And absolutely loved it. The soundtrack was gorgeous. I loved watching all that on-the-scene footage. The veterans were so articulate and so sad. It was really like being there. Which I would have been if I hadn't been a freshman away at college at the time - protesting the war out-of-state.
The scenes at the end as they walked into Charlestown were amazing - Kerry's comments were entirely accurate - the people handing them cans of soda and bags of chips were the Boston area version of conservatives. Of course, these were also the people whose kids would have been fighting in Vietnam instead of off at college.
The whole thing had special resonance for me because I know those places so well. I picnicked many times with my kids on the Lexington Green when they were little. The first man killed in the Revolutionary War was from the town where I grew up. The town library had a glass case that displayed his bloody uniform and scarf and his musket, so every time I went to the library from the time I was a small child I would see that bloody scarf. The entire town would retrace the route of the Minutemens' march to Concord that first day of the war every year on Patriot's Day (April 19, which is a state holiday).
So you can see the kind of resonance this particular VVAW protest had for the locals.
Eugenia Kaledin:
If historians remain unsure about who shot the first round on the Green in 1775, few question the fierce sense of injustice that propelled colonists to rebel against the Crown. If in the 1770s, as in the 1970s, most people wanted to respect law and order as part of a new country’s obligation to civic tranquility, moral outrage nevertheless propelled many good citizens into breaking their king’s laws. When Bostonians dumped 342 chests of tea into Boston Harbor in 1776, when local abolitionists hid fugitive slaves in the 1850s, New Englanders were proud to be breaking man’s laws for what they saw as a higher law. And when in 1971, in a gesture of solidarity with the Vietnam Veterans Against the War (VVAW), many local citizens chose to break a town ordinance forbidding anyone to sleep on the sacred Green, the arrest that followed became the largest arrest in Massachusetts’ history.
In terms of the history of protest in the Bay State the future should note the significance of the Lexington arrest alongside the Boston Tea Party and Shay’s Rebellion, especially because it was a community gesture of civil disobedience, not of violence. If the police had arrested the crowd at ten p.m., the moment the ordinance became effective, twice as many people would have gone to jail. But no place in town could have held so many dissenters. The protest was entirely peaceable. No shots were fired; no menacing gestures were necessary. The police treated their law-breaking neighbors with respect. Indeed, the largest local repercussion was political; at the next election, the people of Lexington voted in great numbers to turn out of office the powerful selectman most responsible for the arrest. . .