The Silence (1975 film)


The Silence is a 1975 made-for-TV movie about James Pelosi, a West Point cadet who was charged in 1971 with cheating on an exam. He remained at West Point but was subjected to "The Silence" – a policy that ostracized cadets who broke the Honor Code.

Alleged cheating incident

During his junior year at the United States Military Academy at West Point, cadet Pelosi was accused of cheating on an exam. He was found guilty by the cadet honor committee. However, the officers’ review board's committee exonerated him. Despite his exoneration, his fellow cadets imposed “the Silence” anyway. At the time, West Point's "Honor Instruction" stated that a cadet who broke the Honor Code and did not leave the Academy "will not be allowed to have roommates. He will eat at a separate table. He will be addressed only on official business and then as Mister." Cadet Pelosi endured the silence for 19 months until his graduation from West Point in 1973.

Television dramatization

A television dramatization was first shown on NBC on November 6, 1975. The dramatization does not judge Pelosi's guilt or innocence. Rather, it depicts his version of the incident and the systematic ostracism that followed his decision not to resign from the Academy. Scriptwriter Stanley R. Greenberg based the drama on interviews he had with Pelosi.

Afterwards

The silence was abolished by the Corps of Cadets in 1973. Many attribute that decision to Pelosi's experience. Pelosi went on to serve in the U.S. Army as a First Lieutenant in Army's Berlin Brigade's Special Troops Unit, he received a medal for a May 17, 1975 incident for heroism in rescuing wounded civilians in a nonmilitary traffic accident. He is the brother-in-law of Nancy Pelosi.
General Benjamin O. Davis Jr., a 1936 West Point graduate, also endured the silence from the time he arrived at the academy until he graduated because he was one of the first African-American cadets.

Cast