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Social
and Cultural Analyses
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Marcus
Garvey and the Early Rastafarians: Continuity and Discontinuity
By RUPERT LEWIS
In Chanting Down Babylon: The Rastafari Reader,
Edited by Nathaniel Samuel Murrell, William David Spencer, and Adrian
Anthony McFarlane (Temple University Press 1998), pp. 145-158.
This chapter examines political aspects of the origins of the Rastafarian
movement at a time when the Garvey movement was in decline in the 1930s.
Its main intentions are to underscore ways in which Garveyism has affected
the evolution of Rastafari and to identify the many similarities and differences
that exist between the two anticolonial ideologies. Many interpretations
of the origins of Rastafari have focused on two events during this period:
the coronation of Ras Tafari as emperor of Ethiopia in 1930 and Marcus
Mosiah Garvey's writings on the significance of this coronation for people
of African descent.
In
his capacity as president general of the Universal Negro Improvement
Association (UNIA), Garvey sent a cable to His Majesty Ras Tafari that
read "Greetings from Ethiopians of [the] Western World. May
your reign be peaceful, prosperous, progressive. Long live your
Majesty."(1) That communique was printed in the
New York-based Negro World newspaper on November 8, 1930.
On that same day, Garvey published an article in his Jamaican newspaper,
The Blackman, that read:
Last
Sunday, a great ceremony took place at Addis Ababa, the capital of
Abyssinia. It was the coronation of the new Emperor of Ethiopia
-- Ras Tafari. From reports and expectations, the scene was
one of great splendor, and will long be remembered by those who were
present. Several of the leading nations of Europe sent representatives
to the coronation, thereby paying their respects to a rising Negro
nation that is destined to play a great part in the future history
of the world. Abyssinia is the land of the blacks and we are
glad to learn that even though Europeans have been trying to impress
the Abyssinians that they are not belonging to the Negro Race, they
have learned the retort that they are, and they are proud to be so.
Ras
Tafari has traveled to Europe and America and is therefore no stranger
to European hypocrisy and methods; he, therefore, must be regarded
as a kind of a modern Emperor, and from what we understand and know
of him, he intends to introduce modern methods and systems into his
country. Already he has started to recruit from different sections
of the world competent men in different branches of science to help
to develop his country to the position that she should occupy among
the other nations of the world.
We
do hope that Ras Tafari will live long to carry out his wonderful
intentions. From what we have heard and what we do know, he
is ready and willing to extend the hand of invitation to any Negro
who desires to settle in his kingdom. We know of many who are
gone to Abyssinia and who have given good report of the great possibilities
there, which they are striving to take advantage of.
The
Psalmist prophesied that Princes would come out of Egypt and Ethiopia
would stretch forth her hands unto God. We have no doubt that
the time is now come. Ethiopia is now really stretching forth her
hands. This great kingdom of the East has been hidden for many
centuries, but gradually she is rising to take a leading place in
the world and it is for us of the Negro race to assist in every way
to hold up the hand of Emperor Ras Tafari.(2)
I have
quoted the full text of Garvey's article on the coronation because often
commentators refer only to the last paragraph and stress the religious,
prophetic dimension, that of a prince coming out of Egypt and Ethiopia
stretching out its hands to God (Psalm 68:31), at the expense of other
aspects of Garvey's thinking.(3) But Garvey addressed
many issues: the attempts by Europeans to separate Ethiopia from the
rest of Africa, European attendance at the coronation and its impact,
the coronation as a symbol of black pride, and, most important, Garvey's
expression of hope for a reign based on modernity within the framework
of Pan-African solidarity. In Garvey's thinking and work, Ethiopianism
functioned in accordance with his strong modernizing Pan-African outlook.
The
emphasis placed on the coronation of Haile Selassie I was important
in a colony where the British monarchy was the supreme symbol of power.
