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Sunday, May 24, 2015

Remembering Another Army Of Heroes

I felt a profound sense of sadness as I counted the names, 259 in all, on the front page of yesterday's Daily News-Record. They represent all of the young men from our area who were sacrificed in the prime of their life in our past five US wars, from 1914 to the present.

Some WWI objectors were tortured
The God who deeply loves the whole world must surely want people everywhere to courageously say No to this travesty. Certainly followers of non-violent Jesus should affirm that no matter what the cause, the cure should never include inflicting bloodshed and carnage on fellow human beings. Yet so-called Christians on all sides have continued to defend war and take part in it, and those who object have often suffered as a result.

On this Memorial Day, and near the 101st anniversary of the start of World War I, we should take time to remember the sacrifices of anti-war heroes who believed, like the Christians of the first century, that war was wrong and refused to take part in it.

WW I, which indirectly or directly spawned many of the wars that followed, is seen by many historians as one of the least defensible and most regrettable waste of life and resources of all time. I remember Barbara Tuchman's well researched book, The Guns Of August, having a huge impact on me when I read it over 50 years ago. How could human beings be so shortsighted, so blinded by their own nationalistic aims, as to engage in the kind of insanity that resulted in the deaths of more than 9 million combatants and 7 million civilians?

Looking back, it seems unimaginable, but at the time, US Secretary of War Newton D. Baker, who declared that the war was "the purest mission that a nation ever espoused," believed that those who failed to see it as a  sign of the "upward pattern of democratic civilization" must be mentally and morally defective.

There were no special provisions made for conscientious objectors in the US a hundred years ago, and many young Mennonite, Hutterite, Quaker and Church of the Brethren men were either sent to detention camps, federal prisons or forced to show up at boot camp against their convictions. When they refused to put on a uniform and drill with the rest of the recruits they had to endure unbelievable hardships.

According to James Juhnke's book, "Vision, Doctrine, War--Mennonite Identity and Organization in America, 1890-1930", many of those who followed their conscience against obeying military orders were "beaten with hoses and fists, scrubbed down with stiff brushes in cold showers, forced to stand at attention for hours in the hot sun, reduced to bread and water diets in guardhouses, threatened with various forms of execution, and mistreated in other ways."

Lloy Kniss, a native of Johnstown, Pennsylvania, who retired in this area, writes in his memoir I Couldn't Fight: The Story of a C.O. in World War I (Herald Press, 1971) about how he and others were physically assaulted and had their lives threatened repeatedly at the military camp where they were stationed.

I also recently read the dramatic story of the tragic deaths of Hutterite objectors Michael and Joseph Hofer in the July 2014 issue of the Plough. They had been hung by their wrists at Alcatraz with two other objectors and died soon afterwards at the Leavenworth federal prison in Kansas.

Here's another link for more information on World War I conscientious objectors.

2 comments:

Unknown said...

World War I was to be "the war to end all wars". That worked swimmingly

Nonnie said...

My maternal grandfather was among those who was sent to Camp McArthur in Waco. He was given a court-martial for refusing to participate in any activities in the camp and was sentenced to 2 years at the Federal Prison in Leavenworth, KS. He only served 2 months as the war ended, then he was transferred to Fort Dodge, IA to work in a hospital there until the Board could get his release.