Any world-famous rock star can write a check in support of a pet charity project. On Feb. 4, 1970, John Lennon and Yoko Ono made a very different sort of donation.
The duo had recently made the acquaintance of London-based activist Michael X, who'd reached out to them after they made headlines for paying fines incurred by anti-apartheid activists who'd interrupted a rugby match between Scotland and South Africa. Inspired by the gesture, X asked John and Yoko to support the Black House, a home for disadvantaged youth in London, and they agreed.
But instead of offering money, the Lennons hatched a plan for the latest in a series of publicity stunts. Having recently cut off their hair (which they thought would have the added benefit of allowing them to travel more freely in public), they offered to exchange it for a pair of Muhammad Ali's boxing shorts -- an odd celebrity bartering program that was supposed to benefit a pair of projects, with the hair being auctioned off to support the Black House and the shorts being sold to raise money for John and Yoko's peace campaign.
The haircut took place in Denmark on Jan. 20, 1970, and John and Yoko met up with X on the Black Center's rooftop on Feb. 4, where they held a press conference to announce their plans and posed for photos with the hair. Lennon proved typically flippant at the gathering, shrugging that he'd decided on a new look because he was "cheesed off" at his hair ("it was gettin' in me ears") and saying he didn't care whether people saw it as nothing more than a stunt.
Regardless of their reasons for doing it, John and Yoko's donation didn't seem to have much impact. The Beatles Bible notes that there was never any proof that the Lennons put their own proceeds toward the peace campaign, and the Black House closed before the end of 1970, later burning down "in mysterious circumstances."
Michael X, meanwhile, operated under a cloud of suspicion for much of the rest of his life, arrested for extortion following the Black House's destruction (Lennon paid his bail) and ultimately fleeing to his native Trinidad, where he started a commune that also burned in 1972. Investigators discovered corpses buried in shallow graves on the site, and he was hanged in 1975.
To some, Lennon's association with the disgraced activist echoes some of his other dubious allegiances, such as his short-lived devotion to the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi. But if his trust was sometimes misplaced -- and he lived to regret a few of the more outlandish actions and statements he made during his most politically active period -- he was never less than aware of the reasons for his efforts.
“I’ve always been politically minded, you know, and against the status quo,” Lennon said in a 1971 interview. “It’s pretty basic when you’re brought up, like I was, to hate and fear the police as a natural enemy and to despise the army as something that takes everybody away and leaves them dead somewhere. It’s just a basic working-class thing, though it begins to wear off when you get older, get a family and get swallowed up in the system. In my case, I’ve never not been political, though religion tended to overshadow it in my acid days. ... And that religion was directly the result of all that superstar s--- -- religion was an outlet for my repression. I thought, ‘Well, there’s something else to life, isn’t there? This isn’t it, surely?’”
(via Ultimate Classic Rock)
The duo had recently made the acquaintance of London-based activist Michael X, who'd reached out to them after they made headlines for paying fines incurred by anti-apartheid activists who'd interrupted a rugby match between Scotland and South Africa. Inspired by the gesture, X asked John and Yoko to support the Black House, a home for disadvantaged youth in London, and they agreed.
But instead of offering money, the Lennons hatched a plan for the latest in a series of publicity stunts. Having recently cut off their hair (which they thought would have the added benefit of allowing them to travel more freely in public), they offered to exchange it for a pair of Muhammad Ali's boxing shorts -- an odd celebrity bartering program that was supposed to benefit a pair of projects, with the hair being auctioned off to support the Black House and the shorts being sold to raise money for John and Yoko's peace campaign.
The haircut took place in Denmark on Jan. 20, 1970, and John and Yoko met up with X on the Black Center's rooftop on Feb. 4, where they held a press conference to announce their plans and posed for photos with the hair. Lennon proved typically flippant at the gathering, shrugging that he'd decided on a new look because he was "cheesed off" at his hair ("it was gettin' in me ears") and saying he didn't care whether people saw it as nothing more than a stunt.
Regardless of their reasons for doing it, John and Yoko's donation didn't seem to have much impact. The Beatles Bible notes that there was never any proof that the Lennons put their own proceeds toward the peace campaign, and the Black House closed before the end of 1970, later burning down "in mysterious circumstances."
Michael X, meanwhile, operated under a cloud of suspicion for much of the rest of his life, arrested for extortion following the Black House's destruction (Lennon paid his bail) and ultimately fleeing to his native Trinidad, where he started a commune that also burned in 1972. Investigators discovered corpses buried in shallow graves on the site, and he was hanged in 1975.
To some, Lennon's association with the disgraced activist echoes some of his other dubious allegiances, such as his short-lived devotion to the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi. But if his trust was sometimes misplaced -- and he lived to regret a few of the more outlandish actions and statements he made during his most politically active period -- he was never less than aware of the reasons for his efforts.
“I’ve always been politically minded, you know, and against the status quo,” Lennon said in a 1971 interview. “It’s pretty basic when you’re brought up, like I was, to hate and fear the police as a natural enemy and to despise the army as something that takes everybody away and leaves them dead somewhere. It’s just a basic working-class thing, though it begins to wear off when you get older, get a family and get swallowed up in the system. In my case, I’ve never not been political, though religion tended to overshadow it in my acid days. ... And that religion was directly the result of all that superstar s--- -- religion was an outlet for my repression. I thought, ‘Well, there’s something else to life, isn’t there? This isn’t it, surely?’”
(via Ultimate Classic Rock)
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