On May
11, 2011 it was thirty years since Bob Marley joined the
ancestors. Bob Marley was a cultural artist who became internationally
known as a defender of love, freedom and emancipation. This
week we remember him, his songs and his contributions to
both revolutionary consciousness and his call for us to
emancipate ourselves from mental slavery.
Bob Marley from
the Jamaican Countryside
It
is usually from the most rural areas where the cognitive
skills and the history of community solidarity continue
to prevent total mental breakdown. Robert Nesta Marley was
born in the rural areas in the island of Jamaica in February
1945. Jamaica was one of the slave holding territories of
British imperialism. The history of rebellions among the
enslaved informed the consciousness of the peoples of this
island to the point where its name has grown beyond its
size as a small island with less than 3 million persons.
British cultural imperialists worked hard to inculcate Anglo-Saxon
eugenic values of individualism and selfishness but cultural
resistance from the countryside provided an antidote to
oppression. The assertiveness of the people meant that even
among the imperialists, some from among the British fell
in love with the island and with its people.
Bob Marley was the product
of an interracial relationship between an English military
person, (Norman Marley, a captain in the colonial army and
overseer) and an African woman, Cedilla Booker, from Jamaica.
Marley identified with Africa and broke the long tradition
of mixed-race persons who denied their African heritage.
Bob Marley spent his early years in the lush countryside
of St Ann, but moved with his mother to Kingston while still
in his early teens. He grew up in Trench Town among the
most oppressed sections of the working class districts of
Kingston and was influenced by the Rastafari movement. His
formal education came from the Rastafari who developed independent
bases for educating the people so that they could escape
“brainwash education.” The Rastafari movement has been one
of the most profound attempts to transform the consciousness
of the Caribbean people so that they recognized their African
roots and celebrated Africa’s contributions to humanity.
From the Caribbean, this movement has spread to all parts
of the world. Bob Marley was one of the most articulate
spokesperson for this movement.
Marley’s career as a
cultural artist started in 1961 and by 1964 he had teamed
up with Neville Livingston (Bunny Wailer) and Winston McIntosh
(Peter Tosh) to form the “Wailing Wailers.” As a youth I
grew up listening to the lyrics of the Wailers and witnessed
their transition from rude boys pushing the culture of defiance
(in the music of Ska and Rock Steady) to Rastafari spokespersons
articulating a different version of peace and love.
Because
social movements are not static, the dynamism of the Rastafari
culture has been challenged by the mainstream attack on
the Rastafari, along with the attempts at cooptation within
the system. However, one of the severe weaknesses of this
movement was the extent to which some of the most conscious
elements of the movement succumbed to homophobic and patriarchal
ideas.
The fact that this movement
had extended itself to embrace a king in Ethiopia reflected
the traditions of the colonial society. Many were critical
that the Rastas held defensively unto the Ethiopian monarch
Haile Selassie. There were those intellectuals such as Orlando
Patterson who called them escapists and millenarian. But
these writers and intellectuals never said why Caribbean
peoples who claimed a European king and queen as the head
of state were normal but those who called for an African
king were escapists. Unfortunately, if labeling the Rastas
escapists was the only crime of the intellectual, this would
not be fatal. What was significant was how some of these
intellectuals justified state repression and violence against
the Rastafarian movement. From the original attacks against
the Rasta camps in the hills of Jamaica to the use of the
dangerous drugs laws to incarcerate thousands, the repression
and the persecution of this social movement demonstrated
what the African and the poor had to withstand in all parts
of the world.
Bob Marley, Peter Tosh,
and Bunny Wailer came from the ranks of the oppressed youth
and soared to great heights internationally. Together they
had formed Tuff Gong Label in 1970, which marked a turning
point in their career. Soon, the Wailers’ reputation spread
outside Jamaica after they began to tour Europe and the
USA. After the breakdown of the group in 1974, Bob Marley
formed his own group “Bob Marley and the Wailers.” Bob Marley
was backed up by three of the most gifted female artists
in Jamaica: Marcia Griffiths, Rita Marley and Judy Mowatt.
