Tell it in the streets!

Places
Accession Number ARTV03161
Collection type Art
Measurement Overall: 63.6 x 50.4 cm
Object type Poster
Physical description silkscreen on recycled paper
Maker Unknown
Vietnam Moratorium Campaign
Place made Australia: New South Wales, Sydney
Date made 1970
Conflict Vietnam, 1962-1975
Copyright Item copyright: © Australian War Memorial
Creative Commons License This item is licensed under CC BY-NC
Description

This poster relates to one of the smaller, side protests relating to the Vietnam Moratorium movement.


The Vietnam Moratorium campaigns were a result of a conference held in Canberra in November 1969 to plan a series of protests based on the American Moratorium model. There were three Moratorium campaigns in Australia in 1970 and 1971. The Moratorium was the first truly mass movement of the protest against the Vietnam War. Until 1969 the protest had been uncoordinated in a national sense and rallies had been reasonably small in size, whereas the Moratorium mobilised the support of hundreds of thousands. It also succeeded in gaining more publicity in its first six months than had been achieved by the protest movement between 1965 and 1969. The aims of the first campaign were the immediate withdrawal of Australian troops from Vietnam and repeal of the National Service Act. The Moratorium stated that all actions taken by its members and supporters should be of a non-violent nature and this philosophy was extended throughout Australia through various state committees and others. The protest promoted in this poster is one of many smaller protest activities that occurred throughout the protest movement.

The poster contains the prints of two shoes; one in red and one in black. The accompanying text advertises a rally in Martin Place, Sydney in December 1970 and calls for the withdrawal of troops from Vietnam, abolition of conscription and veto of the Saigon government. The Moratorium symbol appears in the upper left of the poster.