Women’s History Month: Jenny Beacham

Jenny Beacham objected to Australia’s involvement in the Vietnam War from very early on, and was involved with the Labor Party. Here she discusses her experience of a moratorium march, and her local Labor branch.
Transcript
Jenny: First of all, I want to tell you a story about the first… I don’t know whether it was the first moratorium but: came to Melbourne to organise getting a house in the late – late 1970. And one of the moratorium marches were on. And we went to that. I remember taking – our daughter Susan was three. And she was marching with us, and was a very big march, where there was almost as many onlookers as there were participants. So I don’t know where it rated it in the list of chronology of the marching – of the moratorium matches. Anyway, it was certainly before we were living in Melbourne. And I remember saying, Susan, wave to the people, Susan! And I, this three year old waving to them was really disconcerting for some people. She was definitely being used as a political weapon outside the town hall. But there was – it was interesting, because I do remember like there was a big crowds watching as well as marching. But it was a pretty big march all the same. So then we came – we came back and lived in Carlton from 1971. And our main activity was through the local ALP branch, the North Carlton branch, which had Gareth Evans and Judy Bornstein. But it was a big branch, was a lot of people; would have been 50 or 60 at any meeting. The war was – the war was still a hot topic. Although it fairly quickly for us it, it morphed into the anti- uranium debate.
I don’t remember gender being much of an issue. There was many – as many women actively engaged… and like the Save Our Sons was a terrific initiative. While you’re aware, you’re aware of Cairns probably as a leader of it, you never felt that he controlled it, not in the way that some later movements were controlled.
If you know a Melbourne woman who was involved in protesting against the Vietnam War, please leave a comment!
Women’s History Month: Ceci Cairns (again)

I’m doubling up here, but the first story here in particular, from Ceci Cairns (member of Save Our Sons), is just too good not to include. In this excerpt, Ceci remembers some of the things she did while campaigning against the Vietnam War.
Transcript
Ceci: I went to meetings, I did everything. And eventually we were harbouring draft resisters, driving them around, having adventures. You know, it was pretty adventurous and funny. Sort of very funny things happened. Like the day I stole a car. Very funny things. I lived in South Melbourne at the time, and when we drove draft resisters around, we tried to get different cars. Because we knew we were being watched and followed, and everything. And how much we knew, I’m not sure, but we just were very careful. So I used to sometimes borrow my grandmother’s Mercedes Benz, or I’d borrow someone else’s car.
Anyway, one day, we ran out of cars, and Jeanie said, “Well, look, you’ll find–” gave me a set of keys to a blue Holden, and said, “Look, the car will be parked halfway along your street.” So I walked out of my house, walked halfway along the street, and there was a blue Holden. And it was open. And I thought, oh, that’s a bit peculiar. Anyway, I hopped in, and on the front seat was a packet with fresh, hot chips on it. And I thought, that’s funny. So I ate a chip, and put the key in, drove off. Get to the meeting place, I’ve taken the wrong car. I mean, I’ve stolen a car. So the absolute nightmare was, what if I get caught in a stolen car? [laughing]
Alex: With a draft resister.
Ceci: Yes! So I thought, I’ve just got to get back to that car park, get rid of this car – so I just drove back. By this time, it was about three quarters of an hour later, because by the time we realised what had happened – and where I was living was opposite the South Melbourne football ground. And it was a football day, so there were no car parks anywhere near where I took the car from. I had to park it again about a mile away. And so that was one of the sort of mad sort of adventures that happened. [laughing] Yeah, it’s very funny. But it’s a sort of – breaking the law on all fronts, it was getting a bit too much.
Alex: Were you involved in the more mundane things, like handing out pamphlets and those sorts of things?
Ceci: Oh God, yeah, all the time. Yeah. Absolutely. In fact, that’s what it was. And that’s – I mean, for instance, we used to meet on the library steps, outside the Melbourne Library in Swanston Street. And every – I can’t remember if it was every week or every month. A few of us met there with a sign saying Anti-Vietnam War – Stop The Draft, or whatever it was, Join Us. And we met there week after week after week for I don’t know how long. I mean, it seemed like years. And occasionally someone would come up, you know, we’d meet someone. But most of the time, we just did it. I learnt how long it takes to – you know, that movement was a movement that – my God, it didn’t build up to the moratorium quickly. It was that kind of drudgery that we – we just did. That gradually built up to the huge moratoriums.
