Vietnam War Protest Primary Documents

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Vietnam War Protest: Primary Documents

NCSS Thematic Strand: Time, Continuity, and Change


Grades: 9-12
Time Outline: 1-2 50 minute periods

Background and Purpose


In this lesson, students will use 6 different primary sources from the Vietnam War
era that were part of the protest movement or led to further protest. The Vietnam War
divided the nation into those who supported the war (Hawks) and those who were
against the war (Doves). Yet there was still a ‘middle’ group of people that thought the
war was going poorly but weren’t sure how the U.S. should act. This ‘silent majority,’ as
Nixon would later define them, was greatly influenced by the protest movements and
popular media around them. After the news and media’s response to the Tet Offensive
in 1968, protest movements grew in popularity. Other events such as the My Lai
massacre and Kent State shootings further eroded support for the war.
The purpose of this is lesson is to help students understand the complex reasons
and responses for protesting the Vietnam War. Based on personal experience, I feel it is
easy for students to simply say that people protested the war and just move on without
serious contemplation. Reasons for protesting the Vietnam War greatly reflected the
social, economic, and political conditions of the 1960’s and 1970’s. For example, by
studying quotes by African Americans, students will see how demands for civil liberties
and freedom from discrimination greatly affected the African American experience for
both soldiers and citizens in the U.S.

Objectives & Student Outcomes:


Students will:
 Use primary sources to understand how we learn about the past and how we
evaluate the reliability and importance of varying historical interpretations and
sources
 Read, describe, and teach the class about a specific group, event, or person who
protested the Vietnam War.
 Read and interpret the many reasons why specific people and groups protested
the war.
 Practice presentation skills as each small group will briefly teach the class about
their primary document

Materials:
 4-5 copies of Bob Dylan’s “Master of War” with introduction
 4-5 copies of Kent State reading with primary pictures.
 4-5 copies of Muhammad Ali’s quotes against the war.
 4-5 copies of My Lai Massacre reading from Larry Colburn, "They Were
Butchering People" (2003)
 4-5 copies of Ton Hayden’s Students for a Democratic society reading.
 4-5 copies of History Alive: African American Experience reading (Not Included)
 1 copy for each student of the note taking table.
 ELMO document projector or overhead projector.

Procedures
Procedure 1: Introduction
Discuss with students how the Vietnam War led to a great deal of public protest
in the U.S. Remind students that some protests were due to the conditions of war in
general (SDS) and some were based on specific events such as the invasion of
Cambodia. While there is no one right answer for why the U.S. lost the war in Vietnam,
many people at the time and historians today claim that the growing unrest at home
gradually undercut support for the war and led to the withdraw of troops during the
Nixon era.

Procedure 2: Instructions
Inform students that they will be split into 6 groups (each group gets one primary
source) and that they will read primary source accounts of people, events, or groups
that turned popular support of the war. Project the note taking table via the ELMO and
explain that students are to first read the background and fill in the first box before
reading the primary document.
After reading the background, groups are to discuss and take notes in the
second box. Students should include 3-4 arguments against the war based on their
primary source.
Inform students that after about 15 minutes of group time they will present their
notes and primary documents to the class as if they were “experts on the reading.”

Procedure 3: Group reading and note time


Allow students to split into six different groups (or assign them to specific
groups). Give each group a couple of copies of one primary source reading. As each
group is working, circulate the room and provide assistance where needed. With about
2-3 minutes left, ask each group a few questions on the reading to make sure they are
ready to go.

Procedure 4: Start mini-presentations


Before having each group present their information, remind the class that they
should work on good presentation skills:
 Introduce your topic and reading
 Summarize your notes; don’t just read them
 While other groups are going, you should be listening and filling out the rest of
your table.

If certain groups struggle, ask guiding questions or add extra information you deem
important.

Procedure 5: Review
At the end of class, but most likely the next day, briefly review the six primary
sources and check for understanding. At the end of the review, walk around and give
credit for students who completed the notes.

