November 22/23, 2019 "Information
Clearing House" -There is a vast
literature on the assassination of
President John F.
Kennedy, who died on a November 22nd Friday
like this in 1963. I have contributed my small
share to such writing in an effort to tell the
truth, honor him, and emphasize its profound
importance in understanding the history of the last
fifty-six years, but more importantly, what is
happening in the U.S.A. today. In other words, to
understand it in its most gut-wrenching reality:
that the American national security state will
obliterate any president that dares to buck its
imperial war-making machine. It is a lesson not lost
on all presidents since Kennedy.
Unless one is a government disinformation agent
or is unaware of the enormous documentary evidence,
one knows that it was the CIA that carried out JFK’s
murder. Confirmation of this fact keeps arriving in
easily accessible forms for anyone interested in the
truth. A case in point is
James DiEugenio’s
recent posting at his website,
KennedysandKing, of James Wilcott’s affidavit
and interrogation by the House Select Committee on
Assassinations, declassified by the Assassinations
Record Review Board in 1998. In that document,
Wilcott, who worked in the finance department for
the CIA and was not questioned by the Warren
Commission, discusses how he unwittingly paid Lee
Harvey Oswald, the government’s alleged assassin,
through a cryptonym and how it was widely known and
celebrated at his CIA station in Tokyo that the CIA
killed Kennedy and Oswald worked for the Agency,
although he did not shoot JFK. I highly recommend
reading the document.
I do not here want to go into any further
analysis or debate about the case. I think the
evidence is overwhelming that the President was
murdered by the national security state. Why he was
murdered, and the implications for today, are what
concern me. And how and why we remember and forget
public events whose consequences become unbearable
to contemplate, and the fatal repercussions of that
refusal. In what I consider the best book ever
written on the subject, JFK and the
Unspeakable:Why He Died and Why It Matters
(2009), James W. Douglass explains this in detail,
including the James Wilcott story.
Realizing what I am about to say might be
presumptuous and of no interest to anyone but
myself, I will nevertheless try to describe my
emotional reactions to learning of John Kennedy’s
murder so long ago and how that reverberated down
through my life. I hope my experiences might help
explain why so many people today can’t face the
consequences of the tragic history that began that
day and have continued to the present, among which
are not just the other assassinations of the 1960s
but the lies about the attacks of September 11, 2001
and the subsequent endless and murderous “war on
terror” with its mind-numbing propaganda and the
recent anti-Russia phobia and the blatant
celebration of the so-called “deep-state’s” open
efforts to overthrow another president, albeit a
very different one.
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
On November 22, 1963 I was a college
sophomore. I was going down three steps
into the college dining hall for lunch.
(Many of my most significant memories
and decisions have taken place on steps,
either going up or going down; memory is
odd in that way, wouldn’t you say?) I
remember freezing on the second step as
a voice announced through a PA system
that the president had been shot in
Dallas, Texas. When I finally recovered
and went down into the building, another
announcement came through saying the
president had died. The air seemed to
be sucked out of the building as I and
the other students with a few professors
sat in stunned silence. Soon little
groups on this Catholic campus joined
together to pray for John Kennedy. I
felt as if I were floating in unreality.
Later that day when I left the campus and drove
home, I thought back to three years previously and
the night of the presidential election. Everyone at
my house (parents, grandparents, and the five
sisters still at home) had gone to bed, but I stayed
up past 1 A.M., watching the television coverage of
the vote count. My parents, despite their
Irish-Catholicism, were Nixon supporters, but I was
for JFK. I couldn’t comprehend why anyone would
vote for Nixon, who seemed to me to personify
evil. When I finally went up the stairs to bed, I
was convinced Kennedy would win and felt very happy.
It wouldn’t be for another tumultuous decade
before I would hear Kris Kristofferson sing
Never knowin’ if believin’ is a blessin’ or a
curse
Or if the going up is worth to coming down….
From the rockin’ of the cradle to the rollin’
of the hearse
The goin’ up was worth the coming down
and I would ask myself the same question.
In the meantime, the next few years would bring
the Bay of Pigs, the Cuban Missile crisis, and the
Nuclear Test Ban Treaty, among other significant
events, and for a high school student interested in
politics and world events it was a heady and
frightening few years. It was a country of
newspapers back then, and I would read perhaps 3-4
each day and sensed a growing animosity toward
Kennedy, especially as expressed in the more
conservative NYC papers. I can remember very little
talk of politics in my home and felt alone with my
thoughts. As far as I can remember, this was also
true at the Jesuit high school that I attended. And
of course nothing prepared me for the president’s
murder and the feeling of despair it engendered in
me, a feeling so painful that I couldn’t really
acknowledge it. At nineteen, I felt traumatized but
couldn’t admit it or tell anyone. After all, I was
a scholar and an athlete. Tough.
