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Historian Howard Zinn Calls for Activism
NEW HAVEN, Conn. - Howard Zinn may be a historian, but he lives in the present.
As demonstrators for immigrant rights made their way around New Haven on May Day, Zinn assumed the stage at the Center Church on the New Haven Green, stressing the need for youth to engage in activism, to understand the darker aspects of American domestic and foreign policy, and to distinguish between allegiance to a government and allegiance to a country.
Evoking a rare mixture of political seriousness and light-hearted wit, the 84-year-old history professor spoke conversationally, prompting many audience members to laugh at his sense of humor or applaud when his musings culminated in calls for change.
"Our interests are not the same [as the government's], despite our culture and the way it tries to indoctrinate us into thinking our interests are the same ... we and the government, Exxon and me," Zinn said to long, drawn-out laughter.
"Bush," he then said with a pause, "and the young person he sends to war do not have the same interests."
Strenuous clapping ensued.
The event, sponsored by Labyrinth Books, coincided with the release of Zinn's "A Young People's History of the United States," a youth-oriented articulation of his seminal "A People's History of the United States." Though he emphasized that the two books do not differ substantially and that his message was the same to Americans both young and old, Zinn's speech on Tuesday focused on the need for the "next generation of youth" to question the government and understand its complexities - an implicit criticism of what he sees as older Americans' failures to do the same.
"We need something better," he said. "With the situation we're in, we can't afford to have another generation that will go along with war. Or another nation that will go along with the nation's enormous militarism."
Youth today need to recognize the presence of social upheaval in America's past in order to recognize the importance of activism, Zinn said, but history teaching has traditionally emphasized American unity while ignoring social movements and conflicts of interest that steered the country toward historical change.
As a result, he said, young people become discouraged when only 20 people show up for a war protest rally; they have no idea that the civil rights protests failed on multiple occasions before the movement saw even an inkling of attention or success.
Also lost upon American youth is the nation's history of ignoring the interests of common people, Zinn said. He said events such as the Vietnam War exemplify the United States's long record of using foreign policy to acquire needed resources, while operating under the guise of liberty, self-determination and freedom.
In short, youth today have the daunting task of separating themselves from a self-righteous national culture, Zinn said. In spite of the hubbub over America's greatness, the historian said, the nation significantly trails many other countries when it comes to literacy rates, infant mortality and the promotion of human rights. Illustrating what he termed the hypocrisy of America's condemnation of nuclear weapons, Zinn recalled a letter that his friend, the late Kurt Vonnegut, had sent to the New York Times.
"Not saying anything about Iran or North Korea, his letter just said this: 'I know of only one country that has dropped nuclear weapons on defenseless people,'" Zinn said. "The Times did not print his letter."
Most in the audience were old enough to have lived through the 1960s and '70s, when Vonnegut first attracted a cult following, although young adults nearly composed a third of the audience. For New Haven resident Pat Topitzer, Zinn's words reminded her of her own youth protest experiences and addressed what she considered a pressing issue.
"I think for people ... it is startling [to see] the lack of involvement of young people," she said. "We had [an anti-war] demonstration last year on the corner of Elm and York streets and it absolutely rocked me - there we were on the corner of two residential colleges and only one college student came out."
Local resident Baub Biden said he found the youth turnout at the talk encouraging, but that it would take more than a re-evaluation of American history to change young people's mentalities.
"You have a lot of people you are distracted by VH1, MTV, BET, and every time you turn on the TV there's a reality show that's kind of catchy," Biden said. "So these people are at home, and they're watching all of these distractions and they're all talking about Britney Spears cutting her hair."
Although he was not in attendance at Zinn's speech, history professor Jean-Christophe Agnew said he had a great deal of respect for Zinn's historical work, which he called highly influential and widely used. Though historians make it their work to study the past, it is not unusual for prominent professors such as Zinn to weigh in on current events, he said, citing a resolution opposing the war in Iraq that was recently ratified by the American Historical Association.
But that does not mean that all historians share the same point of view.
"In these moments of crisis, when the country is split ... so historians are split," Agnew said.
Copyright 1995-2007 Yale Daily News Publishing Company, Inc.
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18 Comments so far
Show AllAtta boy Howard. I wish we had someone like him here in Canada.
MEDIA REFORM is more important than the war on terror.
MEDIA REFORM is more important than global warming.
