Woodstock

641 Words2 Pages

Woodstock festival is one festival that has changed the world in a new perspective.As new music came into play and the hippie generation started, this was one festival that changed it all. Some believe this started a peace war, no one knew how big of a protest this really was. Therefore, Woodstock was treated as inappropriate, yet was ignored by its true protest against war, the love for music, and its love for everyone.
In the year 1969, United States was in war with Vietnam and was drafting young adults into the army. In August 1969, Woodstock created a new revolution against drafting those young adults.These people in Woodstock were called Hippies, though it was far from being an ordinary protest.These people, aka hippies, started to burn their draft cards and started chanting at the soliders and protesting against them (The History 1). Though as much strength these people showed, it was not good enough for the media because they did not want to show what truth they were speaking they only wanted to show what they wanted the audience to know. The media played Woodstock Festival as a three day sex, drug, and hippie music fest and not for what they were truly doing as a protest (The History 2). As the media tried to rise so did the crowd ar Woodstock.As the people from woodstock expected a rough 200,000 people to show up for this festival, they were not ready for the true number. Over 400,000+ people showed up to celebrate and protest against the war. They even raised a total of $4 million dollars as a profit of the festival (Frank 11).
These protest ran on but, in a whole new way to share the love of music. As famous people from all over the world came to this festival such as: Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin, Joe ...

... middle of paper ...

...ed that non-violent acts of justice can do the same but more efficient as a bloody war. Even though the war raged on so did the free love of the hippies and their generation keeps on going. This was more than just a protest, this was a plan that changed the whole game and left it a legend.

Works Cited

Frank,Devine. "Comely child of Woodstock celebrated truth, not protest." Australian, The n.d.:
Newspaper Source. Web. 22 Apr. 2014.
Hoppenstand, Gary. "Editorial: The Sound (and Meaning) of Music." Journal of Popular Culture
Aug.. 2009: 587+.Literary Reference Center. Web. 22 Apr. 2014.
Murchison, William. "The Worst Years Of Our Lives." American Spectator 42.8 (2009): 16.
MasterFILE Premier. Web. 22 Apr. 2014.
“ The History They Didn’t Teach You in School.” Vi.uh.edu. (April 11 2014)

Open Document