In the UNIA, Garvey always emphasized a counterhegemonic perspective
against European domination and exploitation of Africa. Consistent
with this approach, he had written and produced a play, in June 1930,
titled The Coronation of an African King, which had scenes set
in several African, European, and West Indian capitals. The play
was also a dramatic portrayal of the UNIA's work and the attempts by
the U.S. and European governments to stem the tide of the Garvey movement.(4)
Garvey
founded the Universal Negro Improvement Association in Jamaica in 1914.
It took off in the United States in the period after World War I and
became the largest Pan-African movement of the early twentieth century.
The Garvey movement saw its heyday in the early 1920s, but by the late
1920s and early 1930s it was already in decline. Nonetheless,
Garvey and the leaders of the UNIA represented early twentieth-century
Black Nationalist leadership that mobilized the masses around a program
of cultural, economic, and political modernity. They advocated
an end to colonialism in Africa and the Caribbean and envisioned the
eventual development of the African continent into a modern network
of nations that would constitute a United States of Africa. The
models for this network of nations were the United States of America
and western Europe. In this respect, the Garveyites were an "African
Westernizing elite." As African descendants, they claimed
the heritage of early African civilization, but they also valued the
achievements of the world that had enslaved and colonized them (the
so-called Babylon), while rejecting its racial assumptions and notions
of their subordinate position within that world.
Continuities
That
Rastafari and Garveyism share many similarities is well known among
their adherents, as well as among scholars who do research on these
movements. Both movements are Afrocentric and unapologetically
defend the beauty and dignity of Africa and people of African ancestry.
While Garvey emphasized Africa's social and political redemption, Rastas
include in that agenda a spiritual dimension, which they often clothe
in Judeo-Christian thought and African concepts. Both Garveyism
and Rastafari show great respect for the Bible and attempt to distance
themselves from biased, Eurocentric interpretations of Scripture that
contribute to the oppression of black people. Ken Post, whose
work on Rastafari is well known, has stressed the importance of the
Bible in Jamaican culture and Rastafari, pointing out that "the
religious factor which Jamaicans of all classes had in common was the
King James Version of the Holy Bible. For the majority of members
of the lower and many of the intermediate classes, the contents of this
book represented the essential truth. People were accustomed to
search the Bible for answers to their problems."(5)
His
love for and frequent citations of passages from the Bible notwithstanding,
Garvey was less interested in giving a theological or religious interpretation
to his Afrocentric political ideology than the Rastafarians have shown
themselves to be. Garvey and the Rastafarians, however, both read
the Bible with the knowledge that Africa and Africans had been a part
of that recorded experience and wisdom; it is not a book that is alien
to black people. The most well known Marcus Garvey scholar in
the United States, Robert Hill, has argued that the Holy Piby
and the Royal Parchment Scroll of Black Supremacy are the two
books that provide "the actual interpretative basis of Rastafari
ideology."(6) These were introduced into Jamaica
between 1925 and 1927.(7) Along with the Bible and
the oral traditions, they are among a variety of sources that have helped
to shape Rastafarian beliefs. Other scholars have examined the
history of Rastafari in this context, explored its origins(8)
in the peasantry, and also emphasized the impact of traditional Afro-Jamaican
religions, such as revivalism and Kumina,(9) on the evolution
of Rastafari. Maureen Warner-Lewis, an authority on Caribbean
culture, has pointed to the wide range of African continuities in the
Rastafarian belief system.(10)
Historically,
Garveyism and Rastafari were both started by a person who was unknown
and rather insignificant, at first, and both movements were later exported
from Jamaica to other countries under the harsh economic and political
conditions of the early twentieth century. Whereas Garveyism first
surfaced in Jamaica during World War I, Rastafari came out of the depression
years of the 1930s, which gave birth to the 1938 labor rebellion.
As in Garveyism, the Jamaican roots of Rastafari are to be found in
the varied cultural, economic, and political struggles of the Jamaican
people in the post emancipation years after 1838. Both movements
are committed to an ideology of nationalism that supports political
and economic independence for Blacks. That is, they both demonstrate
a strong anticolonial stance and show interest in national independence,
although they have very different interpretations of what a black independent
nation should be.