If you know of a Melbourne woman involved in protesting against the Vietnam War, please leave a comment!
Women’s History Month: Kaye Lovett

Kaye Lovett was involved in protesting against the Vietnam War and conscription through Monash University, and the Labor Club there. In this excerpt she talks about her experience in Ballarat, where she moved for a teaching position.
Transcript:
Kaye: Then in 1970, I was sent to Ballarat, Ballarat Tech, and it was right next to the School of Mines. Anyway, I was very good friends with Michael Hyde. You know, there was all this thing going on in Melbourne about the moratorium and great meetings where people went and spoke and all this sort of stuff – huge meetings they were. Anyway, Michael said to me, You should start a moratorium in Ballarat. I said, Really? Anyway, Jeff, who was my English coordinator – he was a lovely man – I spoke to him and I found out he was a minister in the church in Ballarat. And when the Vietnam War started, he spoke out against it. It was so much criticism of him he was forced out of the church. Anyway, he said, Oh, well, he’d get in contact with people that he knew. And there was I know a teacher at Ballarat Grammar, I think. We had a meeting to start up a moratorium committee in Ballarat, and it was decided that what would happen would be that there would be a statement put in the Courier, a fairly lengthy paid statement against the war, quite long and analytical, but the thing was to get people’s signatures. So we used to, you know, stand on the corner, outside the post office on Saturday mornings and gather signatures and things like that. And when – when it was eventually published in the Courier, well you can imagine – a small town – well, Ballarat was small, small town mentality; it caused incredible – I mean, people went through it to find who they knew had signed it, didn’t they. And also, there was going to be a line of conscience in the main street on the day of the moratorium – people standing there with placards. The people who ran the moratorium in Ballarat didn’t want to be so involved, you know, after that first one. So at a subsequent meeting, I was asked to take charge of the next moratorium. In relation to that – I’m not so sure on dates, whether I did this, you know, before the first moratorium or the second – but I remember going to see Allan Williams, who was head of the trades hall council Ballarat at that time, and of course, you know, they were very involved in opposition to the war. I was asked to address a meeting at the railway workshops that were then functioning in Ballarat. So I had to do this at lunchtime, right, I had to get a taxi from school where I was teaching. And I turned up and I hadn’t thought about it much, you know. And I turned up, and it was sort of really Monty Python ish, in a way. Because when I got there, there was this huge lines of men sitting on the ground with their lunch boxes. And there I was, and I was speaking to them, I’m sure I don’t know whether they were really listening to me or what. It was a bit daunting, I have to tell you that. I did speak.
If you know a Melbourne woman who protested against the Vietnam War, please leave a comment!
Women’s History Month: Sue McCulloch

Sue McCulloch was heavily involved in the Draft Resisters Union, becoming the secretary and treasurer, as well as the Congress for International Cooperation and Disarmament (CICD). Here she talks about the siege of the student union building at Melbourne University.
Transcript:
Sue: And I was involved in the siege at Melbourne University. I think it surprised everybody, really, what it turned into. It was – the idea was to – again, to kind of embarrass the law enforcement agencies and the government by bringing attention to the fact that there were people who felt very strongly about conscription and the war.