Assessment
Students will:
 Complete a graphic organizer/ note taking guide for each primary document
 Students will use note taking guide to review for the summative test
Extensions and Adaptations
Originally, I had thought about creating ‘stations’ with a laptop computer at each
station to encourage further research on the primary document. For some of the
stations, I had planned to have songs or websites already up on the laptop.
If time permits, students could also use their note taking guide to write an opinion
paragraph on the impact of these people and events on the Vietnam War.

Resources
Zinn, Howard & Anthony Arnove. Voices of a People’s History of the United States. New
York: New York. Seven Stories Press, 2004.

TCI, History Alive supplemental Teaching Material.


Handout: Bob Dylan’s “Master of War” with Introduction

Popular Media and the War


The antiwar protesters gained a powerful ally as the war continued on – the mass
media. Television especially played an important role in molding public opinion. Satellite
technology meant that the war could be broadcast at home almost as it happened. The
scenes of brutal fighting, desperate refugees, and dying United States soldiers shocked
the more than 60 million American who tuned in to the nightly news.

During the early years of the war, most reporters agreed that the United States
was fighting the spread of Communism and that South Vietnam deserved and needed
American support. They applauded South Vietnamese leader Diem. In June 1960,
Newsweek called him “one of Asia’s ablest leaders.”

However, after the Tet offensive in early 1968 respected reporters such as
Walter Cronkite began to raise serious questions about the war. Reporters not only
questioned official reports that the war could be won, but also raised more fundamental
questions: Should the United States be in Vietnam?

Music also reflected these critical questions. War critics such as Bob Dylan
argued that the war was not to prevent the spread of communism, but rather for big
businesses to make profits.

Bob Dylan enabled artists to write more about their innermost feelings than about
cars and love. Many bands after Dylan made remakes of his songs. Peter, Paul, and
Mary remade the Dylan song "Blowing in the Wind" and it soon became a hit for them.

Bob Dylan became famous at about the same time as the civil rights movement
in the 1960's. At this time he introduced a new style of lyrics that would remain around
forever. "Open your ears, and you're influenced" (Bob Dylan). Bob Dylan didn't just
come into the music world by himself. He was also influenced by other musicians.
Woody Guthrie was a major influence on Dylan. "_he sat by the bedside of the dying
Woody Guthrie" (Cohn, Nik. Rock From The Beginning). Joan Baez made many of
Dylan's songs popular before Dylan himself became popular. In his early career Dylan
worked with Joan Baez, who was also against the Vietnam War. Baez was one of the
most significant female folk singers of the 1960's.
Bob Dylan’s “Master of War”
Come you masters of war
You that build all the guns
You that build the death planes
You that build all the bombs
You that hide behind walls
You that hide behind desks
I just want you to know
I can see through your masks.

You that never done nothin'


But build to destroy
You play with my world
Like it's your little toy
You put a gun in my hand
And you hide from my eyes
And you turn and run farther
When the fast bullets fly.

Like Judas of old


You lie and deceive
A world war can be won
You want me to believe
But I see through your eyes
And I see through your brain
Like I see through the water
That runs down my drain.

You fasten all the triggers


For the others to fire
Then you set back and watch
When the death count gets higher
You hide in your mansion'
As young people's blood
Flows out of their bodies
And is buried in the mud.

You've thrown the worst fear


That can ever be hurled
Fear to bring children
Into the world
For threatening my baby
Unborn and unnamed
You ain't worth the blood
That runs in your veins.

How much do I know


To talk out of turn
You might say that I'm young
You might say I'm unlearned
That even Jesus would never
Forgive what you do.

Let me ask you one question


Is your money that good
Will it buy you forgiveness
Do you think that it could
I think you will find
When your death takes its toll
All the money you made
Will never buy back your soul.

