The Human Be-In was announced on the cover of the fifth issue of the
San Francisco Oracle as "A Gathering of the Tribes for a Human Be-In". The occasion was a new California law banning the use of the psychedelic drug
LSD that had come into effect on October 6, 1966. and Richard Alpert (soon to be known as "
Ram Dass"), and poets like
Allen Ginsberg, who chanted
mantras,
Gary Snyder and
Michael McClure. Other counterculture gurus included comedian
Dick Gregory,
Lenore Kandel,
Lawrence Ferlinghetti,
Jerry Rubin, and
Alan Watts. Music was provided by a host of local
rock bands including
Jefferson Airplane,
Grateful Dead,
Big Brother and the Holding Company,
Quicksilver Messenger Service, and
Blue Cheer, most of whom had been staples of
the Fillmore and the
Avalon Ballroom. "Underground chemist"
Owsley Stanley provided massive amounts of his "White Lightning" LSD, specially produced for the event, as well as 75 turkeys, for free distribution by the
Diggers. The national media were stunned, publicity about this event leading to the mass movement of young people from all over America to descend on the
Haight-Ashbury area. Reports were unable to agree whether 20,000 or 30,000 people showed up at the Be-In. Soon every gathering was an "-In" of some kind: Just four weeks later was
Bob Fass's
Human Fly-In, then the Love-In (March 26, 1967 at Elysian Park, Los Angeles), the
Emmett Grogan inspired
Sweep-In, Rowan and Martin's
Laugh-In comedy television show began airing over
NBC just a year later on January 22, 1968. This was followed by the first "
Yip-In" (March 21, 1968, at
Grand Central Terminal), another "
Love-In" (April 14, 1968, at Malibu Canyon) and,
John Lennon and
Yoko Ono's "
Bed-In" (March 25, 1969, in Amsterdam).
Inspiration The Human Be-In was organized mainly by Bowen with the assistance of poet
Allen Cohen in the organizational work. The idea of the Human Be-In was born of a fear that the movement would be erased due to tensions between factions of the Hippie movement. Bowen writes "The anti-war and free speech movement in Berkeley thought the Hippies were too disengaged and spaced out. Their influence might draw the young away from resistance to the war. The Hippies thought the anti-war movement was doomed to endless confrontations with the establishment which would recoil with violence and fascism". They decided to thus create 'A Gathering of the Tribes', as the event was advertised on posters later on. This event would use musical performances, group meditation and chanting sessions, political rallies, and speeches to inspire all the factions that they had all joined this movement because they had the same beliefs: peace, love for one another, and freedom. This would be the first moment of true unification within the Hippie Movement in its history. ==Legacy==