Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Protest where Lennon recorded 'Give Peace a Chance'

Bush to face anti-war protest in spot where Lennon recorded 'Give
Peace a Chance'

http://www.google.com/hostednews/canadianpress/article/ALeqM5ggafmlywjOfSHtH49jWZBjkzh8iw

By Andy Blatchford (CP)
10/18/09

MONTREAL ­ The clamour of anti-war protest will once again surround
the Montreal hotel where John Lennon and Yoko Ono held a bed-in that
helped define the peace movement of a generation.

But this time Ono won't be at the Queen Elizabeth Hotel, where 40
years ago she and Lennon recorded the anti-war anthem "Give Peace a Chance."

There won't be any ex-Beatles present, either.

Instead, George W. Bush will be holding court this week inside the
downtown building.

The former U.S. president will reminisce Thursday about his time in
the White House and discuss challenges the world will face in the future.

He was invited by the Board of Trade of Metropolitan Montreal, which
has been selling tickets to the event for between $200 and $400 each.

Bush, who left office in January, led his country into two wars and
saw his popularity rocked by criticism of a campaign in Iraq that
proved to be far bloodier than predicted.

Anti-war demonstrators plan to let him know they're still upset.

One protest organizer acknowledged the connection between Bush's
speech and the 40th anniversary of Lennon's week-long stay at the
Queen Elizabeth during the height of the Vietnam War.

"It's ironic," said Raymond Legault, spokesman for the group
Collectif Echec a la Guerre, said of the link to Lennon.

But he said he's more focused on denouncing Bush for his role in,
among other things, present conflicts. The irony of the setting is
merely secondary.

"This is sort of very thin icing on our protest cake," Legault said.

"This is to protest, more or less, everything that George Bush stood
for and still stands for - meaning getting the U.S. and many other
countries into two wars."

Legault's group collected donations from some 500 people to buy a
full-page newspaper ad Saturday telling Bush he's not welcome in Montreal.

He expects a few hundred people to come out and blast Bush for his
controversial record, which includes allegations of torture at
military prisons in Guantanamo Bay and Iraq.

Protests have followed Bush during his two previous visits to Canada this year.

In March, around 400 noisy demonstrators launched insults outside a
Calgary convention centre, where Bush delivered his first public
speech after leaving the Oval Office.

Four people were arrested in the tumult, when several people paid
homage to Iraqi journalist Muntadhar al-Zeidi by throwing shoes at
posters of Bush.

When Bush visited Toronto with former U.S. president Bill Clinton in
May, hundreds of demonstrators swarmed outside the venue, many
calling both ex-presidents war criminals.

It was a different story when Clinton appeared alone in Montreal last
week. He drew an adoring crowd of 700 people that came to watch him
receive an honourary doctorate at McGill University.

Bush is also scheduled to speak in Edmonton on Tuesday and Saskatoon
on Wednesday.

The moderator for the Montreal event, which includes a 45-minute
speech by Bush followed by a 45-minute question-and-answer period,
said the anticipated rally doesn't surprise him.

"We may agree or disagree - it's always healthy for the public
discourse," said John Parisella, the former chief of staff to the
late Quebec premier Robert Bourassa.

Parisella, who will take over as Quebec's delegate-general in New
York next month, said the hotel happens to be one of the finer
speaking venues in the city. The link to Lennon was accidental, he said.

"There's no symbolism in this and there's certainly no intent to be
disrespectful to other parts in history," Parisella said.

"I think it just happened to be circumstance that brought us to the
Queen Elizabeth."

The head of Montreal's Board of Trade said he invited Bush because
there's significant interest from the city's business community to
hear a former president of Canada's biggest trading partner.

"There's no point in saying there's no controversy - there is
controversy," said Michel Leblanc, who expects to sell out the
1,000-seat venue.

"From the Board of Trade's perspective . . . we do not endorse, we do
not have (a) value judgement about what they say."

.

1 comments:

PeaceworksNow said...

If anyone would like to see what the 1969 Bed-in was all about there is a new book with over 80 images, most never seen before plus eye-witness stories from the likes of producer Andre Perry, writer Paul Williams, DJ Chuck Chandler and more. Yoko herself contributed a powerful and succinct essay about what the event was like and how it relates to today.
Visit http://www.peaceworksnow.com or check out Amazon.com for Give Peace A Chance by Joan Athey.