Megan De Souza

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Megan De Souza United States Peace Corps

American History

Ann Albright

OSU/OKC

Peace Corps

• “to promote world peace and friendship through a Peace Corps, which shall make available to interested countries and areas men and women of the United States qualified for service abroad and willing to serve, under conditions of hardship if necessary, to help peoples of such countries and areas in meeting their needs for trained manpower.

The Act

• President Kennedy hands pen to Sargent Shriver

• 1st director of the Peace Corps

• He signed the Act permanently establishing the agency on Sept 1st, 1961

• The Peace Corps was designed to encourage understanding between Americans and other cultures of the world

• Peace Corps volunteers help underdeveloped nations in areas such as farming, healthcare, and construction

• Peace Corps was very popular in the 1960’s with college graduates whose ideas reflected commitment to peace and international goodwill

The Kennedy Years, 1961-63

• Kennedy elevated the Peace Corps from a weapon in the US, to a worldwide humanitarian mission in which he asked

• “to those people in the huts and villages of half the globe struggling to break the bonds of mass misery, we pledge our best efforts to help them help themselves, for whatever period is required-not because the Communists may be doing it, not because we seek their votes, but because its right.

Kennedy

• Kennedys famous line “ask not what your country can do for you-ask what you can do for your country .

The Act

• Would promote world peace and friendship • The Goals • Help interested countries meet their needs for

trained manpower• To help promote a better understanding of the

American people on the part of the peoples served

• And a better understanding of other peoples on the part of the American people

• Some countries that were interested in the Peace Corps coming to them were

• Poland, Czech, Roamania

• Bulgaria, Asia, Nigeria

• Philippines, China, Russia

• Cuba, Ghana,

Volunteers

• The 1st volunteers there were about three hundred

• These volunteers were not the brightest or the best educated

• Most of them were less interested in politics

• Almost one out of three volunteers was at least five sometimes thirty years past college

Oaths

• Congress insisted that volunteers take loyalty oaths and that the Peace Corps provide them with instruction to educated them on the tactics and menace of communism

• Peace Corps Handbook stated • “you must be prepared for communist

attempts to provoke you or hold you back from the work you were sent to do

1965-Peace Corps vs War Corps

• May 1965 the people of Santo Domingo, capital of Dominican Republic attempted to reinstate exiled President Juan Bosch

• President Johnson called the marines to assist the right-wing military leaders in preventing “another Cuba”

• It lasted four months cost the Dominican Republic 2,850 lives and US 28 lives

• Rather than evacuate Peace Corps volunteers stayed and literally dodged bullets and they cared for their Dominican friends

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• This commitment proved that the Peace Corps idea worked

• The American kids had something different to offer

• Many volunteers thought that Johnsons decision to intervene was a mistake

• They were shocked and ashamed to be giving medical help to Dominicans who had been wounded by American soldiers

The Vietnam Era

• The Peace Corps planted a flag in its 50th country and reached a peak enrollment of 15,556 volunteers

• 1965 the war began to cast a shadow over the Peace Corps’ halo

• Antiwar activist were encouraging students not to join the Peace Corps as a show of protest

Volunteers affected by the war

• In Thailand and Philippines the volunteers were reminded of the war almost every day by the roar of the B-52 bombers flying in and out of American military installations

• In Tanzania president J. Nyerere ordered the Peace Corps to leave his country

• In Ethiopia students ridiculed volunteers and accused them for secretly working for the CIA

• Some were even pelted with rocks and provoked into fist fights

Draft Dodgers

• Nixon predicted that the program would become an easy out for draft dodgers

• The Peace Corps did not keep records of how many men signed up to avoid going to Vietnam

• Dramatic shift in ratio of male to female volunteers between 1965 and 1970 from 55-45 to 70-30

• The volunteers acknowledged that avoiding the draft was their main reason for joining the Corps

Peace Corps Act

• Stated that volunteers would not be exempt from their military obligation

• Selective Service Director Lewis Hershey deemed this to be am occupation that served the national interest

• Therefore a volunteers military obligation would be deferred

• But whether or not they were granted was left up to the draft board

The Committee of Returned Volunteers

• Confessions of an Imperialist Lackey • “We went abroad to help Asians, Africans, and

Latin Americans develop their resources and become free people. Once abroad, we discovered that we were part of the US worldwide pacification program. We found the US projects in these countries are designed to achieve political control and economic exploitation: to build an Empire for the US. As volunteers we were part of that strategy; we were the Marines in velvet gloves.

Committee of Returned Volunteers

• Founded in 1966 • First national organization of Peace Corps alumni-was a

forum for discussion of US policies toward the third world • Some people thought it would be okay to have an

association but nobody was going to make a political statement because we might embarrass the government

• The story of the CRV illustrates how the Vietnam War helped rob many volunteers and the Peace Corps itself of its innocence

• The CRV was full of idealists who felt committed and somewhat betrayed

President Kennedy greets Peace Corps Volunteers August 1962

The Beginning

• Since the Peace Corps began in 1961, more than 170,000 Peace Corps Volunteers have served in 137 countries.  Of these dedicated men and women, 264 have sacrificed not only their energies and time, but also their lives while pursuing the Peace Corps mission.

August 1962 President Kennedy greets Peace Corps Volunteers

Peace Corps Volunteer Ida Shoatz at the Pisac Market

1st Director of Peace Corps R. Sargent Shriver leads Peace Corps

Volunteers

Peace Corps Volunteer Arthur Young in Tanzania

An add for the US Peace Corps

The Bush Years 1989- present

• Events around the world were suddenly making the Peace Corps very popular

• Moscow, Poland, and Hungary asked the Peace Corps for teachers and business advisors

• When Uganda began relaxing their socialist policies they invited the Corps as their initial efforts to better relations with the US

Popular Peace Corps

• When Namibia achieved its independence from South Africa in 1988 the Corps readied a program for the new country

• Operations in Nicaragua and Panama were resumed when friendly governments came to power , and when Laos showed sufficient cooperation with the US drug interdiction efforts

• Countries realized there are good feelings here about the Peace Corps

Conclusion

• Perhaps now more than any other time since its founding, the Peace Corps has a chance to really make a difference

• Internationalized volunteer service is probably the most idealistic outgrowth of the Peace Corps

• Written in early 1961, Sargent Shriver said “we should hope that our citizens will find themselves working alongside citizens of the host country and also volunteers from other lands”

Essay Question

• When was the Peace Corps Act Signed? What did this Act State? What were draft dodgers? What were some of the downfalls for the volunteers of the Peace Corps during the Vietnam War? What was JFK’s purpose of the Peace Corps? What was Kennedys famous words? What countries were interested in the Peace Corps and why?

Reference

• What Can You Do For Your Country (An Oral History Of The Peace Corps By: Karen Schwarz

• The Bold Experiment JFK”s Peace Corps Gerard T. Rice

• http://www.jfklibrary.org/Historical+Resources/JFK+in+History/Peace+Corps.htm