Then on Sunday morning my family had the TV on
and we watched as Jack Ruby shot
Lee Harvey Oswald
(image on the right), the guy the
government said had killed the president. The
unreality was compounded manyfold, and when later it
was reported that Oswald had died, I felt I was
living in an episode of The Twilight Zone,
a popular television show at the time, whose
narrator would say we are now entering the weird
world between shadow and substance.
The next day a friend and I went to the Fordham
University campus to visit a Jesuit priest who was a
mentor to us. He had the television on for JFK’s
funeral and we sat and watched it for a while with
him. After a few hours, it became too painful and
the two of us went outside to a football field where
we threw a football back and forth. Perhaps
subconsciously we were thinking of Kennedy’s love of
football; I don’t know. But I remember a feeling of
desolation that surrounded us on that empty cold
field with not another soul around. It seemed
sacrilegious to be playing games at such a time, yet
deep trauma contributes to strange behavior.
Then I went on with my college life, studying and
playing basketball, until the day after Malcolm X
was assassinated on February 21, 1965. Those New
York newspapers that didn’t like Kennedy, hated
Malcom even more and were constantly ripping into
him. I vividly remember talking to my college
basketball teammate the next day. His sense of
devastation as a young African American struck me
forcefully. As we walked to basketball practice and
talked, his sense of isolation and gloom was
palpable. Visceral. Unforgettable. It became mine,
even though I didn’t at the time grasp its full
significance.
In 1968 when Dr.
Martin Luther King was assassinated, I was
driving to visit a girlfriend and remember hearing
the news on the car radio and feeling deeply
shocked. I felt immediately oppressed by the first
warm spring evening in the New York area. It was as
if the beautiful weather, usually so uplifting after
winter and so joyously stimulating to a young man’s
sexuality, was conspiring with the news of King’s
death to bring me down into a deep depression.
Soon the country would awaken on June 5 to the
surreal news that Senator Robert Kennedy was shot in
Los Angeles the night before. Like so many
Americans, when he died not long after, I felt his
death was the last straw. But it was far from it.
For all the while Lyndon Johnson had lied his way to
election in 1964 and escalated the Vietnam war to
savage proportions. Death and destruction permeated
the air we were breathing. The year 1968 ended with
the suspicious death in Thailand of a hero of mine,
the anti-war Trappist Monk Thomas Merton.
Subsequent research has shown that that too was an
assassination. And while all of this was going on
and my political consciousness was becoming
radicalized, I became a conscientious objector from
the Marines. I was 24 years old.
By the late 1970s, having been fired from
teaching positions for radical scholarship and
anti-war activities, and mentally exhausted by the
unspeakable events of the 1960s, I retreated into
the country where I found solace in nature and a
low-key life of contemplation, writing literary and
philosophical essays, a novel, book reviews, and
becoming a part-time newspaper columnist. By the
1990s, I gradually returned to teaching and a more
active political engagement, primarily through
teaching and writing.
Then in 1991 Oliver Stone jolted me back in time
with his film JFK. I found powerful
emotional memories welling up within me, and growing
anger at what had happened to the U.S. in the
previous decades. Soon JFK Jr., who was
investigating his father’s assassination and was
about to enter politics and take up his father’s
mantle, was killed in a blatantly rigged
“accident.” A month before I had been standing in
line behind his wife in the bakery in my little town
while he waited outside in a car. Now the third
Kennedy was dead. I called my old friend the Jesuit
priest from Fordham, but he was speechless. The
bodies kept piling up or disappearing.
When the attacks of September 11, 2001 happened,
I realized from day one that something was not
right; that the official explanation was full of
holes. My sociological imagination took fire. All
that I had thought and felt, even my literary
writing, came together. The larger picture emerged
clearly. My teaching took on added urgency,
including courses on September 11thand
the various assassinations.
Then in 2009 I read and reviewed James Douglass’s
masterpiece, JFK and the Unspeakable, and
my traumatic memories of 1963 and after came
flooding back in full force. I realized that those
youthful experiences had been so difficult for me to
assimilate and that I therefore had to
intellectualize them, for the emotional toll of
reexperiencing them and what they meant was
profound. The book really opened me to this, but so
too did the awareness of how sensitive I was to John
Kennedy’s death, how emotional I felt when reading
about it or hearing him speak or listening to a song
such as
“The Day John Kennedy Died” by Lou Reed. It was
as though a damn had burst inside me and my heart
had become an open house without doors or windows.
I tell you all this to try to convey the ways in
which we “forget” the past in order to shield
ourselves from powerful and disturbing memories that
might force us to disrupt our lives. To change.
Certain events, such as the more recent attacks of
September 11, have become too disturbing for many to
explore, to study, to contemplate, just as I found a
way to marginalize my feelings about my own
government’s murder of President Kennedy, a man who
had given me hope as a youngster, and whose murder
had nearly extinguished that hope.
Many people will pretend that they are exposing
themselves to such traumatic memories and are
investigating the events and sources of their
disquietude. It is so often a pretense since they
feel most comfortable in the land of
make-believe. What is needed is not a dilettantish
and superficial nod in the direction of having
examined such matters, but a serious in-depth study
of the facts and an examination of why doing so
might make one uncomfortable. A look outward and a
look inward. Just as people distort and repress
exclusively personal memories to “save” themselves
from harsh truths that would force them to examine
their current personal lives, so too do they do the
same with political and social ones. When I asked
two close relatives of mine, both of whom came close
to death on September 11, 2001 at The World Trade
Towers, what they have thought about that day, they
separately told me that they haven’t really given it
much thought. This startled me, especially since it
involved mass death and a close encounter with
personal death in a controversial public event, two
experiences that would seem to elicit deep thought.
And these two individuals are smart and caring
souls.
What and why we remember and forget is profoundly
important. Thoreau, in writing about life without
principle, said, “It is so hard to forget what is
worse than useless to remember.” This is so true.
We are consumed with trivia, mostly by choice.
Perhaps a reason we remember so much trivia is to
make sure we forget profound experiences that might
shake us to our cores. The cold-blooded public
execution of President John Kennedy did that to me
on that melancholy Friday when I was 19, and by
trying to forget it and not to speak of it, I hoped
it would somehow go away, or at least fade to
insignificance. But the past has a way of never
dying, often to return when we least expect or want
it.
So today, on this anniversary Friday, another
November 22, I have chosen to try to speak of what
it felt like once upon a time on the chance that it
might encourage others to do the same with our
shared hidden history. Only by speaking out is hope
possible. Only by making the hidden manifest.
T. S. Eliot wrote in “Journey of the Magi” words
that echo ironically in my mind on this anniversary
of the day John Kennedy died:
All this was a long time ago, I remember
And I would do it again, but set down
This set down
This: were we led all that way for
Birth or Death? There was a Birth certainly,
We had evidence and no doubt. I had seen
birth and Death,
But had thought they were different; this
Birth was
Hard and bitter agony for us, like Death, our
death.
We returned to our places, these Kingdoms,
But no longer at ease here, in the old
dispensation,
With an alien people clutching their gods.
I should be glad of another death.
Remembering in all its emotional detail the day
John Kennedy died has been a long and cold journey
for me. It has allowed me to see and feel the
terror of that day, the horror, but also the heroism
of the man, the in-your-face warrior for peace whose
death should birth in us the courage to carry on his
legacy.
Killing a man who says “no” to the endless cycle
of war is a risky business, says a priest in the
novel Bread and Wineby Ignazio Silone. For
“even a corpse can go on whispering ‘No! No! No!
with a persistence and obstinacy that only certain
corpses are capable of. And how can you silence a
corpse.”
John Kennedy was such a man.
Eliot was right: Sometimes death and birth are
hard to tell apart.
President Kennedy’s courage in facing a death he
knew was coming from forces within his own
government who opposed his efforts for peace,
nuclear disarmament, and an end to the Cold War – “I
know there is a God-and I see a storm coming. I
believe that I am ready,” he had written on a slip
of paper, and his favorite poem contained the
refrain, “I have a rendezvous with death” – should
encourage all of us to not turn our faces away from
his witness for peace.
We must stop being at ease in a dispensation
where we worship the gods of war and clutch the
nuclear weapons that our crazed leaders say they
will use on a “first-strike” basis. If they ever do,
Eliot’s question – “were we led all that way for
Birth or Death?” – will be answered.
But no one will hear it.
Edward Curtin, Educated in the classics,
philosophy, literature, theology, and sociology, He
teaches sociology at Massachusetts College of
Liberal Arts.
www.edwardcurtin.com
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