From
1974 to 1981 Marley became a world leader for truth and
justice. He did not allow individual fame to detract from
the message of the music.
The Inspiration
of Marley and His Reggae Philosophy
Bob Marley was one of
the most articulate spokespersons for peace, love and justice.
His music of inspiration continues to act as a rallying
cry for those who are struggling for change. In the past
thirty years, the literature and writings on the philosophy
of Bob Marley served to shed more light on the role of music
and song as a mobilizing force in society. His songs of
love and inspiration are now enjoyed in all parts of the
world, breaking language and racial barriers. It is now
acknowledged on all continents that Bob Marley was one of
the most influential musicians of all time. His performance
at the Zimbabwe Independence Celebrations in April 1980
sent the message to the apartheid rulers that oppression
would not stand. Within South Africa, Lucky Dube deepened
a brand of progressive reggae so that today, in all parts
of the world, there are reggae groups placing their own
stamp on this culture of resistance. In 1999, Time magazine
dubbed Bob Marley and the Wailers’ Exodus
the greatest album of the 20th Century, while the BBC named
“One
Love” the song of the millennium.
The hypocrisy of the
British knew no bounds: the same British imperialists who
celebrated the song, “One Love” as the song of the millennium
were the same downpressors that unleashed police to arrest
and harass young persons who identified with the Rastafari
movement. Bourgeois intellectuals in Britain continue to
criminalize youths who identify with Bob Marley, stating
that these youths belong to a “criminal subculture.” Yet,
it is the Rastafari reggae song and the positive musical
healers from among the Rastafari who continue to inspire
young people to stand up to defend their humanity in the
face of the massive push to turn young people into mindless
consumers and gadgets without care for the world in which
they live. These
youths listen to Peter Tosh who wailed, “everyone is talking
about crime then, who are the criminals” The progressive
wing of the Rastafari movement continues to challenge young
people in the capitalist centers to oppose the current social
order that is “dominated by the relentless privatizing and
commodification of everyday life and the elimination of
critical public spheres where critical thought, dialogue,
and exchange take place.”
One of the songs that
continues to be played in all parts of the world is “Get
Up Stand Up, (stand up for your rights).” Bob Marley
was aware that there could be no peace in a world of injustice
and brutal exploitation.
It Takes a Revolution
to Make a Solution
Though Bob Marley transitioned
on May 11, 1981 when he was thirty six years old, today
we can hear the music of reggae in various languages around
the world. Today, as revolutionary upheavals shake Africa
and the Middle East, young rebels listen to the lyrics of
Bob Marley as they instill in themselves the confidence
to stand up for their rights. In Tunisia and Egypt, home
grown reggae artists were parts of the revolutionary process
which is still unfolding. Tunisian youths played Reggae
music and other songs calling on the soldiers, don’t shoot
the people. Clearly, in the revolution, one of the tools
was progressive hip hop and reggae. The music of Lion revolution
used symbols popularized by Bob Marley to rally the youths
of Tunisia to stand up and fight.
Marley had emerged as
a Caribbean Revolutionary who wailed to promote the spirit
of love as the basis for revolution. The revolutionary Che
Guevara had clearly stated that, “At the risk of sounding
ridiculous, let me say that the true revolutionary is guided
by feelings of love.” It is this revolutionary love that
informs the philosophy of Rastafari, and their principles
of peace and love can be discerned in the present international
revolutionary pressures. Wherever one goes, young people
instinctively turn to the song, “One Love” to express group
solidarity. It is to this song, “One Love,” where we have
to turn from time to time to cope with the challenges of
“Babylonian provocation.”
