A Few Small Candles: War Resisters of World War II Tell Their StoriesLarry Gara, Lenna Mae Gara Kent State University Press, 1999 - 207 pages Little is known about those who openly refused to enter military service in World War II because of their convictions against killing. While many of those men accepted alternative civilian service, more than 6,000 were incarcerated with sentences ranging from a few months to five years. Some were tried, convicted, and reimprisoned for essentially the same offense--resisting induction into the armed forces--after their initial release. In A Few Small Candles, ten men tell why they resisted, what happened to them, and how they feel about that experience today. Their stories detail the resisters' struggles against racial segregation in prison, as well as how they instigated work and hunger strikes to demonstrate against other prison injustices. Each of the ten has remained active in various causes relating to peace and social justice. This is a unique collection of memoirs that illuminated the American homefront during World War II and provides an important source for those interested in the American peace movement. |
From inside the book
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... Selective Training and Service Act provided legal options for any objector who " by reason of religious training and belief [ was ] conscientiously opposed to participation in war in any form . " Classification 1 - AO was for those ...
... Selective Training and Service Act of 1941 , and bond was set at two thousand dollars . So I sat in a D.C. jail while my friends got on the phone with George Lyman Paine , in whose Boston Park Street office I had my FOR desk . He paid ...
... congratulations by Esther Rhodes . What a wonderful breath of air my service in China was . All those who had various war objections in the United States were at sixes and nines about Selective Service , CPS , and prisons PRISON MEMOIR 17.
... Selective Service , CPS , and prisons . In China , we had a well - organized international team of British , Canadian , New Zealanders , Welsh , Australian , Chinese , and American men and women . A council , with Colin Bell as chair ...
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Contents
1 | |
20 | |
My Resistance to World War II | 38 |
My War and My Peace | 53 |
My War on War | 78 |
War Resistance in World War II | 98 |
Reflections of a Religious War Objector Half a Century Later | 130 |
Prison and Butterfly Wings | 152 |
How the War Changed My Life | 174 |
My Story of World War II | 194 |
Selected Additional Readings | 205 |