
In the late 1960s, a group of Catholic priests and laypeople launched a series of daring, non-violent protests against the Vietnam War. By infiltrating draft boards and destroying records with homemade napalm, these activists sought to disrupt the machinery of war and challenge the morality of the military-industrial complex. Their actions, which led to high-profile trials and prison sentences, sparked a national conversation about the limits of civil disobedience and the power of individual conscience in the face of state-sanctioned violence.




