2019 marks the anniversary of the legendary week in May, 1969 when John  Lennon and his wife Yoko Ono booked themselves into Montreal's Fairmont The  Queen Elizabeth hotel, and held their 'Bed-in for Peace', an  unforgettable moment of 60's counter-culture and protests against the  Vietnam War.
  The event resonated around the world, drawing global media. While in bed,  they composed and recorded the anthem 'Give Peace a Chance' that  resonates even today. It was Lennon's first solo single. Music history  and activist history made on the grand stage of a bed in a suite in the hotel  that ha become a pilgrimage site for fans and activists.
  Now, as part of a $100 million-plus renovation of Fairmont The Queen  Elizabeth, the four rooms Lennon originally booked have been joined together  in a single suite, renamed in honor of the couple and designed with all the  comforts of a modern luxury hotel, but also in homage to the 60's era,  the Bed-in for Peace, and the urgent, memorable song 'Give Peace a  Chance' with interactive, multi-media immersions that bring to life the  media frenzy and impact of this once-in-a-generation event.
  The John Lennon and Yoko Ono suite at Montreal's Fairmont The Queen  Elizabeth is not normally open to the public, but BestTrip got access to  experience the suite today, re-live that week in 1969 and its message of  'Peace and Love'. 
