In January of 1976 I sent another of my telegrams to John
requesting an interview. I didn’t hold out much hope but I wanted to know what
his plans were now that he’d been granted a green card and was free to travel
outside of the US. In the event he responded by sending me a postcard,
evidently bought in Singapore but posted in New York, declining the request. He
wrote: “No comment, was the stern reply. Am invisible, Love John L” and signed it, as he
almost always did, with a tiny self-portrait. Of course, I still have that
postcard and both sides of it are reproduced below. I never communicated
with John Lennon again.
Today, almost 34 years later, the killing of John Lennon
seems to me to be the single most tragic event in the history of rock’n’roll.
It is a cruel irony that John, a determined peace campaigner, died in the
manner he did. In a better world he would have been awarded a Nobel Peace Prize
for few individuals that I know of did more than him to spread the idea that world peace was probably a
good thing. His song ‘Give Peace A Chance’ remains the worldwide
anthem of the peace movement and his ever-popular Christmas song ‘Happy
Christmas (War Is Over)’ conveys a similar message. To have written ‘Give Peace…’
alone is worthy enough of the Prize if I had any say in the matter, but evidently someone decided that Henry
Kissinger, who is still wanted for war crimes in parts of the Far East,
deserved one more than John (or Yoko). According to Wikipedia: “These charges
have at times inconvenienced his travels”, and there's an irony there in that the Nixon administration's persistent hounding of him certainly inconvenienced John's travels.
If that
sounds cynical, then what about America’s gun culture? I have long been amazed
and appalled at the stupidity of a nation whose governments sanction, even
encourage, the manufacture and sale of implements with which its citizens
routinely kill and maim each other and their children. Nothing exposes the
institutionalised corruption of American politics more than the ease with which
gun manufacturers, through their stooges the National Rifle Association, can
bribe the country’s legislators to block measures designed to control the sale
of their loathsome products. Although I sympathise with all the victims of
American’s gun madness, especially the families of those children in schools
mowed down by madmen with guns, these strong feelings of mine really stem from
what happened to John, a man whom I liked to think of as a friend, at least for
those few years in New York, and who was slaughtered in cold blood, shot in the back, by a lunatic
for whom it was the simplest thing in the world to obtain a gun with which to
carry out this barbarous act.
I have read
a great deal of rubbish about John in the years since his death, much of it
emanating from mendacious pens wielded by the likes of the late Albert Goldman,
but none of it in any way alters my firm conviction that the John Lennon I knew
was a good-natured man of integrity and talent who tried to use his exalted
position to right a few wrongs and spread what he saw as a gospel beneficial to
mankind. He was no saint, it’s true, but he never pretended to be either.
1 comment:
Chris, Amen to your comments about guns in the USA. The situation in regard to firearms here is, as you say, one of total madness. Unfortunately, too many Americans continue to believe in the "right to bear arms," and the inevitable result is endless bloodshed. The NRA is completely evil.
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