And I hope that you die


And your death'll come soon
I will follow your casket
In the pale afternoon
And I'll watch while you're lowered
Down to your deathbed
And I'll stand over your grave
'Til I'm sure that you're dead.
Handout: Kent State reading with primary pictures
Kent State Shooting
In 1970 the United States was in what the President's Commission on Campus
Unrest later would call its most divisive period since the Civil War. The Vietnam War,
stalemated after five years of intense U.S. ground combat, was the target of
increasingly aggressive, sometimes violent protests. When Nixon announced the
Cambodia invasion on April 30, campuses erupted.
In Kent, some students rioted outside the bars downtown the following night, a
Friday. Saturday night protesters set fire to the ROTC building and slashed firemen's
hoses. Even before that, Gov. James Rhodes, a Republican, called out the Ohio
National Guard. He called the protesters "the worst type of people that we harbor in
America," and said "[w]e are going to eradicate the problem. We are not going to treat
the symptoms."
On Monday several hundred students gathered on the campus commons to rally
against the war and the Guard's presence. The soldiers used tear gas to move the
students off the commons, followed them up and over a small hill, and formed ranks in a
practice football field. A standoff ensued. Students kept their distance, chanting slogans
— "Pigs off campus!" — and hurling rocks and bottles, a few of which reached their
targets. Then the Guardsmen retraced their steps up the hill, heading back toward the
commons.
The crowd had swelled to several thousand, including protest supporters,
observers and bystanders. Many of them now relaxed; the confrontation seemed over.
"It was OK until they got up on that hill," Vecchio recalls.
Suddenly, about 12 Guardsmen turned 130 degrees, raised their rifles and fired.
"I heard the shots," Vecchio says, "and kissed the ground."In 12.53 seconds, 28
Guardsmen got off 61 to 67 shots. (Some fired into the ground or the air; 48 Guardsmen
did not shoot at all, according to the FBI.) Vecchio found Jeff Miller, whom she'd gotten
to know over the past few days, bleeding to death. There was nothing she could do.
She screamed, "Oh my God!" Also killed: protester Allison Krause; Bill Schroeder, an
ROTC student who'd been watching the protest and was shot in the back; and Sandy
Scheuer, who was walking to class.
Nine students were wounded. One, Dean Kahler, was shot in the back as he lay
on the ground. The bullet left him paralyzed for life. Another, Alan Canfora, ducked
behind an oak tree as a bullet passed through his right wrist. Canfora says today that
after the Cambodia invasion, "We wanted to bring the war home. But we never
expected that."
The shootings provoked America's first national student strike, closing hundreds
of campuses, and inspired an anti-war anthem — Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young's Ohio,
which asked, "What if you knew her/and found her dead on the ground?" Newsweek put
the photo of Vecchio on its cover under the headline "Nixon's Home Front."
A Gallup Poll found that only 11% of Americans faulted the Guard; 58% thought
the demonstrators were partly responsible for the carnage. Based on an FBI
investigation, the Justice Department concluded that the Guardsmen were never in
danger and that their explanation — they were surrounded, outnumbered and fired in
self-defense — was a fabrication. Later that year, a presidential commission called the
shootings "unnecessary, unwarranted, and inexcusable."
Primary Source pictures
Handout: Muhammad Ali against the War

Muhammad Ali and a divided nation


By 1967 the United States was deeply divided over the war. Hawks, those who
supported the war, urged stepping up the war effort to win a military victory. Doves,
those who supported the withdrawal of United States troops and a negotiated end to the
war, questioned both the cost and morality of the war.

Many Americans were neither Hawks nor Doves but were disturbed both by the
war and the protests against it. A December 1967 poll showed that 70 percent of
Americans believed the protests were “acts of disloyalty” to the soldiers fighting the war.
However, as the war raged on many became convinced that the United States was
hopelessly bogged down in an unwinnable war. That frustration could be heard in the
words of one Iowa homemaker. “I want to get out, but I don’t want to give up.”

In 1964, shortly after becoming the world heavyweight boxing champion, the
boxer Cassius Marcellus Clay (named after a white abolitionist by that name) took the
name Muhammad Ali, renouncing what he called his slave name. Two years later, the
outspoken fighter caused outrage in the media when he petitioned for exemption from
military service in Vietnam and then, when denied, refused to be drafted. As a result of
his protest against the war, Ali's title was revoked and he was sentenced to a five-year
prison term. Ali's battle against the sentence went to the U.S. Supreme Court and was
not reversed until 1971. In 1966, Ali spoke in Louisville, Kentucky, his home town, about
the reasons for not fighting in Vietnam.

