Monday, December 12, 2005

Give peace a chance

I've a feeling my blog's going to turn into a site where I do little more than rave and rant and bemoan the state of the world. Oh well, I guess I'd better make the most of this time while my friends are still indulgent enough to read my ramblings - and comment!

Anyway, like many Beatles/Lennon fans, I watched the 8 December programmes Star Plus aired to commemorate John Lennon's death anniversary. While watching the first segment, 'Give Peace a Song', which was basically about the week-long bed-in that John and Yoko had done way back in 1971 to protest against the wars and violence plaguing the world and call for peace, and where the rousing 'Give Peace a Chance' was recorded, I couldn't stop thinking - how come this (hundreds of people coming together with one socially aware celebrity to record a song for peace, a song that went on to become the anthem for everyone calling for an end to war across the world) doesn't happen any more?

'You know what surprises me?' one of the people who'd been part of the recording said while being interviewed for this programme, 'the fact that this song is still as relevant now as it was 35 years ago, when John wrote it. ' I think this fact isn't just surprising, it's profoundly disturbing. Wars and violence have become endemic all over the world - they're just another way for people to make money and get powerful at the expense of less privileged sections of humanity - and no one cares enough to organise protests any more. Oh, I know there are protests all over - there are marches, demonstrations, rallies - but they don't seem to have any effect, do they? Is there anyone like John Lennon around anymore, someone who would protest social evil by simply staying in bed for a week? And if there was someone, would she/he have the same charisma and appeal that John had, to be able to fearlessly proclaim your views and influence thousands of people? I got goosebumps watching all those people - regular people, most of them - sitting around John and Yoko, singing 'All we are saying, give peace a chance' as if that was what they were always meant to do, as if their lives depended on it - and maybe they did. And later, outside the White House, thousands more protesting the Vietnam War joined Pete Seeger in singing the same song. Just that one line said so much more than a hundred speeches ever could.

Yoko and Sean had brought out this new, updated version of 'Give Peace a Chance' after 11 September along with a whole lot of other singers. But somehow, the sight of these celebrities clapping and stamping to the rhythm of 'Give Peace a Chance' on this technologically well-crafted video just did not have the same power that the sight of ordinary people taking to the streets, wearing their beliefs like an armour and singing as if all their voices raised together in a single song could make all the difference did. Violence, civil wars and every possible social ill afflicts every country in the world today. The world's most powerful superpower starts a war in another country for no good reason and is aided and abetted by other European powers - and half the people of the world no longer come forward to ask them to give peace a chance. Why? Have we become that selfish and insular, that uncaring? Surely not?

I was thinking of what John would say if he were to pay the world a visit now and see just how badly we need to give peace a chance. How would he feel to see that his protests, his messages of peace had come to naught? The continuing relevance of his song will bring him no solace, I'm sure.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

A good rant is good for the soul! As I figure, your blog is the one place where you can say anything, without anyone having the right to object. So... let rip!

Anonymous said...

You know what I remember of that programme on Lennon and Yoko's 1969 bed-in in Montreal? (I know you don't like Yoko, Pro, and you're in gadzillion-plus company.) Lennon being asked by a largely clueless journalist whether he thought that "[world] peace would be possible in his lifetime". And John replying - nope, retorting - "Yes, of course, it'll happen." Like, I mean, what's NOT to happen? The whole song had two jangly guitars, a tambourine and impromptu percussion from the 40-plus visitors and gatecrashers. Lennon's manager recalls, "The rhythm track was the record executive kicking the door!" To top it all, the room's acoustics were not made for sound recording, but Lennon's powerful voice just blew all accompaniments away. Oh man, how I miss Lennon. 'Give Peace a Chance' wasn't our anthem - 'Imagine' was, when we were all in a fugue of collegial flirting with ideologies like extreme Marxism, Trotskyism and political anarchism.

What a time that was, Pro. And you know the most painful realisation of all? That it will never happen again. Like you told me the other day, "The most searched-for word in the online dictionary is 'integrity'."