Left in the Bay Profile picture
Histories of people's struggles in the San Francisco Bay Area | email: leftinthebay@gmail.com

May 21, 2021, 8 tweets

56 years ago, May 21 1965, the first Vietnam Day, a 35-hour teach-in on the Vietnam War, began in Berkeley. The event was organized by the Vietnam Day Committee, a direct outgrowth of the Free Speech Movement led by activist Jerry Rubin

Some 35,000 people attended the teach-in. Anti-war speakers included Staughton Lynd, Bob Scheer, Dr. Benjamin Spock, and FSM leader Mario Savio. Despite the event's anti-war stance, it featured some speakers who supported the war, such as Cal professor Aaron Wildavsky

Vietnam Day was made possible by the gains won by the Free Speech Movement, which opened space for free political speech on campus which would have previously been barred. VDC drew links between the civil rights movement, campus struggles, and the war

Radicals, such as self-described "Castroist" Jerry Rubin, played leading roles in VDC. Also involved were the Communist Party's Du Bois Clubs, Students for a Democratic Society, Young Socialist Alliance, and Maoist organization the Progressive Labor Party

The event also featured music by folk singer Phil Ochs and jazz musician Philly Joe Jones, as well as a performance of Bertolt Brecht's "The Exception and the Rule" by the San Francisco Mime Troupe

Vietnam Day inspired similar teach-ins and protests at campuses across the country, leading to a dramatic expansion in the youth anti-war movement. It also signaled a growing militancy on the part of Berkeley activists, who would soon engage in violent confrontations over the war

Prophetically, Staughton Lynd's speech ended: "The natives here at home are restless, too. And maybe there should be a contingency plan to keep some of the Marines here to deal with us." Four years later, Berkeley would be under National Guard occupation

You can watch a film of Vietnam Day produced by VDC here: oac.cdlib.org/ark:/13030/kt6…

Share this Scrolly Tale with your friends.

A Scrolly Tale is a new way to read Twitter threads with a more visually immersive experience.
Discover more beautiful Scrolly Tales like this.

Keep scrolling