Ali's refusal sparked a national uproar, and virtually every state and local entity
canceled his boxing license. Ali did not fight for two and a half years. He was stripped of
his championship title, and his passport was confiscated. He lost an initial court battle
and faced a five-year prison term. Ali became the first national figure to speak out
against the war in Vietnam.

Muhammad Ali Quote:


“Why should they ask me to put on a uniform and go ten thousand miles from
home and drop bombs and bullets on brown people in Vietnam while so-called Negro
people in Louisville are treated like dogs and denied simple human rights? No, I am not
going ten thousand miles from home to help murder and burn another poor nation
simply to continue the domination of white slave masters of the darker people the world
over. This is the day when such evils must come to an end. I have been warned that to
take such a stand would put my prestige in jeopardy and could cause me to lose
millions of dollars which should accrue to me as the champion. But I have said it once
and I will say it again. The real enemy of my people is right here. I will not disgrace my
religion, my people or myself by becoming a tool to enslave those who are fighting for
their own justice, freedom and equality. . . .

If I thought the war was going to bring freedom and equality to twenty-two million
of my people they wouldn’t have to draft me, I’d join tomorrow. But I either have to obey
the laws of the land or the laws of Allah. I have nothing to lose by standing up for my
beliefs. So I’ll go to jail. We’ve been in jail for four hundred years.”

1966 Sports Illustrated article on the public’s response to Ali


“The governor of Illinois found Clay "disgusting." and the governor of Maine said
Clay "should be held in utter contempt by every patriotic American." An American
Legion post in Miami asked people to "join in condemnation of this unpatriotic,
loudmouthed, bombastic individual," and dirty mail began to arrive at Clay's Miami
address.”
Handout: My Lai massacre changes opinions back home
On March 16, 1968, a company of U.S. infantry entered the village of My Lai, and
although they did not receive a single round of hostile fire, methodically slaughtered
some five hundred Vietnamese peasants, mostly women and children. The freelance
journalist Seymour Hersh heard the story, but the major media ignored his efforts to
publicize it. Finally, in December 1969, Life magazine carried Ronald Haeberle's
horrendous photos of GIs pouring automatic rifle fire into trenches where Vietnamese
women, babies in their arms, crouched in fear. The military arrested Lieutenant William
CaIley, a platoon leader at My Lai, who had ordered the shootings. Many officers were
involved in the incident and then the cover-up. However, only Calley received a jail
sentence. His life sentence was reduced to five years by the intervention of President
Nixon. He served three and a half years under house arrest and was then released. In
the following recollection, Larry Colburn, a helicopter door-gunner, who, with his pilot,
Hugh Thompson, came upon the scene and stopped some of the killing, tells his story.

How would this event change public opinion in the U.S?

Should Lt. Calley have received a stronger punishment?

Larry Colburn, "They Were Butchering People" (2003)


We weren't pacifists. We did our job and when we had to kill people we did. But
we didn't do it for sport. We didn't randomly shoot people. In our gun company it was
very important to capture weapons, not just to legitimize your kill, but psychologically it
was easier when you could say, "If I didn't do that, he was going to shoot me."

We flew an OH-23-a little gasoline-engine bubble helicopter. We were aerial


scouts-a new concept. Instead of just sending assault helicopters they'd use our small
aircraft as bait and have a couple gunships cover us. Basically we'd go out and try to
get into trouble. We'd fly real low and if we encountered anything we'd mark it with
smoke, return fire, and let the gunships work out. We also went on "snatch missions,"
kidnapping draft-age males to take back for interrogation. We did that a lot in 1968.

After that we just started working the perimeter of My Lai-4, -5, and -6 and I
remember seeing the American troops come in on slicks [helicopters]. We got ahead of
them to see if they were going to encounter anything and we still didn't receive any fire.
It was market day and we saw a lot of women and children leaving the hamlet. They
were moving down the road carrying empty baskets. As we went further around the
perimeter we saw a few wounded women in the rice fields south of My Lai-4. We
marked their bodies with smoke grenades expecting that medics would give them
medical assistance.
When we came back to the road we started seeing bodies, the same people that
were walking to the market. They hadn't even gotten off the road. They were in piles,
dead. We started going through all the scenarios of what might have happened. Was it
artillery? Gunships? Viet Cong? The American soldiers on the ground were just walking
around in a real nonchalant sweep. No one was crouching, ducking, or hiding.

