Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

Ron Kovic stays outspoken for veterans, against war

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True to the title of his most famous book, Ron Kovic was indeed born on the Fourth of July in 1946. Though born in Wisconsin, he grew up on Long Island, New York, graduating from Massapequa High School in 1964.

That fall, he volunteere­d to join the Marines in order to fight in the Vietnam War. He began his first stint in Vietnam as a member of the 1st Marine Division in December 1965, conducting reconnaiss­ance missions into areas held by the North Vietnamese Army and the Viet Cong guerrilla forces.

Kovic was awarded the Navy Commendati­on Medal for serving on 22 reconnaiss­ance missions. He returned stateside after a 13-month tour of duty and was stationed in North Carolina in 1967, when he decided to volunteer for another hitch in Vietnam.

His life changed forever on Jan. 20, 1968. His reconnaiss­ance squad encountere­d North Vietnamese and Viet Cong forces near the village of My Loc while trying to help South Vietnamese forces in the village.

During the ensuing battle, he was shot in the right foot and again through his right shoulder. The second bullet collapsed his lung and injured his spinal cord, permanentl­y paralyzing him from the chest down. He was sent home after a week in the intensive-care unit in Da Nang. He was awarded the Purple Heart and the Bronze Star for valor.

“It was a terrible period of time,” he said about his recovery in a 1983 interview with Newsweek. “It was an impossible period of time. It was a hellish period of time. Sometimes I'm amazed I made it.”

His life changed profoundly and permanentl­y thereafter.

And he began to battle on new fronts. His antiwar activism has become well-known, but he was just as outraged by the poor, sometimes abusive treatment that returning, injured veterans — who had sacrificed for their country — received under the Veterans Administra­tion, specifical­ly at the VA hospital in the Bronx.

Kovic first spoke out against the Vietnam War at a protest at Levittown High School on Long Island, not far from his home town of Massapequa, in 1969. Before he spoke, a bomb threat cleared out the auditorium there, and the protest had to move to the school's football field. He'd never made a public speech before.

His activism increased after the Kent State shootings in Ohio on May 4, 1970, when four student antiwar protesters were shot and killed by National Guard troops.

Kovic moved to Southern California in the early 1970s, where he continued to speak out against the war. He would go on to be arrested dozens of times. His first arrest came at a protest outside of a draft board office in Orange County in 1971.

Other notable protests included a hunger strike at the Los Angeles office of then-Sen. Alan Cranston over the VA's treatment of veterans returning from the war and an arrest for speaking out against the war outside the 1972 Republican National Convention in Miami Beach, Florida.

Inspired by blackliste­d screenwrit­er Dalton Trumbo's 1939 antiwar novel, “Johnny Got His Gun,” Kovic in 1974 began feverishly writing about his own experience­s after he met Trumbo and actor Donald Sutherland at the opening of the film that was based on the book.

It took him one month, three weeks and two days of nonstop writing to complete the autobio- graphical “Born on the Fourth of July,” which was published by McGraw Hill on July 4, 1976 — his 30th and the country's 200th birthday.

With the book's success, Hollywood came calling.

Director Oliver Stone worked with Kovic on a screenplay for a film adaptation, and Tom Cruise signed on to play the lead role. At the end of filming,

Kovic Kovic gifted Tom Cruise with his Bronze Star medal in thanks for the actor's performanc­e in the film.

Released in December 1989, “Born on the Fourth of July” went on to be the 10th-highest grossing film of the year. It was nominated for eight Academy Awards, winning Oscars for best director and film editing. It also won Golden Globes for best dramatic film, best actor, best director and best screenplay.

Kovic moved to Redondo Beach in the late 1980s. In 1990, he considered entering politics to oppose Republican Rep. Robert K. Dornan, a staunch war hawk, but ultimately decided against it.

He has been arrested many times over the years, but has continued to oppose U.S. involvemen­t in foreign wars, including frequent, vociferous criticisms of the first Gulf War in the 1990s and the 2003 invasion of Iraq.

Bruce Springstee­n wrote a song, “Shut Out the Light,” about Kovic after befriendin­g him in the 1970s, and wrote a new introducti­on to the 40th anniversar­y edition of the “Born on the Fourth of July” book in 2016.

Kovic's second book, “Hurricane Street,” also published in 2016, detailed his efforts, beginning with the hunger strike at Cranston's office in 1974, to organize the American Veterans Movement to advocate for better treatment of military veterans.

His third book, “A Dangerous Country: An American Elegy,” will be published in 2024. It will focus on the physical and mental traumas caused by war.

Kovic still lives in Redondo Beach, where he counts writing, painting, music and gardening among his daily activities.

“I love to write — I feel like I forget about the paralysis, I forget about the wheelchair,” he told the Daily Breeze in 2014. “When I write, I just feel free and I feel like I'm in another world.”

Sources: Daily Breeze archives. Born on the Fourth of July: 40th Anniversar­y Edition, by Ron Kovic, Akashic Books, 2016. Internet Movie Database. Los Angeles Times archives. “Ron Kovic and the Continuing Struggle for Veterans,” interview by Robert Scheer for KCRW program Scheer Intelligen­ce, Feb. 19, 2016. “Ron Kovic Reborn,” by Tim Gilmer, New Mobility magazine, June 20, 2003. Wikipedia.

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