And the idea was to hold a kind of public demonstration in which four of the draft resisters would appear, and then be supposedly smuggled out of the building where they were to appear – but, in fact, what happened was that they appeared at the Melbourne University student union, and then it was decided to kind of barricade ourselves in, so that I think they could make media appearances. And there was this huge – it went on for several days, and we basically took over the union. The student union. And by the time the police arrived, in a kind of classic manoeuvre, I suppose, they did a dawn raid. I think, maybe, thinking they could catch people unawares. But by this stage, we’d barricaded ourselves in with chairs that went up and down the – you know, completely blocked the stairway of the several floors, and the draft resisters were not out of the building, they were, in fact, still in the building, hidden behind a very thin partition wall. There was a false wall that was discovered in one of the union rooms upstairs. And they were actually in the building when the police barged in, and eventually got their way up through this maze of chairs and came into the room where they were supposed to be. And there was nobody there. But, in fact, they were only, you know, like, a few centimetres away. And they said, you know, they had to be very careful not to cough, or not to alert anybody to them. And then, eventually, they were sort of smuggled out some time – I think, progressively, sometime after that.
Alex: You were in the union house for the entire siege?
Sue: Yes, yes. I was. In fact, I was the voice on the radio. There was a radio station called Radio 3DR that was set up, an illegal radio station. Which was itself a rather terrifying thing to do, because that contravened the Broadcasting Act. And that actually had very serious penalties. And just before we were about to go on air, somebody told me what these penalties were, and they were like – I don’t know – ten years’ jail, and a huge fine. And I sort of went on, and I had no idea what to say. So they just went, “Right, you’re live to air now,” and, you know, and I started speaking. And I said something like, “Hello, this is Radio Resistance 3DR, and we’re trying to give power to the people.” And I think I sounded quite terrified, because I was just – I’d just been told of, you know, what we might be facing if we were caught.
If you know of a Melbourne woman involved in protesting against the Vietnam War, please leave a comment!
Women’s History Month: Judy Maddigan

Judy Maddigan went to Melbourne University and participated in several demonstrations against the Vietnam War. In this excerpt she discusses her motivations for being involved.
Transcript
Judy: I came from a family that wasn’t interested in politics at all – my parents would have voted Liberal all their lives; we used to live out in the seat of Kooyong which of course was Robert Menzies’ seat – so I wasn’t interested at all in politics. When I went to university I didn’t – wasn’t involved in any political activities except for the Vietnam War. And I think a lot of people were involved in the Vietnam War – apart from the practice of war, we should never been fighting because it had absolutely nothing to do with us – but the system of selecting young men to go and fight, which was in my view it was extremely unfair – and the fact that they couldn’t get enough volunteers, I would have thought would show that most people in Australia think it’s totally inappropriate.
Alex: So if you came from a family that was, I guess, relatively conservative for the time, and so on, what made you I guess, aware of Vietnam? And what made you think that it was a war Australia shouldn’t have been involved in – like was the news, was it friends?
Judy: I think it was probably more – more being at Melbourne University and all the newsletters came out, and other people talking to us about it. So – and there was huge amount of publicity about in the time, and the guys who refused to put their name in a hat, who got into terrible trouble. I think if I hadn’t been at university, I’m not sure it would have been different or not. But certainly, I think being at university and like, there were discussions about it all the time, people talking about it all the time. But even on the news, like there were so many – continually people disagreeing with us being there. And there’s still people saying you shouldn’t do that; if you want to send people you should have a national service system, so everyone has to go for six months or something. But just – I think the fact that it was so unfair, just, you know, bad luck. And if you think like in the time, so… ’60, bit over ’60, middle ’60 – most of us would be hard pressed to find Vietnam on a map if we’d been asked where it was. And I think the other thing – but I have a bit to do with RSLs – so I have corrected them on some cases, because a lot of those soldiers think that all those marches were against them. So I try and make it clear, it wasn’t about you. It was saying you should never have been sent there in the first place. I’ve never met an ex servicemen who fought in the Vietnam War, who thought was a good idea. And it’s very hard to meet an ex servicemen who thinks any war is a good idea. Which I think is the truth about it. And I think – but some of those people I think were devastated. And I think once again, that’s because the government put – kept putting out media about doing your service for the country and all of the rest of it, which was absolute crap of course, had nothing to do with Australia at all, Vietnam was never going to bomb Australia, and we lost the war anyway. What was the point?
Alex: And do you think at the time you were more concerned with Vietnam or conscription, or were they just so intertwined it’s a pointless question?
