A surprising look at the 28 Catholic radicals who raided a draft board
in 1971—and got away with it. When the FBI arrested twenty-eight
people in connection to a break-in at a Camden, New Jersey, draft
board in 1971, the Bureau celebrated. The case should have been an
easy victory for the department—the perpetrators had been caught
red-handed attempting to destroy conscription documents for draftees
into the Vietnam War. But the results of the trial surprised everyone,
and in the process shook the foundations of American law, politics,
and religion. In Spiritual Criminals, Michelle M. Nickerson shares a
complex portrait of the Camden 28, a passionate group of grassroots
religious progressives who resisted both their church and their
government as they crusaded against the Vietnam War. Founded by
priests, nuns, and devout lay Catholics, members of this coalition
accepted the risks of felony convictions as the cost of challenging
the nation’s military-industrial complex and exposing the illegal
counterintelligence operations of the FBI. By peeling away the layers
of political history, theological traditions, and the Camden 28’s
personal stories, Nickerson reveals an often-unseen spiritual side of
the anti-war movement. At the same time, she probes the fractures
within the group, detailing important conflicts over ideology, race,
sex, and gender that resonate in the church and on the political Left
today.
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How the Camden 28 Put the Vietnam War on Trial
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780226828046
Publisert
2024
Utgiver
University of Chicago Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter