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Book Cover for: Conscientious Objectors at War: The Vietnam War's Forgotten Medics, Gary Kulik

Conscientious Objectors at War: The Vietnam War's Forgotten Medics

Gary Kulik

During the war in Vietnam, thousands of young men served as conscientious objector medics. They had been certified by their local draft boards as noncombatants, but many would know intense combat nonetheless. Without weapons training, they ran through the infantry lines, answering the desperate call, "Medic!" Many displayed exemplary heroism even at the cost of their lives. With the end of the draft, we will never see their like again.

Conscientious Objectors at War tells their stories within the background context of pacifist churches in America. It is the first book exclusively devoted to such men, who emerged initially from the historic peace churches--Quakers, Brethren, Mennonites--and from Seventh-day Adventists, who would comprise roughly half of all conscientious objector medics serving in the Vietnam War. From World War II on, growing numbers of men from mainstream churches made the same choices, and after a Supreme Court decision in 1965, so too would men who claimed humanist and secular justification. The pages contain the stories of pantheists and Catholics, among others from the peace traditions.

Gary Kulik, who also served as a conscientious-objector medic, interweaves his own story into those he recounts, stories of fierce combat, stumbling accidents, moments of fleeting honor and ever-present death.


Book Details

  • Publisher: Texas Tech University Press
  • Publish Date: Apr 11st, 2025
  • Pages: 186
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 9.00in - 6.00in - 0.43in - 0.56lb
  • EAN: 9781682832608
  • Categories: Wars & Conflicts - Vietnam WarMilitary - United StatesMilitary

About the Author

Kulik, Gary: - Gary Kulik served as a deputy director of the Winterthur Museum, Garden & Library, near Wilmington, Delaware. Previously, he was a department head and assistant director of the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History and the editor of American Quarterly. A graduate of St. Michael's College, he earned a PhD in American Civilization at Brown University. He has written extensively on early American industrial history. He is also a decorated veteran of the Vietnam War, having served as a medic in the 4th Infantry Division and as an adjutant's clerk in the 61st Medical Battalion. He is the author of "War Stories" False Atrocity Tales, Swift Boaters, and Winter Soldiers--What Really Happened in Vietnam (2009). He lives in Wilmington, Delaware.