Judy: Well, they were very intertwined I suppose. I think it was mainly in Vietnam more because of the unfairness of it, which brought in, you know, the way they were conscripted, which, as I said, I think many people thought it was awful, which – it was awful. And I think – and even I’m thinking when I went to work, you know, people who are sitting there petrified on the day they used to draw the lots – numbers – out of the hat or whatever they did, you know, that one of their family members or their boyfriend or the man next door or something got drafted – so it made, it made the community really anxious and nervous, and that stuff was there till they stopped doing it, which was a great relief to all.
If you know of a Melbourne woman involved in protesting against the Vietnam War, please leave a comment!
Women’s History Month: Sandra Goldbloom Zurbo

Sandra Goldbloom Zurbo was (as you’ll hear) involved in protests and demonstrations from a very young age, mostly because of her father, Sam Goldbloom. She was heavily involved in organising various actions throughout the era of the Vietnam War. In this short excerpt she talks about her motivation for being opposed to the Vietnam War.
Transcript
Alex: Were things like the Vietnam War and conscription being talked about at home or amongst your family.
Sandra: Mum wasn’t particularly political, but dad was extremely. … There was always, almost always something political would come up at dinner. “See that butter sandwich, the price of that butter is determined by…” and so on. In my teens, I was part of a organisation called the Youth Peace Group, which was kind of a spin off from the Victorian Peace Council, which was the Victorian branch of the Australian Peace Council, which was – basically it was a pro Soviet peace thing, but they did some really good work. And long before moratoriums, like from the early 60s, members of the Victorian peace group were protesting the Vietnam War. Twenty people would show up, you know – “Vietnam? where’s that?” – people didn’t have a clue where it was. …
Alex: Would you have described yourself as a pacifist?
Sandra: No, never. No, I was never a pacifist. I’m still not a pacifist.
Alex: Why would you not see yourself as a pacifist?
Sandra: Well, because I think there are times when people have to fight because you can’t – you can’t just say, listen, America, would you leave here? Listen, you know, China, Russia, whoever you are – I mean, people have to often take up arms or stones or rocks or whatever they – in Middle East, you know, whatever they need to take up – to get rid of what I think of it as oppressors. No, I mean, I’ve never been a pacifist and I’m still not.
Alex: So when it came to thinking about the Vietnam War and Australia’s involvement in Vietnam: you objected to that, obviously. How were you thinking about why Vietnam was a problem as a war?
Sandra: Australia only went there to – to kiss American arse, just as they went to Afghanistan, and every other war that it’s fought apart from World War Two, in which we were very late to take part. Otherwise, certainly everything postwar that we’ve done, Korea, and so on, so on. It’s all been, you know, as I say, to kiss American arse, and under the misguided belief that if we ever got into any trouble ourselves, then the Americans would come to our aid. And I know full well that the Americans will come to our aid if and only when it suits them politically and financially and diplomatically and every other -ly. … So I never thought that Australia should be engaged. And I certainly didn’t think the Americans should be engaged.
If you know a Melbourne woman who was involved in protesting against the Vietnam War, please leave a comment!
Women’s History Month: Ceci Cairns

Ceci was probably the youngest member of the Melbourne SOS (Save Our Sons). She was a young mother when she first joined. The Jeanie she mentions in this short excerpt from our interview is Jean McLean.
Transcript
Ceci: I came from a family – my father was a conscientious objector in the Second World War. And my family were Labor Party supporters. My father probably would have been a Communist, except he had differences with the way the Communists were behaving in Europe, and he never joined the Communist Party.
But he was – he basically believed in, sort of, socialism, and in peace, and he was totally anti-war, obviously. And he was an official conscientious objector. Which meant you were officially in the army.
And so I come from that sort of background, which I’m still dedicated to, that idea of freedom and peace, and anti-war. I mean, I’m anti the whole idea of armies anyway, I think they should be – I mean, I think the way they’re trained, which is to kill – basically to kill people, they have to be trained to – they have to be brainwashed into thinking the people they kill aren’t actually human beings like them. And so they become monsters without even realising. So perfectly normal people can become terrible people. As we keep finding out about army generals and things, who go wrong.
