On Fri, Jun 21, 2024 at 8:48 AM Michael Meeropol via groups.io <mameerop=
[email protected]> wrote:
All praise to Sutherland, Fonda and the entire crew --- and to the man who
had the idea for the GI coffee houses --- FRED GARDNER (a former high
school mate of mine!)

The Pray-in at Fort Jackson <https://theava.com/archives/242626>
BY FRED GARDNER ON APRIL 21, 2024

Steve Kline was a Sp4 stationed at Fort Jackson when Donna Mickleson and I
met him in December 1967. We were transforming a failed Tiki bar on Main
St. in Columbia, South Carolina, into a coffeehouse that we hoped would
become a hangout for GIs. Kline got wind of our project and offered to
help. Later that winter he and a soldier named Bob Tater would be prime
movers in a “Pray-in for Peace” at a chapel on post. Tater, who was
serious, soft-spoken and saintly, deserted soon after the pray-in. Last I
heard he was teaching at a school for blind children in France. That was 55
years ago.

Kline has just brought out a memoir called “The Metta Way,” using a
pen-name (George Hendruk). His style is straightforward and informative
without any fancy flourishes. He grew up in New Jersey. His father was a
successful optician who suffered a massive heart attack when Steve was 11.
The family endured a class fall. (I flashed on Charles Willeford’s memoir
“I Was Looking for a Street” – high praise, indeed.)

In ‘The Metta Way,’ all proper names have been changed at the insistence of
Hay House, a publisher that specializes in “self help, inspirational and
transformational books and products.” Kline’s alma mater becomes “Winston
University,” although he uses the real name of his friend Howard Porter,
the star basketball player who almost led Villanova to the NCAA
championship in 1971. Donna becomes “Florence Patterson – a magnificent
blonde Goddess, unapproachable as a girlfriend but she always had time to
sit and talk.” I become Frank Forest.

About the coffeehouse he writes, “It became my home away from the base. I
even helped Frank and a crew plaster a wall after the Columbia building
inspector went out of his way to say that a perfectly clean brick wall was
‘dirty’ and would have to be covered over. The UFO gave us disaffected and
curious GIs a place to hang out, relax, and talk about what we saw as wrong
about the War and the army. And it gave us a base to plot and plan!

“There was a core of about 12 of us who wanted to take some action. We
decided on asking permission to have a discussion in the base main chapel
along with the Chaplain, who had his doubts about the war and gave us
permission.”

Kline quotes an account of the pray-in from Soldiers in Revolt, David
Cortright’s very good history of the GI movement: “On the evening of
February 13, 35 uncertain but determined soldiers gathered in front of the
main post chapel for what had been advertised as a silent protest service
against the war. Military police broke up the event before it really got
started but two GIs – Bob Tater and Steve Kline – were arrested and thrown
in the brig.”

Kline adds: “Just to correct the article, it was to be a discussion,
including a period of silence on and for all those who had died in Nam,
both American and Vietnamese. At this point I was becoming an activist and
had little grounding in ‘spirituality’ as such; I was rebelling against the
Church and didn’t yet comprehend the differences. When we were turned away,
Bob [that’s his real name] and I looked at each other, spontaneously
informed the MPs that we would still have our prayer service/meeting and
knelt in prayer. I think of it as my first real adventure in Spirit:
something moved us to do that, and it felt as right as it could be. The MPs
picked us up under our arms and carried us away and told us to leave. Bob
and I looked at each other again and we went back and knelt again! The
chaplain almost joined us! Looking back, Spirit/angel/goddess moved me to
do this thing.

“Frank had notified the Village Voice, a New York radical counterculture
newspaper, of the event, and their reporter Jack Newfield and a
photographer got onto base (the bases were wide open then). They got the
perfect shot of the MPs dragging Bob and I away. The picture and story hit
the wires and the next day was in newspapers all over the country. My
gung-ho vet dad picked up the Miami Herald next day and there I was on the
front page! This led to some lively discussions, accusations, and finally
agreements that saw him supporting Bobby Kennedy for President.”

>From Ken Burns’s account of the War in Vietnam I inferred that the group of
“wise men” convened by Clark Clifford in the spring of 1968 to advise
President Johnson on how to proceed in Vietnam had been seriously upset by
news of 35 soldiers attending a de facto protest at Fort Jackson.
Newfield’s piece in the Voice had been picked up by the New York Times and
hipped the “wise men” to the rate at which dissent within the ranks was
growing. Previously, the biggest collective antiwar action had been the
Fort Hood Three refusing orders for Vietnam.

I’m halfway through “The Metta Way.” What follows, according to the
author’s blurb, includes “his retreat to normalcy, his stirring of spirit,
and the opioid epidemic.”


On Fri, Jun 21, 2024 at 8:48 AM Michael Meeropol via groups.io <mameerop=
[email protected]> wrote:

> Either on the Dick Cavett show or some other late night talk show,
> SUtherland and another guy (name forgotten) did a FANTASTIC 'sports
> announcement" version of a battle between the VIet Cong and the 101st
> Airborne -- the end up with a "draw" and note that the Viet Cong seem to
> have a lot of support from the local fans which (they told the TV audience)
> always brought down the house from active-duty GIs.
>
> the work that the FTA tour did probably was one of the most crucial means
> for ending the US aggression against the people of Indochina -- once the
> army couldn't be relied upon, the gig was up.
>
> All praise to Sutherland, Fonda and the entire crew --- and to the man who
> had the idea for the GI coffee houses --- FRED GARDNER (a former high
> school mate of mine!)
>
> On Fri, Jun 21, 2024 at 11:43 AM Dennis Brasky via groups.io <dmozart1756=
> [email protected]> wrote:
>
>> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YWAbhonmCOg
>>
>>
>>
>> 
>
>


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