Item #12992 PORTRAIT Of The ENEMY. The Other Side of Vietnam, Told Through Interviews with North Vietnamese, Former Vietcong and Southern Opposition Leaders. Joan - Recipient. Van Toai Baez, Doan, David Chanoff, b. 1941.
PORTRAIT Of The ENEMY. The Other Side of Vietnam, Told Through Interviews with North Vietnamese, Former Vietcong and Southern Opposition Leaders.

PORTRAIT Of The ENEMY. The Other Side of Vietnam, Told Through Interviews with North Vietnamese, Former Vietcong and Southern Opposition Leaders.

New York: Random House, (1986). 1st edition. INSCRIBED PRESENTATION copy, SIGNED in full by Van Toai on the h-t page. 215, [3] pp. 8vo. Black cloth spine with red paper-wrapped boards. Dust wrapper. Nr Fine (3"horizontal stress line to front board)/Nr Fine. Item #12992

Highly visible in civil-rights marches, Baez became more vocal about her disagreement with the Vietnam War. In 1964, she publicly endorsed resisting taxes by withholding sixty percent of her 1963 income taxes. In 1964, she founded the Institute for the Study of Nonviolence[84] (along with her mentor Sandperl) and encouraged draft resistance at her concerts. The Institute for the Study of Nonviolence would later branch into the Resource Center for Nonviolence.[85]
In 1966, Baez's autobiography, Daybreak, was released. It is the most detailed report of her life through 1966 and outlined her anti-war position, dedicating the book to men facing imprisonment for resisting the draft.

Baez was arrested twice in 1967, having blocked the entrance of the Armed Forces Induction Center in Oakland, California, and spent over a month in jail. She was a frequent participant in anti-war marches and rallies, including:
• Numerous protests in New York City organized by the Fifth Avenue Vietnam Peace Parade Committee, starting with the March 1966 Fifth Avenue Peace Parade;[88]
• A conversation with husband David Harris at UCLA in 1968 discussing the resistance to the draft during the Vietnam War.[89]
• A free 1967 concert at the Washington Monument in Washington, D.C., that had been opposed by the Daughters of the American Revolution which attracted a crowd of 30,000 to hear her anti-war message.
• The 1969 Moratorium to End the War in Vietnam protests.

There were many others, culminating in Phil Ochs's The War Is Over celebration in New York City in May 1975. During the Christmas season 1972, Baez joined a peace delegation traveling to North Vietnam, both to address human rights in the region, and to deliver Christmas mail to American prisoners of war. During her time there, she was caught in the U.S. military's "Christmas bombing" of Hanoi, North Vietnam, during which the city was bombed for eleven straight days.

She once was quoted, "I went to jail for 11 days for disturbing the peace; I was trying to disturb the war."
—Joan Baez, 1967 Pop Chronicles interview.

Author's copy [and so stated by Van Toai], with his signature & blindstamp, dated in the year of publication. Year later presentation inscription to Joan Baez, "... the great friend of the Vietnamese people ..."

Price: $125.00

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