And so that’s my position. I very deeply feel all that. So when – I remember when I was at school, and I was about seventeen years old, reading then about – in the early days of Vietnam, when America actually was very influential in the politics of Vietnam, and put – I can’t remember the history of all that … So I was interested from an early age in Vietnam, anyway. To do with being at school, I suppose, and what was interesting in that era was, there was a great deal of information out there about what was going on in the world. I think, despite all our media, and despite our flash, flash, flash of information, we actually – there was a deeper understanding of the politics, if you bothered to read it, at that time.
And, of course, over the period, sort of, ten years after that, the papers were full of terrible photographs which illustrated what was happening. And I think everyone who became anti that war learnt a lot from those photographs, which I’m sure everyone says.
So that’s my kind of position. I wasn’t particularly – I mean, I had feminist sensibilities, but I didn’t come at it because I was a feminist. I came at it because I wanted justice for everyone, and justice for the Vietnamese. I wanted justice for the young men who were coerced into being in the army. The cruelty for those young men, putting them in a situation that they had no idea what they were going into, just seemed to me so unjust.
So that was where I was coming from. So when I realised how much I was – I knew I was on the side of the anti-Vietnam people, and I must have met up with Jeanie somewhere, and said, “Hey, I want to join you.” [laughing]
If you know a Melbourne woman who was involved in protesting against the Vietnam War, please leave a comment!
Women’s History Month: Jan Muller

Jan Muller was a student at La Trobe University in the late 1960s/early 70s. She was heavily involved in protesting against the Vietnam War; as well as being in protests, she also typed and Gestetner-ed many pamphlets, and assisted draft resisters. In this short excerpt, she talk about her motivation for being involved.
Transcript
Jan: First of all, I was a good little Christian girl. And from a middle class, conservative family, and I remember finding in the shed one of the Uniting Church’s early booklets about the effects of napalm and, and so forth, on children and in the villages of Vietnam. And I was pretty horrified. And so I think that was my first – I mean, we did, we did talk about the Vietnam War in school, but it didn’t mean anything in school.
So I suppose I was about sixteen or seventeen when I saw this, these graphic – graphic photos of, of injuries, and I was pretty incensed about that. So, moving on, that would have been in the mid ’60s.
And when I was at Teachers College in 1968, ’69, I wasn’t – I was pretty politically naive. But I do remember people talking about going to the demonstrations against the war. … My fiancé, I think, was quite politically active in ’68, late ’68, early ’69. And I think I went to my first demo with him. And it was a very violent demonstration. Not violent from our side, by the way. But I was so naive, I didn’t think that the police would actually hit women. So I had a big wake up then.
Alex: It seems like your initial problem with what was happening was the way that people in Vietnam were being treated.
Jan: Yep.
Alex: And then did you come to oppose conscription kind of because of Vietnam, or conscription in general?
Jan: I do remember, one of the neighbours, who my father called a pinko, driving up the street with a “no conscripts for Vietnam” sticker on the back of her car. And I didn’t know what the word “conscripts” meant. And I didn’t – I knew that Vietnam existed. I knew about Vietnam because I was a stamp collector, so I knew what Vietnam was. But I didn’t know what the word “conscripts” – but I do remember seeing that car every day as the neighbour drove home, and wondered what “conscripts” meant. That’s, that’s in the ’60s, early ’60s.
So by the time I got to be aware of conscription, I was already politically active. And, yes, I had a neighbour who was conscripted. And I got involved in the anti-conscription movement, and had friends in the Draft Resisters Union.
If you know a Melbourne woman who protested against the Vietnam War, please leave a comment!
Women’s History Month: Jill Reichstein

Jill Reichstein attended Monash University and was involved in numerous demonstrations against the Vietnam War. This is a short excerpt from our interview, where she talks about her motivation for being involved.