Today, many are again
turning to the inspiration of Bob Marley in their search
for levers to understand the chaos and destruction of the
capitalist world. Over the years, I have written on the
electric presentation of Bob Marley at the independence
celebrations in Zimbabwe in 1980. Such was the power and
force of the music that hundreds of thousands of Zimbabweans
flocked to the stadium that night to turn the independence
celebrations into a people’s celebration. Because many people
could not get into this official celebration, Bob gave a
free concert the next night at the Rufaro stadium in Harare
and pledged that the music of reggae was now at the gates
of apartheid South Africa and that the task of the reggae
artists was to continue the fight, just as Peter Tosh had
sung, “we gonna fight, fight, fight, fight ’gainst apartheid.”
In his small newspaper
called Survival, which was published from the Hope Road
Headquarters in Kingston, Jamaica, Marley had this to say
in 1980:
“I and I make our
contribution to the freedom of Zimbabwe. When we say natty
going to dub it up in Zimbabwe, that’s exactly what we
mean, give the people of Zimbabwe what they want, now
they got what they want, do we want more? Yes, the freedom
of South Africa. So Africa Unite, Unite, Unite. You’re
so right and let’s do it.”
Reggae and Revolution
In
any revolutionary process, one of the most important tasks
is for the people to recover their self confidence in order
to make history. Rastafari imbued confidence in the peoples
of the Caribbean, and it was this same self confidence and
self esteem that underpinned the spirit of resistance among
the Rastafaris from the hills of Jamaica to the streets
of Zimbabwe. In his song, “Zimbabwe,”
Marley prophetically predicted that, “Soon we’ll find out
who is the real revolutionary.” Robert Mugabe and his clique
exposed themselves soon after independence, when the Zimbabwe
government attacked the Rastafari movement in Zimbabwe,
castigating Rastas for not dressing “properly” because they
did not wear British suits like the leaders. Mugabe called
the Rastas “dirty” and “unwashed,” but this was the first
sign of a regime that attacked women, same sex couples and
those who opposed the self-enrichment of a small clique.
Many Rastas are now listening to the words of Bob Marley,
who in the song “Ride
Natty Ride” calls on politicians to pull their own weight
and stop making speeches to confuse and oppress the people.
The Caribbean reggae
lyrics of confidence and personal dignity continue to spread
as people gear themselves for today’s revolutionary moment
in world history. As one of the commentators on the Egyptian
revolution stated,
“what the revolution
offered the people was the opportunity to restore their
sense of self-esteem, honor and dignity. Once the fear
barrier was knocked down, they acquired a new sense of
pride and empowerment that not only challenged the state
monopoly on violence but also defeated it using solely
peaceful means. With each passing day they became more
determined to fight for their rights and quite willing
to tender the sacrifices needed to gain their freedom.”
Bob
Marley articulated the need for radical revolutionary change
and he dug deep into black life to grasp what C.L.R. James
had understood - that black people formed a revolutionary
force in world politics because of where they had been located
in the system since the Atlantic Slave Trade. The task of
the revolutionary artist and revolutionary intellectual
is to unearth the revolutionary potential of the people.
This, Bob Marley consciously sought to do through his music
and concerts. In his last years, his concerts were like
giant political rallies.
Of his many renditions
about emancipatory politics and the emancipation of the
mind, Marley turned to religious language and images to
reach a section of the population that is not usually reached
by traditional radical discourses on revolution. Those who
study wave theory and the physics of music are examining
the lyrics and vibrations of the music produced by Bob Marley
and reggae artists to see how this art form and spiritual
message emerged as a revolutionary form. They are studying
the real meaning of Rasta Vibrations. Today, these vibrations
are helping to inspire revolutionaries as they remember
the words of Bob Marley: “It takes a revolution to make
a solution.”
Bob Marley’s use of
religious metaphors stimulates the imagination of the oppressed.
