spike Lee, having edited the 1989 Do the Right Thing and Malcolm X (1992). Most recently he received an Academy Award nomination for Best Editing on BlacKkKlansman (2018). He is currently directing his first narrative feature.

Praise for THE WAR AT HOME
Meticulously constructed ... One of the great works of American documentary moviemaking.
 New York Film Festival (2018)

The reflective narrative offered by THE WAR AT HOME, about the charged, escalating battleground that was the University of Wisconsin campus in Madison is an invaluable one. Never more so than today.
 Los Angeles Times (2018)

THE WAR AT HOME documentary returns with a message that still resonates.
 Detroit Free Press (2018)

The War at Home is Available on Netflix, click here





Fifty years ago, activists across the country spoke out against the war.  "
The Moratorium to End the War in Vietnam" was a massive demonstration and teach-in across the United States (including 15,000 demonstrating in Madison and several Wisconsin cities) against the United States involvement in the Vietnam War. It took place on October 15, 1969, followed a month later by the National Mobilization in  Washington on Nov. 15, 1969, that attracted more than 500,000 antiwar protesters with the support of many active-duty GIs in Vietnam. These events are among the many important events of the Antiwar Movement documented in the film The War at Home.

The War at Home had its World Premiere at the Majestic Theater in Madison on October 12, 1979.  The film was restored from its original 16mm format to a new 4K Digital Cinema Package (DCP) and had its 4K “premiere” at the 2018 New York Film Festival.
Silber says, “The War at Home shows how a political resistance movement against the war in Vietnam started very small in 1963 and grew over the following decade to where it became a majority movement in the U.S. that helped bring the war to a close. 

“Today, the climate crisis is the ‘new war at home’ -- and a national a new global protest movement is taking action to protest government inaction and a fossil fuel industry that is fueling global warming and climate change, threatening our planet.  Last week in Albuquerque, Santa Fe and in cities all over the U.S., we saw young people leading a new protest movement to ensure they have a safe, sustainable clean energy future.  No political issue is more important today.”



The NYFF Film Festival listing read as follows:
The War at Home
Directors Glenn Silber and Barry Alexander Brown, USA, 1979, 100
min. A Catalyst Media Productions release.
This meticulously constructed 1979 film recounts the development of
the movement against the American war in Vietnam on the Madison
campus of the University of Wisconsin, from 1963 to 1970. Using
carefully assembled archival and news footage and thoughtful interviews
with many of the participants, it culminates in the 1967 Dow Chemical
sit-in and the bombing of the Army Math Research Center three years
later. One of the great works of American documentary
moviemaking, The War at Home has also become a time capsule of the
moment of its own making, a welcome emanation from the era of analog
editing, and a timely reminder of how much power people have when
they take to the streets in protest.

For info on this award-winning film go to:
 www.TheWarAtHome.tv

The War Comes Home (GWU November 2019 Program)



"The War Comes Home:
Moratorium and Mobilization, 1969"

A panel on the 50th anniversary of the largest
peace demonstration in US. History 

Video here
https://youtu.be/RzSatmj0Tjg


The New York Times  retrospectively described November 15, 1969, as, "the largest antiwar protest in United States history when as many as half a million people attended a mostly peaceful demonstration in Washington." 

It was preceded by the March Against Death that began on the evening of November 13th.  During the next forty hours 45,000 people walked single file  from the west end of the Arlington Memorial Bridge wearing on a placard the name of a US soldier from their state who died in Vietnam or the name of a village that had been destroyed.  Each name was called out in front of the White House and the placard was deposited in a coffin at the Capitol Building. 

The briefing offers an opportunity to meet people who took part for inclusion in or background to 50th anniversary coverage.


Wednesday, November 13, 12:00 PM - 2:00 PM, Room 505, Elliott School of International Affairs, George Washington University, 1957 E St. NW, Washington, D.C.

Panel Discussion: The War Comes Home:  Moratorium and Mobilization, 1969

Clara Bingham, author "Witness to the Revolution:  Radicals, Resisters, Vets, Hippies and the Year America Lost Its Mind and Found Its Soul"

Dr. Mary (Munchen) Posner, organizer of the Moratorium demonstration on October 15, 1969, at Ball State University in Muncie, Indiana, and of a contingent in the November 15th Mobilization in Washington.  NBC Nightly News on February 25, 1970, broadcast a feature story about Ball State's anti-war activity that featured Mary (click here).

Rev. Richard Fernandez, founder of Clergy & Laity Concerned about Vietnam, organizer of the March Against Death

Robert Levering, staff of New Mobilization Committee, responsible for training 5,000 marshals

Anne Gallivan, Lessons of the 60's (Washington oral history project), Vietnam Peace Commemoration Committee (VPCC)

Martha Norman, Baltimore civil rights and peace activist, Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee

Moderator: John McAuliff, member of New Mobilization Steering Committee, founder of the Fund for Reconciliation and Development, VPCC Coordinator
The panel is part of a week of activities at George Washington University "Waging Peace in Vietnam: U.S. Soldiers and Veterans who Opposed the War"  that culminates in a Friday evening walk and vigil at the White House commemorating the March Against Death.  The full program can be seen here

The march and vigil will begin at 6 p.m. November 15th at the Elliott School and will include Peter Yarrow who performed at the November Mobilization with Peter, Paul and Mary; Rev. Richard Fernandez and Dr. Mary Posner.

Ron Young was the National Coordinator of the November Mobilization.  The section from his memoir about it and the March Against Death can be read here.