'Alice Herz' (
1883 –
March 26,
1965) was the first of eight
activists in the
United States known to have
immolated themselves in protest of the escalating
Vietnam War, following the example of
Buddhist monk
ThÃch Quảng Äức who immolated himself in protest to the oppression of Buddhists under the South Vietnamese government. A longtime
peace activist, she attempted
self-immolation on
March 16,
1965 in
Detroit, Michigan at the age of 82. A man and his two boys were driving by and saw her burning and put out the flames. She died of her wounds ten days later. According to Taylor Branch's ''At Canaan's Edge'' (2006), it was President
Lyndon Baines Johnson's address to Congress in support of a
Voting Rights Act that led her to believe the moment was propitious to protest the Vietnam War. The war continued for another ten years following her death.
A German of Jewish religion, Herz was a widow who left
Germany with her daughter Helga in
1933, saying that she anticipated the arrival of
Nazism long before it started. Alice and Helga Herz were living in
France when Germany
invaded in 1940. After spending time in an
internment camp near the Spanish border, Alice and Helga eventually came to the United States in
1942. They settled in Detroit, where Helga became a librarian at the
Detroit Public Library and Alice worked for some time as an adjunct instructor of German at
Wayne State University. The pair petitioned for, but were denied, U.S. citizenship due to their refusal to vow to defend the nation by arms. Helga Herz later reapplied and was granted citizenship in 1954.
Herz wrote a last
testament, which she distributed to several friends and fellow activists before her death. The testament specifically refers to her decision to follow the protest methods of the
South Vietnamese monks and nuns, whose acts of self-immolation had received worldwide attention. Confiding to a friend before her death, Herz remarked that she had used all of the accepted protest methods available to activists--including marching, protesting, and writing countless articles and letters--and she wondered what else she could do. Evidently, Herz decided to make self-immolation her final act of protest. Japanese author and philosopher
Shingo Shibata established the
Alice Herz Peace Fund shortly after her death.
See also
★
Norman Morrison
★
George Winne Jr.
★
Florence Beaumont
★
Roger Allen LaPorte
★
ThÃch Quảng Äức