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UID:231-1430506800-1430596800@www.brandywinepeace.com
SUMMARY:Vietnam: The Power of Protest\, Wash.\, DC
DESCRIPTION:Vietnam: The Power of Protest\nhttp://lessonsofvietnam.com/\nWHO WILL TELL OUR STORY? \n By tom hayden \nWho will tell our story when we are gone? So much was never remembered\, and now the time is rapidly passing. \nWe need to resist the military occupation of our minds. Long-discredited falsehoods are being resurrected again. As one example\, the recent acclaimed film “Last Days of Vietnam” depicts the war as one of aggression from the North with a green dagger of invasion pointed to the South. That was the false claim of the State Department’s “white paper” we debunked in 1965.Â   \nAs other examples\, the Pentagon’s recent website trivializes the Pentagon Papers\, and restores the Phoenix assassination program\, shut down in 1971\, asÂ  aÂ  misunderstood program that was succeeding. We were winning the war in the South\, many claim today\, when Congress and the peace movement pulled the plug. \nThe Official History becomes a hecatomb covering our truths. So this becomes our last campaign\, our legacy to the next generation. \nThe warmakers could win on the battlefield of memory what they lost on the battlefields of war. \nWe must not let that happen. We must unite for the future to overcome our divisions of theÂ  past.  \nWe need everyone in the peace movement to transcribe their stories so that an oral history of the peace movement can be preserved in a living archive.That’s how the stories of past social movements were recorded.  \nWe need a new generation of historians to document the peace movement as a truly historic resistance which helped end a war\, terminated the forced draft\, toppled two American presidents\, might have elected a president were it not for assassinations\, and shook the country to its foundations until the madness finally was ended. \nWe need to protest the continuing exclusion of our viewpoints from the the think tanks of the powerful.  \nWe need to widen the spectrum of legitimate opinion to include a genuine peace option. Having been wrong about past wars should not be a qualification for high political or editorial office. We need to ostracize all those who have never apologized.  \nHealing the wounds of war should mean a faithful commitment to removing the unexploded bombs and mines from the soil of Vietnam\, Laos and Cambodia\, and preventing Agent Orange from dooming future generations to birth defects and disabilities. \nThe disaster that began in Vietnam still spirals on as a conflict between empire and democracy. The cycle of war continues its familiar path\, with memory its casualty. The demonization of enemies. The fabricated pretexts. The secrecy in the name of security. The casualties covered up. The costs hidden off budget. The lights always at the end of tunnels.  \nWe need to end this future and assert ourselves in history. \nMay 1-2 in Washington is the place to begin to tell our story. Go to www.lessonsofvietnam.com  for the agenda and to register for the conference. \nA registration donation of at least $25 assures reserved seating at the Saturday conference.Â  General admission is a nominal $5.\n\nSaturday registration at the church requires a donation of at least $30 for reserved seating.\n\nThere is no cost for the Friday night program or to participate in the walk to the Martin Luther King memorial.\n\nSaturday’s on site lunch and a special dinner of Vietnamese\, Lao and Cambodian cuisine must be reserved on line and purchased no later than Wednesday\, April 29.\nAdditional reading \nThe 40th anniversary of the end of the war is prompting many reflective pieces. Among the most interesting: \n“The Scene of the Crime:Â  A reporter’s journey to My Lai and the secrets of the past by Seymour M. Hersh\nhttp://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2015/03/30/the-scene-of-the-crime \n“After the Fall of Saigon” by Ngo Vinh Long\nhttp://www.aucegypt.edu/GAPP/Cairoreview/Pages/articleDetails.aspx?aid=794 \n“America’s Memory of the Vietnam War in the Epoch of the Forever War” \nby H. Bruce Franklin\nhttp://lareviewofbooks.org/essay/americas-memory-vietnam-war-epoch-forever-war \n\n
URL:http://www.brandywinepeace.com/event/vietnam-the-power-of-protest-wash-dc/
LOCATION:New York Avenue Presbyterian Church\, 1313 New York Avenue NW\,  Washington\, DC\,  20005\, United States
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