It is so simple it's celabratory.
adamwestfakey@yahoo.ca
I agree, Adam, we could use Howard Zinn in Canada. We may not have him, but we do have people who are trying to speak out but the mainstream media ignore them. The Council of Canadians and the folks at the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives (and many others) are working and speaking constantly, but few are listening. So I do agree that we need media reform, but I refuse to make that a bigger priority than global warming: campaigns for media reform and for environmental reform need to go forward together. Neither is going to go forward at all until Canadians force the issue of North American Union (NAU) out of the shadows and onto the floor of the Parliament.
Wonderful Howard, I applaude you. But when do we realize that talking isn't workng.
And then some.
Am I the only one asking what the hell "they" are putting in our skies via chemtrails? There is no ONE reason for the weakening of the bees, I have asked the above question to many experts only to hear no response back.Is it time for revolution..revolution..revolution? It wokrd before, why are the younger generations so "Americanized"?
I'm not sure the younger generations are not involved. I suspect that they may be involved in different ways than other generations are used to.
A major difference between the generations is what Howard is talking about. Younger folks need to know the history before they can put current events into perspective. They need to understand that their actions will eventually have an impact on our government. Our youth will be motivated to get involved when they realize that they are the ones who are paying, and will continue to pay, with their blood and their futures for the wrongs committed today by our government. Our youth needs to know that the older generations that created this mess cannot fix it without their help.
Thank you Howard. You are a treasure.
Howard Zinn will be at the US Social Forum in Atlanta, June 27 - July 1, 2007.
Go to the US Social Forum Website to learn more.
Be a part of the most important progressive gathering since the battle of seattle!
F.Y.I.---Howard thinks Congressman Kucinich is the best, brightest, and boldest in the Congress. (Sorry. Can't find the quote right now.) Now THERE are a pair of insightful, deep-thinking, and PROGRESSIVE human beings.
I, personally, wish we had SEVERAL million of BOTH these men!
Zypher(and anyone really) I've no idea how old you are and what generation you come from, but in this socio-political climate any young person that wants to speak out can, but only in the right context and within the right perimeters.(Free speech zones, designated protest areas and the like) Most in my generation(I'm 26) and younger generations have a hard time forcing themselves into action due to technological advances on the other side. Sure we can do sit in's and stay for days on the national mall like 30 years ago. In turn the FBI can zoom in from outerspace to see what pamphlet you're reading and do a database search for your identity from the contours of your face. And the result of that would be, what? Nothing, except more tax dollars to goverment agencies to "control" the next massive sit in.
You may be out of the loop on the dynamics of the dedicated peace activists in my generation.(They aren't celebrities, rockstars and clever pundits either) They aren't hippies, nor liberals(albeit they have the right idea...) They're punks. Anarchists. Decentralists. Anti-capitalists. This is the age of information and these kids are more informed and thus more intelligent. It isn't a game, Black Blocs aren't fun and yes, this means the rest of our lives. Even those kids who aren't there at every protest or maybe aloof to political activism still listen to bands such as ANTI-FLAG with songs like THE WTO KILLS FARMERS and DU IS A WAR CRIME and they believe it(as they should.) You can't believe what MSNBC says simply because it's not Fox News. You haven't seen the "revolution" 'cause it's STILL not being televised. These corporations have financial interests and monotary backing and support from the exact companies that destroy american culture. It's not that the youth have been "Americanized", it's that they haven't been and if anyone wants to instill those true to heart American values in them now...well good luck. We want no part. It's shrill, and oh so very distant. We want to focus on the now, the economic collapse of America, the globalization of coporate welfare and we don't really care what our forefathers and current celebrity politicians did or are doing, how innovative the business leaders of the 20th and 21st century are because at this point because they have failed us all.
resist.refuse.object.reuse.
Well, of course, simple intelligence and conscience will bring you to agreement with what Howard Zinn has to say and the wonderful ways he says it.
I'm not sure how much internet research on national issues college students are doing, how many of them question the political violence that took so many progressive leaders in America, or how or what they understand of our CIA's activities throughout the world for a half century and more . . .
But it does seem to me that they should be questioning 9/11 and the official story because that is something they lived through, just as they are personally experiencing the Bush regime and it's act of aggression against Iraq in this illegal war.
Comforting as it is for most of us that we don't have a draft in America, that may add to the inactivity of college students.
If they are paying any attention, they will be aware of Global Warming now, but if they rely on our "media" to inform them of the facts and the full threat, they will be misinformed.