The only thing I remember feeling back then was that these guys were really out
for revenge. They'd lost men to booby traps and snipers and they were ready to
engage. They were briefed the night before and I've heard it said that they were going in
there to waste everything. They didn't capture any weapons. They didn't kill any draft-
age males. I've seen the list of dead and there were a hundred and twenty some
humans under the age of five. It's something I've struggled with my whole adult life, how
people can do that. I know what it's like to seek revenge, but we would look for a worthy
opponent. These were elders, mothers, children, and babies. The fact that the VC [Viet
Cong] camped out there at night is no justification for killing everyone in the hamlet.

Compare it to a little town in the United States. We're at war with someone on our
own soil. They come into a town and rape the women, kill the babies, kill everyone. How
would we feel? And it wasn't just murdering civilians. They were butchering people. The
only thing they didn't do is cook 'em and eat 'em. How do you get that far over the
edge?
Handout: Students for a Democratic Society (SDS)

At first SDS tackled domestic issues. In the summer of 1964, SDS volunteers
moved into poor urban neighborhoods and organized residents to fight for jobs, better
housing, schools, and community services.

By the fall of 1964, SDS had organized chapters on nearly 50 campuses around
the country. Then a new issue loomed-the war in Vietnam. At its December 1964
national convention, SDS members voted to protest the war by organizing a march on
Washington for the following April. Because United States involvement in Vietnam was
still limited to military advisers and aid, opposition to the war remained muted. No one
expected more than a few thousand marchers. Then President Johnson began to
escalate the United States commitment to South Vietnam.

When Johnson ordered the large-scale bombing of North Vietnam n 1965 and
sent in the first combat troops, the antiwar movement mushroomed. Some Americans
felt betrayed by Johnson, whom they had considered a peace candidate in 1964. SDS
now led a crusade to end the war in Vietnam. Within a single year, the ranks of SDS
had swollen to more than 150 chapters with 10,000 members.

That spring (1965) also helped organize several university teach-ins. The first
teach-ins took place at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor. On March 24, 1965.
Shortly after the first United States ground combat troops landed in South Vietnam,
more than 3,500 students and professors jammed into 4 lecture halls. They sang folk
songs, analyzed United States foreign policy, and debated the war until dawn. In the
following weeks, similar teach-ins sprang up at campuses across the nation.

Tom Hayden outlines the Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) views on the
ills of society.

American society is being destroyed by its unrepresentative government. The


politicians who control the White House and Congress do not respond to glaring social
needs or to the outcries of millions of people. Democracy is reduced to the sorry event
of people trooping to the polls every four years to vote for candidates who offer no
serious choice.

Our taxes, blood and national honor are being poured out in the hopeless
Vietnam war, while the violence in our cities exposes the real depth of our unsolved
problems at home. Faced with a world wide cry for human rights, from Vietnam to our
nation’s slums, top American politicians seem able to reply only with negative and self-
defeating violence. But the violence of suppression solves nothing. The problems
cannot be avoided or bombed away.

In 1960 and especially in 1964, the American voters supported peace in Vietnam
and social reform at home. Since then leading scholars, religious figures, artists, even
certain generals and businessmen have protested the war; the Senate leadership of
both parties has criticised the President; opinion surveys show a large minority opposed
to the fighting; nearly all of America’s allies have registered their opposition; world public
opinion condemns the US as the aggressor in Vietnam. Yet the warmakers continue to
escalate. Their domination of policy grows.

For a century American society has endorsed racial equality. But in 1968 a virtual
race war is in the making. Since open rebellions broke out nearly four years ago, no
social and economic answer has been put forward. The basic response of the
government has been to violently suppress the rebellions then let evil conditions go on
as before. Rotten housing, schools and jobs are the continuous lot of black Americans.
Neither hard work in the cotton fields, nor politics, nor labor organizations, nor
nonviolent demonstrations have made the American promise become a reality.