Both
movements gained their popularity abroad before they were accepted at
home by the Jamaican middle class, from whom they received much hostility.
Garveyism got its early support in Harlem before it was endorsed in
Jamaica in the 1920s. Leonard Howell, who is regarded as one of
the founders of the Rastafarian movement, first gained a following in
the rural parish of St. Thomas and later, in the parish of St. Catherine,
set up a commune called Pinnacle, which was constantly under pressure
from the authorities in the 1940s and 1950s. In 1954 the commune
was broken up by the police.(11) Thus Rastafari's
acceptance in Jamaica, especially among the middle class, came only
after the university study of 1961, Prime Minister Michael Manley's
political interest in and sympathy toward the Rastas, and the reggae
explosion of the 1970s. Both Garvey and Howell were, over the
course of their careers, arrested and imprisoned on charges of conspiracy,
the former in the United States and the latter in Jamaica. Yet,
despite the hostile attitudes of the Jamaican society to Garveyism and
Rastafari, the 1930s ushered in a period of transition between colonialism
and the rise of Jamaican nationalism -- due in no small measure to the
struggles of both the Rastafarians and the Garveyites.
Rastafarian
intellectuals construct a lineage going back beyond the plantation to
Ethiopia, and many Rastafarian elders emphasize individual spiritual
vision to account for the origins of their conversion.(12)
Many versions of the 1930s emergence of Rastafari are proffered other
than those that have become standard in scholarly works. However,
certain basic facts remain undisputed. That several of Garvey's
followers were involved in the founding of Rastafari is common knowledge.
Leonard Howell, for example, traveled paths similar to Garvey and was
a known Garveyite and Africanist. Coming from a poor rural background,
Howell joined the thousands of Jamaicans who migrated to Panama and
then to the United States, where he worked with the United States Army
as a cook and was said to have had a business in New York. Garvey
did not work with the army but made Harlem, New York, his headquarters.
Hill notes that Howell's return to Jamaica "coincided with
the period of marked upsurge in religious revivalism that began during
1930-31."(13) The Gleaner of December 1933 alleged
that at Howell's meetings, "devilish attacks are made ... on government,
both local and imperial, and the whole conduct of the meeting would
tend to provoke an insurrection if taken seriously."(14)
Discontinuities
Although
the Garveyite secular-religious interpretation of the coronation of
Ras Tafari and the Rastafarian religious view of that event both originated
from a similar Africa-centered tradition, they are not identical.
Garvey saw in Selassie an African head of state and someone who could
be a major player in the Pan-African Black Nationalist movement; but
the Rastafarian interpretation of the emperor recognized divinity.
To the Rastafarian way of thinking, no contradiction exists between
the secular and the religious elements in Garvey's thinking, nor in
his emphases regarding the emperor's coronation. They interpret
the whole of Garvey's thoughts from a theocratic point of view.
In contrast, Garvey privileged a secular approach, with a preference
for modernity over theocracy. So when Garvey later criticized
Emperor Haile Selassie for his conduct in Ethiopia's war with Italy,
he saw the emperor as a ruler, not as God. Rastafarians, by contrast,
saw God in the emperor; Haile Selassie is God, King of Kings and Lord
of Lords. The coronation therefore inspired the emergence of the
Rastafarian movement in ways that Garvey never envisioned. Rastas
fused ancient Hebrew prophecy, so common in Garvey's speeches, with
Africanist ideas(15) and gave rise to the most influential
cultural and spiritual current to have emerged in the Caribbean in this
century.(16)
The
differences between the Garveyites and the Rastafarians involve not
only Garvey's ideological stance but also the social character of the
movement he led and the religious outlook of the early Rastafarians.
The early Rastas were drawn predominantly from the African Jamaican
underclass, and the religious character and cultural and social practices
of early Rastafari are characteristic of the Jamaican peasantry.(17)
The style, organizational structures, and practices of the Garvey
movement had the stamp of the emergent black petite bourgeoisie or middle
class. At the same time, the Jamaican government had supporters
drawn from the peasantry but did not attract many followers from the
UNIA.(18) In the UNIA, one felt the energy of a group
of Blacks repressed by colonialism and American racism but determined
to resist and take its place in the world through conventional means,
rather than by way of a radical break with Western culture, as advocated
by Rastafari. Around the black middle-class thinking and leadership,
the black masses coalesced.