In the song, “Revolution,”
Marley starts out with the need for a memory of truth. He
used the word revelation, which served as the opener for
his call for truth. Secondly, this truth telling would allow
the people to expose the mainstream politicians who perpetuated
what was termed, “the Babylonian system.”
In contemporary
society, politics is more or less about accumulation, exclusion
and divisions. Bob Marley said that one cannot trust a politician:
“Can’t trust no shadows after dark.” He added: “Never make
a politician, grant you a favour, they will always want
to control you forever.” In addition to calling on the people
to self-organize by standing up for their rights, Marley,
in this song on revolution also called for the people to
fight so that “Rasta there up on top, can’t you see, so
you can’t predict the flop.” He used the metaphor of the
storms and hurricanes to remind the people of the chaos
caused by the social system and to call for the overthrow
of this system which is capitalism: “blood make you run.”
Marley states, in this process of revolution, “Let the righteousness
cover the earth like the water cover the sea.” For Marley,
the weak in mind and heart cannot make revolution. The weak
conceptions of inferiority had to be transcended in order
for revolution to develop. Revolution and freedom were the
constant theme of the lyrics in which Bob Marley was calling
for the prisoners of Babylon to be free:
“Too much confusion;
so much frustration
I don’t want to live
in the park
Can’t trust no shadows
after dark
Like the bird in the
tree, the prisoners must be free.”
Eusi
Kwayana, the Caribbean revolutionary grasped the importance
of the Marley intervention and called his contribution one
of the landmarks achievements of the Caribbean Revolution.
In the preface to my book, Rasta
and Resistance: From Marcus Garvey to Walter Rodney,
Kwayana wrote:
“The placing of the
stamp of Babylon on the whole of official society and
the wide acceptance of this description is one of the
landmark achievements of the Caribbean Revolution. The
more it is seriously accepted, the more the culture divides
into two poles of authority: a necessary forerunner to
any long term revolutionary objectives. Those members
of the society who do not accept or embrace the dress,
or need the religious ideas, accept the language, those
who do not accept the language with the movement’s definition
of the order of things, accept the music. In fact, such
is the power of art that Bob Marley’s music has done more
to popularize the real issues of the African liberation
movement than several decades of backbreaking work of
Pan Africanists and international revolutionaries.”
Pan Africanist
Marley and African Unity
Bob Marley was very
conscious that the African revolution and African unity
were inseparable. In February 2005, at the moment of his
posthumous 60th birthday celebration, Rita Marley and other
members of his family organized the massive African Unity
concerts in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. Members of the Marley
family were reminding the youth that long before Col. Muammar
Gaddafi claimed to have supported African unity, Marcus
Garvey, Kwame Nkrumah, and Bob Marley were supporting the
full unification of Africa. In all parts of Africa the people
sing the song of Bob Marley, “Africa
Unite.”
This call for African
unity from the grassroots is as urgent today as it was 31
years ago when Bob Marley uttered these words of unity from
the stage in Harare Zimbabwe. Marley had joined his voice
to the push for the full liberation of Africa. He understood
that no black person could be free until Africa was free,
united and liberated from foreign domination and military
interventions. Bob Marley worked hard. I witnessed this
in Harare, Zimbabwe in 1980 when he was spending his time
grounding with Zimbabwean musicians, attempting to learn
as much as possible about Zimbabwean music while he was
there. One could also see that he was intimately studying
the situation on the ground. This capacity for hard work
ensured that the Rastas of that period developed independent
sources of information on Africa.
In the last year of
his earthly life, Bob Marley worked hard to unearth spiritual
energies to make the people stronger. In his growing awareness
of his own mortality, Bob Marley intensified his work and
pushed himself to the point where he collapsed in his final
concert. Bob Marley was suffering from cancer. This suffering
showed him that he only had a short time on earth. Today,
Bob Marley is larger in death than when he was alive but
as we remember him, we must remember him as a human with
strength and weaknesses. We now know more of these weaknesses
and Marley himself communicated his pain and hurt in his
songs. It
is this same pain and hurt that infused his songs that connected
him with other persons going through similar pain. Despite
the weaknesses and the pain, Marley stressed the positive
and as we remember him, we seek to highlight the positive
while learning from the negative.