Transcript:
Jill: My journey started when I was doing my matriculation year at a private girls’ school in Melbourne. And both my parents were fairly conservative. And I had a history teacher who – or politics, political science teacher – who was wonderful. And she discussed the Vietnam War. So we’re talking 1967. And I was outraged. And I really started to get involved and have a look at it. I mean, I knew we were involved in it, but I didn’t sort of take a lot of interest
I didn’t think we should be sending our soldiers to fight in a war that had nothing really to do with us. And I think I was slightly anti American. And I didn’t like the idea of following what Americans did. And I just didn’t understand the rationale behind it. I mean, it was a war in a country between the North and the South. Obviously, America was spooked. But I didn’t understand the rationale behind it. So I started writing essays at school against the war. And then the following year, I went and lived in the UK for 12 months. You know, my parents wouldn’t let me travel. But they let me go to a liberal arts college, which sort of – wasn’t a finishing school, because we actually, we actually did politics and history. And there were an amazing range of women – there was 100 women living out in the country near Oxford – so I ended up spending a lot of time with people in Oxford, who were also very politically opposed to the war. And so I’d go down to the demonstrations in London, that’s when I first started to participate in the anti-war demos, concerts, etc. And then when I came back to Melbourne and went to Monash University – hotbed of, you know, political unrest – a lot of my friends, and in fact, my future boyfriend, he was a draft dodger. So there were all all of those issues for me that I faced. So I ended up going to quite a lot of the demonstrations here in Melbourne – quite memorable to think that our streets were just 1000s and 1000s and 1000s of people who were opposed to it; providing safe havens for people who were avoiding it. And so that election night when Labor won was just such a celebration.
Alex: Were you were opposed to conscription early on, or did that develop later?
Jill: No I felt it was challenging somebody’s liberty to tell them they had to go and fight somebody else’s war. And I probably didn’t really understand the political agenda behind it, other than mimicking what America was doing, which I really disliked, and I thought to force someone to fight in something they didn’t believe in was inappropriate.
If you know a woman who lived in Melbourne at the time and was involved, please leave a comment!
Women’s History Month: Diana Crunden

Diana Crunden was at Melbourne University when she started to protest against the Vietnam War and the National Service Act. The Harry she mentions below is Harry van Moorst, a leading figure in Melbourne’s protest scene, who recently passed away. She was part of Students for a Democratic Society (note the misspelling of Crunden’s name on that page), amongst other things. This is a short excerpt from our interview, where she talks about some of her motivations for protesting.
Transcript:
Diana: But I always had a fairly sort of social justice type of thing. Like, I thought the White Australia Policy was terrible, et cetera. And my parents were pretty appalled at my political activity, really, but didn’t try and restrain me at all. That was good. My political education, I guess, started when I went to uni. And I happened to meet Harry [van Moorst], because we were all in the same year. …
I was at home, up where I was born, and I came back to Melbourne to find out that a smallish group of people both at Monash and Melbourne had raised funds for the National Liberation Front. And I thought, wow. You’re prepared to go to jail for this? And it was all pretty amazing.
And then, of course, the anti-war movement started to develop. And I was pretty involved in that, but I wasn’t a leader, I wouldn’t say. I mean, I was relatively well-known, but I think it was more because I was Harry’s partner than anything else.
Alex: In terms of the war itself like, what were your objections?
Diana: It wasn’t something that America should be involved in, and Australia shouldn’t be involved in. And it was typical of Australia that it went in league with the States. It was just appalling. And, you know, all the things about, if the referendum had been – not the referendum, the – you know, the United Nations had said, “This – the demilitarised zone, and when that’s – we’ll have elections, and then that will be the solution to it.” And, of course, America decided they didn’t want to do that, so they intervened. So those were all appalling. I mean, I must have developed this perspective quite quickly, but I did have it.
Alex: And conscription?
Diana: Yes, yeah. Because so many of my friends were involved.
Alex: Would you have described yourself as a pacifist? Or was it more about the forcing people who didn’t want to do it?
Diana: No, not really. Because that just seemed to be – it was an unjust war. And that should be sufficient grounds to allow people to get conscientious objection. But, of course, it wasn’t. You had to be a pacifist. But no, I wasn’t a pacifist.
f you know a woman who lived in Melbourne at the time and was involved, please leave a comment!
