Remembering Eric Hoffer / November 2016
Yours Truly in a Swamp
Monthly e-column @ www.LEJ.org
President John F. Kennedy,
assasinated in Dallas, November 1963
~ YouTube ~
The year was 1963. The century was still young, but over the middle hump and starting its slide down the ageing side.
I had been in college in Illinois, and the generation teaching us hailed itself as the proud victors of World Wars One and Two ~ and anything else daring to cross the waves.
America had fallen deeply and tragically in love with war, and eagerly policed the World for the greater good of reasons unclear to us, the young being asked to die for such vision.
San Francisco had become the sex, drugs and rock'n roll magnet of that tune-in, turn-on, dropout era.
In the Fabled Sixties, philosopher poets walked freely among us bearing ideas like cargo from far away places with strange sounding names. When I met Hoffer he was at the top of this heap looking for the gangway.
He had no paper birth records, but he told us he was born and raised in the Bronx. His strong German/Yiddish (he spoke both fluently) accent made that believable. Whatever the truth of origin, Hoffer was an outsider ~ the best thing a writer/artist can be.
Eric Hoffer sitting by the dock of the San Francisco Bay |
More than once I found him sitting on the waterfront at the foot of Market Street, talking about Schopenhauer and America's China trade with an audience of other longshoremen and beguiled tourists.
His first book, True Believer: Thoughts On The Nature Of Mass Movements, was published in 1951 ~ a scant six years since the end of World War Two. It grew enormously popular through the following decade, and was widely read and praised by our college professors ~ whom increasingly we suspected of being in a conspiracy to kill us.
True Believer was promoted by no lesser true believers than Presidents Lyndon B. Johnson and Dwight D. Eisenhower. Ike passed out copies of the book to his war buddies, and when Hoffer heard about this, he remarked with a grin, "It proved to me that this is the kind of book any child can read."
During those conversations Hoffer commented that he thought well of Lyndon Johnson and his escalating war in Vietnam.
Lyndon Johnson smarting inside the White House over draft-age youths dancing in opposition to his war ~ not only in San Francisco, but right under his own White House windows ~ did not let his tv-set cool before he booked Hoffer for a five-minute photoshoot that stretched into an hour-long, jaw-and-gum-flap session.
Hoffer with L. B. J. at the White House, 1967 |
My college friends and I watched the early part of those Vietnam days on television sets in Carbondale, Illinois. The vertical hold button on ours was tricky. The nation was entering its first of the many flickering wars of attrition that plague us yet today.
After an academically questionable eight
or nine freshman years,
Southern Illinois University president, Delyte W. Morris,
personally booted me out,
"Dance lithely," he told me, "they all are."
Hoffer visited the White House a second time in 1982, when Ronald Reagan (a Johnny-come-late foe of youthful dancing) presented Hoffer with the Presidential Medal of Freedom. No small achievement for two elderly would-be Union men sitting inside the White House. Hoffer died the next year, at 80.
To my knowledge, Hoffer never retracted his support for the Vietnam War ~ even after it had clearly failed. The hard fact remained that the war was good for shipping, sailors and longshoremen, Hoffer's people.
From its early days there were Union members against going to war in Vietnam, of course, and this number increased as the war's failures grew painfully obvious.
Hoffer suffered the loss of the intellectual followers who had originally catapulted him to fame, and at one point he "dropped out." Oddly arguing that he had not wanted to be a spokesman. (The troubadour Bob Dylan had recently said the same thing.) The Fabled Sixties were complicated.
He told me at the time of his publicly announced retirement from first the wharf, then lecturing at the University of California, Berkeley; and then writing his newspaper column: "I knew when to catch the train, but it is harder to know when to get off."
Copyright, 2016, Leonard Earl Johnson, All Rights Reserved
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We're finally on our own.
This summer I hear the drumming,
Four dead in Ohio.
Gotta get down to it
Soldiers are cutting us down
Should have been done long ago.
What if you knew her
And found her dead on the ground
How can you run when you know?
Gotta get down to it
Soldiers are cutting us down
Should have been done long ago.
What if you knew her
And found her dead on the ground
How can you run when you know?
Tin soldiers and Nixon coming,
We're finally on our own.
This summer I hear the drumming,
Four dead in Ohio.
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~ a song of the times ~
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Your comments and corrections are welcome
Copyright, 2016, Leonard Earl Johnson, All Rights Reserved
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* * * If you wish to read any month's column go to www.LEJ.org anytime.
They are posted on the first of each month and polished for the next few years.
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Royal at Kerlerec, Faubourg Marigny, NOLa / Janis Turk |
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It is written by Leonard Earl Johnson of Lafayette and New
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