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Lädt ... David Dellinger: The Life and Times of a Nonviolent Revolutionaryvon Andrew E. Hunt
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The year was 1969. In a Chicago courthouse, David Dellinger, one of the Chicago Eight, stood trial for conspiring to disrupt the National Democratic Convention. Dellinger, a long-time but relatively unknown activist, was suddenly, at fifty-three, catapulted into the limelight for his part in this intense courtroom drama. From obscurity to leader of the antiwar movement, David Dellinger is the first full biography of a man who bridged the gap between the Old Left and the New Left. Born in 1915 in the upscale Boston suburb of Wakefield to privilege, Dellinger attended Yale during the Depression, Keine Bibliotheksbeschreibungen gefunden. |
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Dellinger’s commitment to nonviolence was put to the test over the years. He was imprisoned, abused to the point of torture, force-fed, kept in solitary, splattered with red paint, beaten up, clubbed by police, vilified by the press, but stayed true to his principles through it all. He had his jaw broken and one eye blinded, without retaliating. He was confrontational, but not violent. What a reflection on the United States of America! How we love to punish peacemakers! This is a story of relentless persecution of a good man by a society sick with violence.
Much of this book is concerned with the chronic factional infighting on the Left, and Dellinger’s attempts to co-ordinate the disparate groups into a powerful mobilization. To unite the moderates with the militants to stop the militarists. It is impossible to say to what extent he succeeded, but surely he made a difference.
At times Hunt is critical of Dellinger, but is fair and honest about it, and in the end leaves the reader with a sense of the greatness of the man. Dellinger was America’s Gandhi. He was not a liberal, not a socialist, but a revolutionary. A “fulltime crusader,” said the CIA. The message of Dellinger’s life—that violence is not the answer—comes across in this book. ( )