Dressed in white, the artistic duo received
visitors and held press conferences from bed in the presidential
suite atop Amsterdam's Hilton Hotel from March 23-29.
A photo exhibition and other events remembering Ono and Lennon,
the Beatles songwriter who was shot and killed in New York in
1980, are being held this week in the Dutch capital to
commemorate the events 50 years ago.
Amid flowers and self-made signs reading "Hair Peace" and "Bed
Peace", the couple put forward a simple strategy for achieving
world harmony: reject violence of all forms.
"If you believe violence will solve the problem, that's up to
you. I don't," John told one reporter.
"Nobody's ever tried the peace thing."
The incident was memorialized in "The Ballad of John and Yoko",
released shortly before the Beatles broke up:
Drove from Paris to the Amsterdam Hilton / Talking in our beds
for a week / The news people said, "Say what you doing in bed?"
/ I said, "We're only trying to get us some peace."
In 2012, Ono released for free "Bed Peace", a documentary about
the Amsterdam bed-in and a second bed-in the couple held several
months later in Montreal, Canada.
At one point, Ono dismisses a book of poems and manifestos
handed to her by a self-styled "revolutionary".
"I'm sorry, no matter how beautiful your poem is, if you can't
share with people, it's crap," she said.
To honor their memory, a white "Peace Tulip" will be planted
outside the hotel on Thursday.
Other commemoration events in Amsterdam include a film evening,
concert and tour of the famous room #902.
Fifty years later, world peace has not yet arrived.
Skeptics at the time pointed out that not everybody can afford
to stay in bed all day or be as famous as John and Yoko.
"Stop asking if it's going to work, do something yourself," an
annoyed Lennon told one reporter in the documentary.
"Grow your hair, wear a sign."
(Reporting by Toby Sterling; Editing by Anthony Deutsch and
Andrew Cawthorne)
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