Houston Chronicle Sunday

‘The Vietnam War’

How the controvers­ial conflict ripped the nation’s religious fabric

- By Don Lattin

When: 7 p.m. Sunday-Thursday and Sept. 24-28 Network: PBS

In Belief: The documentar­y shows how the war tore at America’s religious fabric.

In the 1960s, the relatively new medium of television brought the war in Southeast Asia into living rooms across the United States like never before. And, this month, TV is once again at the center of the story as filmmakers Ken Burns and Lynn Novick present “The Vietnam War,” a 10-part, 18-hour series on the Public Broadcasti­ng System, premiering Sunday.

America is about to the relive the horror and deep divisions spawned by the U.S. war in Vietnam — convulsion­s that also tore apart the nation’s religious fabric and still echo across the political and cultural landscape.

“So much of the disunion and cynicism we see today dates back to the Vietnam era,” Novick said in an interview with RNS. “The tension between the secular and religious is part of it, but also class tension and ethnic tension, and the whole urban/rural and red state/blue state split. This didn’t come out of nowhere. A lot of that started to bubble up during Vietnam.”

There was no unified religious or U.S. Christian response to the rapid escalation of the war in Vietnam in the mid-tolate 1960s, just like there is no single response to the current war on Islamic extremism in Iraq, Syria, Afghanista­n and Africa.

In the mid-1960s, Christian peace organizati­ons such as the Catholic Worker Movement, Clergy and Laity Concerned About Vietnam and the American Friends Service Committee protested rising American involvemen­t, but mainstream groups such as the U.S. Catholic bishops conference and the National Associatio­n for Evangelica­ls firmly backed the hawkish policies of President Lyndon B. Johnson.

The tide began turning against the war in the spring of 1967, when the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. condemned a massive U.S. bombing campaign as “blasphemy against all that America stands for.” King’s speech at Riverside Church in New York City and the quagmire of Vietnam marked the beginning of the end for Johnson, who would soon decline to seek a second term.

“In the film, we hear Dr. King’s words and understand what a watershed that was,” Novick said. “Dr. King felt loyalty to President Johnson because of the work they were doing together on civil rights. King took quite a hammering from many quarters for not being patriotic and not being on the team — from the black community and from the Democratic establishm­ent. In 1967, it was not a popular thing to do to criticize the government about the war.”

Public opinion shifted with the rapid escalation of the conflict between March 1968 and March 1969, when the total number of U.S. soldiers who died in Vietnam jumped from roughly 19,000 to 33,000. Eventually, more than 58,000 Americans would lose their lives. By November 1971, the nation’s Catholic bishops had reversed themselves, saying the war in Vietnam no longer met the religious criteria for a “just war.”

“Before the war began, most Christians in America possessed a naive belief in the inherent goodness of all things American,” observed American religious historian Mark G. Toulouse. “In the years following Vietnam, and later Watergate, this trust in American institutio­ns and government officials dissipated as one of the options truly available to thoughtful Christians.”

Another scholar who has written about the religious response to the war, Kenneth Heineman, said media coverage of radicalize­d religious leaders, such as the left-wing Catholic priests Daniel and Philip Berrigan, “hurt the overall brand of religion” in America.

“Did the church’s anti-war activism turn off people? Yes,” said Heineman, who teaches at Angelo State University in San Angelo. “The church was divided, as was the country.”

The Berrigan brothers were among the Catonsvill­e Nine protesters who served prison time for pouring homemade napalm on hundreds of stolen draft records in May 1968.

Burns and Novick’s marathon series does not focus much on the role of organized religion in contesting or supporting the war. It relates the human stories of the war in Vietnam — the struggle of U.S. military personnel and also of Vietnamese soldiers on both sides of what, for them, was a civil war.

“There were many individual acts of conscience and individual existentia­l questionin­g about what is right,” Novick said. “There was the question of conscienti­ous objector status and who could have access to it. For part of this time, you had to belong to an organized religion like the Quakers or Seventhday Adventists” to claim that status.

But Novick noted that the horror of the war raised broader “existentia­l questions about the human condition and the existence of a higher power. … Some people questioned God, while others turned to God to help them get through.”

Novick and Burns also show how the war looked from the perspectiv­e of the Vietnamese people. More than 3 million of them died in the war, which began against their French colonial overlords in the aftermath of World War II.

“Religion is also important in Vietnam, and just like in America, there are many Vietnamese perspectiv­es. North and South Vietnam were predominan­tly Buddhist, with a minority Catholic population. Before the country was divided in 1954 into north and south, the Catholic minority had close ties to the French and often were in positions of authority and power in the French colonial government.”

“When the communists took over in the north, about a million Catholics fled to the south,” Novick continued. “We show that in the film. They would have felt persecuted if they had stayed in the north. In the south, the government formed eventually around (Prime Minister Ngo Dinh) Diem. He was a Catholic and his brother was a bishop. So he was a problemati­c figure in a Buddhist country.”

“The legitimacy of his tenure was always complicate­d,” she said. “Over time he became authoritar­ian and repressive against Buddhists who were protesting the lack of freedom and civil rights. That culminated in immolation­s by monks and mass demonstrat­ions, which were brutally repressed in 1963, and that resulted in the Kennedy administra­tion deciding to overthrow Diem and put somebody else in power. This all laid bare the tensions between Buddhists and Catholics.”

Even for those who were alive to remember it, the war in Vietnam, the filmmakers hoped to convey, was more complicate­d than our experience or opinions of it.

“Too often,” Novick noted, “when Americans talk about Vietnam, they are talking about themselves.”

 ?? Associated Press ?? Carl Garman, of Harris, Pa., looks for names of soldiers from Gettysburg, Pa., etched on the black granite of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington.
Associated Press Carl Garman, of Harris, Pa., looks for names of soldiers from Gettysburg, Pa., etched on the black granite of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington.
 ?? Associated Press ?? American troops carry the bodies of fellow soldiers past a wounded North Vietnamese soldier on Hill 990 in South Vietnam’s central highlands on June 2, 1968. Television brought the war in Southeast Asia into living rooms across the United States.
Associated Press American troops carry the bodies of fellow soldiers past a wounded North Vietnamese soldier on Hill 990 in South Vietnam’s central highlands on June 2, 1968. Television brought the war in Southeast Asia into living rooms across the United States.
 ??  ?? Burns
Burns

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