The
anticolonial content of Howell's preaching was clear in his message
that black people's only true king was Emperor Haile Selassie.(19)
But Garvey did not approve of Howell's teaching and rejected his claims
that Selassie was God. As Hill reports, Garvey refused to allow
Howell "to sell the Emperor's pictures in Edelweiss Park, the [Jamaican]
headquarters of the UNIA."(20) Garvey found many
of Howell's doctrines embarrassing to his own Christian thought, especially
on the issues of God and the Messiah. There is little evidence
that Garvey read Howell's Promised Key, but if he had, he would
have found this early Rastafari prophet's interpretation of Bible characters
and the Christian church (especially the Roman Catholic Church) highly
offensive; Garvey's respect for the Bible is unquestioned.
Another
Garveyite associated with the early Rastafarians is Robert Hinds, a
follower of Alexander Bedward who was among those arrested on Bedward's
1921 march against oppression and his call for spiritual reform.
Chevannes calls Hinds "the most successful of all early Rastafari,
in terms of membership.... Hinds led an organization of over eight
hundred members on roll, and turnout at functions of a couple hundred."
Hinds's headquarters was called the King of Kings Mission, and "it
was organized along the lines of a Revival group."(21)
Again, the connection between Bedwardism, revivalism, and early
Rastafari is patently clear. Also, like both Bedward and Garvey,
Hinds had the ability to attract a large following.
The
1935 Italian war against Ethiopia gave Rastafari one of its most important
impulses. Not only were Rastafarians and Garveyites protesting
publicly in Kingston, but the wider black community was also opposed
to Italy's aggression. The Garvey-oriented newspaper Plain
Talk reported that "a group of Jamaicans had decided to launch
a series of meetings throughout the Island, for the purpose of getting
together a battalion of stalwart men to defend the Ethiopian frontier
from the Italian invaders," and that the contingent would be assisted
by a black organization in Chicago.(22) Amy Jacques
Garvey, wife of Marcus Garvey, delivered the main address at a mass
meeting in support of Ethiopia at the Kingston Liberty Hall on October
13, 1935. She concluded that the war would result in the "rising
up of the people of Africa in one great effort to emancipate themselves."(23)
At this rally, "a petition signed by no fewer than 1400 persons
was drafted asking the British Government to allow Jamaicans to enlist
in the Ethiopian army so as 'to fight to preserve the glories of our
ancient and beloved Empire'."(24) This petition
was sent to the British colonial secretary, who represented the custodian
of Jamaica's national and international defense. However, the
British government did not accede to the suggestions of the Jamaica
Garveyites; in fact, one British official "wrote contemptuously
of the 'bellicose sons of Ham in Jamaica, so anxious to serve two masters'."(25)
The
Rastafarians showed their opposition to the Italians in different ways.
Several Rasta groups demonstrated in Kingston, while others voiced their
defiance through a variety of approaches. According to Randolph
Williams, "There were sections that wanted to send a petition to
His Majesty the King of England praying that they be allowed to recruit
men in Jamaica to be sent to Abyssinia to do service in the Ethiopian
ranks, others wished to collect money to send to Ras Tafari to be used
for the purchase of arms, some decided upon just praying three times
per day for the triumph of Abyssinia."(26) In
Montego Bay, on the western end of the island, about two thousand persons
demonstrated against Italian aggression. Similar protests took
place in Guyana, Barbados, Trinidad, St. Kitts, and other West Indian
territories.
The
Garveyite newspaper Plain Talk was commended by Dr. Malaku Bayen,(27)
Haile Selassie's personal representative in the United States, who was
in charge of organizing the Ethiopian World Federation. Early
Rastafarian leaders Joseph Nathaniel Hibbert, Archibald Dunkley, and
many other Rastas were foundation members of the first local branch
of the Ethiopian World Federation to be set up in Jamaica. But
Garvey himself was very hostile in his criticism of Haile Selassie.
