Draft Board Blues (FutureCycle Press, 2017) is Robert Cooperman’s
epic account of his efforts to avoid being drafted to serve in Vietnam, circa
1969-1970. In a series of first-person
poems divided into four sections, Cooperman recalls what it felt like to be
threatened with the draft. No one born
in the last fifty years can know what he and others like him (myself included)
experienced at the prospect of going to serve in Vietnam and perhaps to be
killed or maimed. I opposed the Vietnam
war, but what most focused my opposition to it was fear of dying. I never liked the draft, which seemed an
unnecessary exercise of power by an excessively authoritarian state. I did not want to serve. I respected those
who served, whether they went willingly or not.
But I didn’t want to serve. Would
I have gone had I been called? Who can say? Probably I would have. My number in
the draft lottery was 109, low enough that I could expect with some certainty to
be drafted after my college deferment ran out.
Fortunately for me, in 1972, the last year of the draft, the year I
graduated from college, the last people summoned had numbers no higher than 90.
Cooperman’s poems—full of anger
and indignation but also humor and compassion—recall those days when an entire
generation of young American men faced the draft. They tell his own story of his numerous
interviews with draft boards, military doctors, psychiatrists, and others that
ultimately led to 4-F status. In the
meantime, he recounts the stories of other young men he knew who were drafted,
some dying in the war, others escaping the draft and the war as a result. These
anecdotal poems provide a context that makes clear that Cooperman’s story was
shared by many others.
No poem I have ever read begins
as starkly as this one, “Before a Screening of Planet of the Apes”:
Years
before I knew what a right-wing
Gun-crazed
asshole Charleston Heston was . . .
Although political attitudes are
clear enough in these poems—an extreme time by nature provoked extreme
attitudes—these poems are more about human beings than politics. There are moving poems about family, about
friends and acquaintances impacted by the Vietnam years. In
“Watching President Johnson Announce He Wouldn’t Run,” Cooperman recalls the
president not as a figure he hated but as an old and defeated man for whom he
felt sorry, “a man who’d be dead soon after his term was up.” He links that
defeated man to his own father,
Dad too tired to walk me to the
door
I’d bent and kissed him, not a
thought in my head
That it would be for the last time.
Cooperman doesn’t deny his own
fear of the draft and the Vietnamese War.
In one poem. He imagines that he would have gone to serve in World War
II, which was a quite different war, but even then he suspects he would have
been killed by a sniper’s bullet:
Most likely I’d have died, on
D-Day,
At the Bulge, on a nameless Pacific
island,
A French, Belgian, or German
barnyard:
From a sniper’s bullet while
resting after a march
Or a battle in which I’d mostly
ducked and cringed
(From
“Had I Been Called”)
In “Who Went and Who Didn’t” he remembers that the wealthy
and affluent had ways of avoiding service, “But God forbid / you were from a
small town, / a farm, were black, or Latino / or all of the above.” He recalls
a moment of solidarity with his father after the older man encountered a
hatemonger at a peace rally.
The last poem in the volume,
“Guys My Age,” Cooperman describes his encounter with a wheelchair-bound
veteran of the war. He expresses a certain sheepishness—is it guilt, self-doubt?—not
that he regrets avoiding the draft and the war, but he’s aware of those who often
paid a terrible price for serving in a war that accomplished nothing.
Those who didn’t live through the draft will perhaps not
understand these poems and the world out of which they were written. They are testimony to a dark time.
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