The problems of Vietnam and racism affect all Americans. Our country’s future
peace and honor depend on a successful resolution of these two problems. Hatreds and
divisions are being created which will take generations to end. America is becoming an
ugly and insecure place to live. The country lacks the commitment to deal with racism,
and cannot afford to anyway because of its preoccupation with Vietnam. Because our
social imagination is blighted by these investments in violence, our life as a whole is
degraded in countless ways. Cities are unlivable. Television is a wasteland. Medical
needs are not met. Mental problems go unattended.
Protest Primary Documents Name:_________________

In the table below, describe the background (italics) of the reading in 3 or 4 main points. In the second box, outline the arguments
against the war. Your group will be responsible for presenting the information on one source to the rest of the class.

Name of Description and background information on the Describe 3-4 major arguments against the war
Primary person or group
Source

African
Americans

Popular
media and
the War:
Bob Dylan
“Masters of
War”

Muhammad
Ali and a
divided
nation
Protest Primary Documents Name:_________________

Name of Description and background information on the Describe 3-4 major arguments against the war
Primary person or group
Source

Students
for a
Democratic
Society
(SDS)

My Lai
Massacre

Kent State
shooting
Protest Primary Documents Name:_________________

In the table below, describe the background (italics) of the reading in 3 or 4 main points. In the second box, outline the arguments
against the war. Your group will be responsible for presenting the information on one source to the rest of the class.

Name of Description and background information on the Describe 3-4 major arguments against the war
Primary person or group
Source

African  11% of general population, yet 20% of  Should be fighting for freedoms at home (Civil Rights
Americans frontline combat forces were African movement) and not fighting in pointless war of Vietnam
American: overrepresented in military.  Faced discrimination in the army.
 Civil Rights movement was still going on back
home so many felt that they were fighting for
nothing back home

Popular  Television changed people’s perception of  Bob Dylan argued that the only reason we were fighting
media and war: they brought images of death and Vietnam war was so big businesses could make money
the War: destruction to American’s ‘living room’ off of selling arms and missiles.
Bob Dylan  First ‘living room war’  Politicians who get us into war are not usually the ones
“Masters of  Music was also key to protest movement who are fighting and suffering in war.
War”

Muhammad  Resisted being drafted  Ali argued African Americans weren’t treated well back
Ali and a  Boxing licenses and heavy weight boxing title home so why should they fight for the U.S.
divided revoked.  Was Muslim and claimed religion prevented him from
nation  Tried to gain ‘conscientious objector’ killing anyone in war.
deferment from draft  Public ridiculed Ali as being ‘un-American’
 Hawks= support war
 Doves = against war
Protest Primary Documents Name:_________________

Name of Description and background information on the Describe 3-4 major arguments against the war
Primary person or group
Source

Students  College student group first focused on  Felt government did not represent the people very well.
for a domestic issues  Felt Vietnam was hopeless
Democratic  Protested via march on Washington  Vietnam was wasting money that should be used at
Society  Felt betrayed by Johnson because they home.
(SDS) thought he was a ‘Peace Candidate’  Two problems: Vietnam and Race at home
 Held ‘Teach-ins’ to inform people about the
war.

My Lai  U.S. battalion marched into village of My Lai  U.S. public had a hard time supporting a war that let to
Massacre and shot and killed 500 peasants such atrocities as this one.
 Many were unarmed women and children.  Took media one year to fully publicize the event.
 Attack was unprovoked.  First-hand accounts felt soldiers were out for revenge.
 Lieutenant Calley: Faced life in prison;
reduced to 5 years by Nixon

Kent State  Protest at college in Ohio  Most of the U.S. public blamed the rowdy protestors
shooting  Protest moved to bars the first night; protest even though they were unarmed.
got carried away and burned down ROTC  U.S. public upset that war in Vietnam was leading to
building. such violence at home.
 National Guard called in
 Final day of protest, Guards opened fire on
protesters. 9 wounded, 4 killed.

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