As early as October 1935, Garvey had argued that the Italo-Ethiopian
war "affords only another example of what unpreparedness means
to a people." Less than two years later he stated the following
in his main critique of the emperor:
He
kept his country unprepared for modern civilization, whose policy
was strictly aggressive. He resorted sentimentally to prayer
and to feasting and fasting, not consistent with the policy that secures
the existence of present-day freedom for people whilst other nations
and rulers are building up armaments of the most destructive kind
as the only means of securing peace ... and protection.... The
results show that God had nothing to do with the campaign of Italy
in Abyssinia, for on the one side we had the Pope of the Catholic
Church blessing the Crusade, and the other, the Coptic Church fasting
and praying with confidence of victory.... It is logical therefore
that God did not take sides, but left the matter to be settled by
the strongest human battalion.(28)
At
the very beginning of the Rastafarian movement, Garvey challenged Leonard
Howell's claim that Selassie was divine. Garvey respected the
emperor only for the important role he saw him playing in African politics
at the time; but he criticized Selassie openly for his political ineptitude
and his defense of his Semitic ancestry at the expense of his African
heritage. Not surprisingly, Garvey's attitude toward Haile Selassie
was bitterly criticized by his opponents, as well as by some of his
supporters, in correspondence and articles to Plain Talk.(29)
Some of the opposition to Garvey derived from the view that the emperor
was a descendant of King Solomon and therefore untouchable. The
power of the Hebrew Bible record was often invoked in the interpretation
of the Emperor's ancient lineage. Others felt that Garvey's criticisms
were simply unfair.(30) No doubt exists that Garvey
lost support among his followers as a result of his criticisms.
However, his work and his reputation after his death caused him to become
a prophet to Rastafarians and a national hero in Jamaican society.(31)
Although
the Garveyites and the early Rastafarians were minority groups in Jamaica
in the 1930s, they were at the forefront of the challenge to Jamaica's
colonial mentality. Rastafari therefore represents an important
dimension of popular resistance to British colonialism, the plantation
system, as well as the authority of British-oriented mulatto and black
middle-class values. However, to frame the oppositionist posture
of Rastafari in relation to the more privileged classes is to see it
conveniently in a one-sided way, when, in fact, it has challenged the
values not only of the privileged but also of the underprivileged who
accept colonial values. The Rastafarian's "chanting down
Babylon" is, therefore, directed at all segments of the Jamaican
society that cradle and foster the beliefs that sustain black subordination.
Garveyism
and Rastafari are the results of distinct social movements that overlap
on certain ideas and personalities and differ in other respects.
For example, while Garveyites shared a similar perspective on Africa
to that of the Rastafarians, they differed over Selassie's divinity.
For Garvey, Selassie was a secular figure, not a religious one, and
absolutely not God. Garveyism was broader than Rastafari in social
appeal and included a strong element of middle-class Blacks of that
era, though it also attracted a strong working-class and rural following.
By contrast, Rastafari was definitely rooted in the lower socioeconomic
classes. It was a movement among the Jamaican poor, unmediated.
The infusion of the middle class into Rastafari came with Black
Power in the 1960s. In this regard, the theme of nationhood articulated
by Garvey and other nationalists came into conflict with the theme of
repatriation that was strongly held by Rastafarians.
The
imperative of repatriation among Rastafarians reflected trends all over
the Americas, as witnessed in both the mythic and the physical return
of Brazilian and Cuban Blacks to West Africa in the late nineteenth
and early twentieth centuries,(32) as well as in the repatriationist
efforts in the United States during the same period. This trend
was also strong in Garvey's successful efforts in establishing UNIA
branches in Lesotho, Ghana, Nigeria, Liberia, Sierra Leone, Namibia,
and South Africa.(33) In 1961 the government of Jamaica
appointed a mission to Africa that included Garveyites such as Z. Munroe
Scarlett and Rastafarians Mortimo Planno, D. Mack, and Filmore Alvaranga.