In the last album, appropriately
called Uprising,
Marley reminded the people that they should “have no fear
of atomic energy ’cause none of them can stop the time.”
The song, “Redemption Song,” exposed the versatility of
Marley when he returned to strumming the guitar and asked
simply, “How long shall they kill our prophets while we
stand aside and look?” This was where Marley called on the
people to “Emancipate yourselves from mental slavery, none
but ourselves can free our minds.”
This theme of self-emancipation
sought to bring the fusion of the ideas of spirituality
with the revolutionary changes in the material and technical
conditions of production. Reggae music was an early attempt
at this fusion in order to provide emancipation from mental
slavery so that humans could unleash the latent power of
self-expression. In essence, when the Rastafari and Bob
Marley called on us to “emancipate ourselves from mental
slavery,” they were admonishing the intellectuals and the
activists to make a break with the epistemologies that justify
and cover up oppression.
Bob Marley seems to
have anticipated today’s capitalist push towards mindless
consumerism and the attempts to dumb down the kind of deep,
critical thinking that is required to challenge entrenched
capitalist exploitation and dehumanization.
Thus,
Marley’s call for emancipation from mental slavery also
speaks to all humans seeking alternatives to the massive
push towards mind control and robotization that is promised
in the era of technological singularity, where human beings
would be rendered inferior to super-humans who would be
products of biology, genetic engineering, and robotic science.
In such a climate, the Rastafarian movement and the humanist
philosophy of Marley promise to act as a force to hold the
youth together as humans.
The Rastafari movement
has been one of the most profound attempts to transform
the consciousness of the Caribbean people. The movement
confronted problems pertaining to the colonial and neo-colonial
world, human’s relationship with the universe, human’s relationship
with spirits, human’s relationships with matter and how
to reorganize society. In its own way, this movement that
arose out of the hills of the Jamaican countryside, challenged
the greed, competition and individualism of capitalism.
Bob Marley opposed conspicuous
consumption and the obscene accumulation of wealth. Up to
the time of his passing there were efforts to make him succumb
to the disposition of his material wealth, but he eschewed
the capitalist forms of inheritance. One witnessed court
cases and long litigation because of his opposition to capitalist
wills.
Thus even on his bed
while he was making the transition to the ancestors, Bob
Marley was opposed to the obscene consumptive patterns of
the capitalist mode of production and railed against the
forms of economic organization that placed material goods
before human needs.
My work on the Rastafari
movement in the book Rasta and Resistance was an attempt
to learn from the positive traditions of this movement to
be able to inspire the youth to the long struggles for freedom.
This was an attempt at trying to lay the foundations for
the move from Resistance to Transformation. This attempt
remains premature for such a transformation will only be
possible when there is the harmonization of the culture
and language of the majority with that which is taught in
the schools, colleges and universities in the region. The
Egyptian revolution of 2011 has opened new possibilities
at the political level. As we remember Bob Marley, revolutionaries
will seek his inspiration to push for a quantum leap beyond
the world of capitalist oppression, dehumanization, and
injustice. Most importantly, in order to move from resistance
to transformation and achieve the quantum leap that takes
us beyond the world of exploitation and dehumanization,
we must ultimately emancipate ourselves from mental slavery,
and from the capitalist forces that celebrate genocide,
subjugation, military invasions, environmental plunder,
and crimes against humanity as progress.
BlackCommentator.com
Editorial Board Member, Dr. Horace Campbell, PhD, is Professor
of African American Studies and Political Science at Syracuse
University in Syracuse New York. He is the author of Barack
Obama and Twenty-first Century Politics: A Revolutionary
Moment in the USA. Click here
to contact Dr. Campbell.
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