Nor will it tell you who has taken us on this suicidal path of pollution, overpopulation -- and violence, violence, violence.
But at some point, I think, they have to begin questioning capitalism -- the artificial yardstick of the dollar bill by which our children, nature, animal-life and the planet itself are judged.
Perhaps they will begin to question organized patriarchal religion in its continued unfairness to half the world that is female.
Perhaps they will begin to question "Manifest Destiny" and "Man's Dominion Over Nature" whereby permission is given to exploit nature, natural resources, animal-life -- and even other human beings according to various myths of inferiority.
Perhaps they will continue to be distracted and hypnotized by what they can see on their TV?
Perhaps this revolution will need to be televised! One day when the younger generation can no longer escape into their escapism, when reality has actually become inescapable and has intruded into THEIR personal reality (for many in the sixties, it was the draft or earlier during the depression came the rise of unions and social movements)then the young will erupt in activism.This generation faces catastrophe as global warming disrupts their future and their own uninvolvement - bubble of untouchability. That they will not be able to escape just like the draft once made the vietnam war personal, so too the drastic economic effects and social disruptions due to global warming will rapidly begin to affect them where it hurts...at home.
where to I spend my finite amount of emotion, energy and resource? Do I spend it on environmental issues? Global warming? Teflon in our food? Mercury in our food? Flame retardent in our food? or do I spend it on a war started by lies? Where thousands of our people have died and tens or hundreds or thousands of Iraqi's and Afghans have died? Do I spend it on fighting the integration of church and state and spending my money on vacations and seminars for the religous elite? Maybe I should spend it on the problem of what we do with our sewage and garbage? What does India and China do with it? or gun control? or the still prevalent racial prejudice in our country or abroad? Or seeing to it that our seniors get a fair shake and the rich do not steal retirement funds?
It is "wearing" that so much needs attention ..... and much of it we put our hopes in politicians?
Read the writings of Thomas Paine ..... that, imho, at least seems clear.
Let's face it, today's students (the majority of them...the overwhelming majority of them) are no more involved than the man in the moon. I would never in a million years have believed I would hear myself saying this, but we need the draft reinstated ASAP. You want to see students in the streets and paying attention to the shameless activities of this government and world affairs, lay the threat of the draft over them. One year compulsory national service, CCC style with the option to be called into national defense duties (and, no, John McCain, you absolute jackass, that doesn't mean patrolling our borders). Today's students have few real friends enlisted in the military and even the body counts don't pull them away from MTV. The enlistees are not the college-bound among our youth for the most part. In the late 60s, early 70s our close friends were coming home in body bags and students were in the streets in the thousands (honor Kent State). If students don't get out of the dorms and get active, there is little hope. The first step: read The People's History of the United States! The second: pick something that really pisses you off and dig in for the long haul.
People can get Zinn in Canada, or into their living rooms, or their classrooms, or many other places by buying the DVD about him, "You Can't Be Neutral on a Moving Train."
We should never overlook the power that technologies like DVDs have to share ideas that move people.
The social activism needed right now, immediately, is the impeachment of Bush and Cheney. Failing that, all other activities will become irrelevant as virtual dictator Bush silences everyone with death squad fascism and World War Three.
I like what Howard Zinn says when he tells us that the governments' interests may not be our own. A possible example of government interests vs. the people is the incessant spraying of our skies, double trains (not single like the common jetstream), known as chemtrails. "Zephyr" writes about them and he has a point. There's no one is government who seems to be willing to comment on them. I too have written or called local air authorities, state authorities and finally the Senate.....and have received no intelligent replies. What is going on in the skies? Who's interest in being looked after? Ours? The governments? Is there a benign reason for these chemtrails - like rain-making? Or is it something more sinister?
At time it seems like a police state out there, that is just something that could be putting would be protesters off, the high likelyhood that you will get beaten by the police, harassed by the police after the event and the posibility of a criminal record?
Communitarian makes the most sense. The most direct action we could take at this point is to impeach and remove the current Presidential team of Bush/Cheney. There is plenty of evidence of their impeachable offenses. Congress needs to be impressed with its constitutional responsibility and encouraged (i.e., given the courage) to stand up to its duty to impeach and hold the hearings that will demonstrate to the public the rightness and the justice of removing this team, who have acted lawlessly and violated the constitution in many ways. We can each do our own part by urging our Representative to co-sponsor Kucinich's impeachment bill H. 333, writing letters to the editor, or joining an impeachment action (www.a28.org).