Their report helped to shape the policy of the Jamaican government
in setting up diplomatic relations with independent African states,
in providing solidarity in the struggle against colonial rule, and in
securing land in Ethiopia, where a Jamaican settlement still exists.
The
religious character of Rastafari is partly due to the way Jamaican people
have identified with and appropriated the Hebrew Scriptures and have
seen themselves as the Israelites. The oppression of the Middle
Passage, slavery, and the brutal postemancipation treatment of the peasantry,
when linked to Africa-centered traditions of racial consciousness, led
some Jamaicans to identify themselves strongly with the suffering ancient
Israelites. While sharing in this religious perspective and drawing
on it, Garvey was more secular in his program, policy positions, and
outlook than that theological tradition. Garveyism was a program
of political, economic, social, and cultural modernity. While
incorporating basic fundamental Christian principles, it had to admit
to more than one belief system because the Pan-African movement that
the UNIA represented had believers drawn from different religious and
spiritual persuasions. Among the Garveyites were adherents of
the many varieties of African Caribbean and African American Christian
religions, as well as of orthodox Christian religions and of Islam.
Garvey himself was brought up as a Methodist and had some association
with Catholicism. During his heyday, Garvey was a Christian,(34)
albeit a nondenominational one, who advocated the perception of God
in our own image. This contrasts sharply with the Rastafarian
belief in the divinity of Haile Selassie.
Another
important difference between Garvey and Rastafarians lies in their views
on ganja, which is used ritually and socially by Rastafarians.(35)
An editorial titled "The Dangerous Weed" that appeared in
Garvey's New Jamaican on August 13, 1932, leaves the reader in
no doubt as to where he stood on this matter:
Ganja
is a dangerous weed. It has been pronounced so by responsible
authorities. The smoking of it does a great deal of harm or
injury to the smoker; we understand it has the same effect on the
subject as opium has. Every day we hear of cases of ganja sellers
being brought before the Court -- fines, small and heavy, have been
inflicted with the object of destroying the trade, but yet it grows.
The other day a man was found in possession of ninety pounds of ganja,
this was enough deadly weed to destroy a thousand men. That
our people are being destroyed by the use of ganja there is absolutely
no doubt. We have come in contact with young men and middle
aged men who have become a menace to society through the smoking of
ganja. Sometimes they perform in such a crazy manner as to frighten
us. Aren't we playing with the danger by not more severely
putting it down?
Most
of the people who smoke ganja do so as a means of getting themselves
in such a state or condition as to forget their troubles and worries
-- troubles and worries brought upon them by the bad conditions that
exist in the country.... It would be good that more serious
steps be taken to suppress this ganja habit.... Between ganja
and fanatical religion, we are developing a large population of half-crazy
people who may not only injure themselves but injure us. Some
will do it in the name of the "Lord" and others may do it
under the influence of the evil weed.(36)
This
position brought Garvey into conflict with those who advocated and practiced
the ritual, sacramental use of ganja, as well as with those who traded
in it. (Jamaica had several herbalists who sold many herbs for various
maladies and not as drug dealers.) But while Garveyism inspired
the prophetic and Ethiopianist vision of the Rastafarians, who hail
Garvey as a great hero and prophet of Rastafari, the Jamaican Pan-Africanist
stood in strong opposition to the Rastas' fundamental beliefs and practices.
He saw their rituals and livity as un-Christian and degrading to the
true African personality.
Another
significant difference between the Rastafari and the Garvey movement
is that the latter was institutionalized and centralized through the
UNIA, while the Rastafarian movement is not an institutionalized and
centralized establishment. Attempts by Rastafarians to centralize
the movement have proven dismal failures, although no doubt efforts
will continue to be made in that direction. There is no central
leadership or hierarchy that makes decisions for the movement, and the
various groups exercise a tremendous measure of independence.
Perhaps their only uniting principle is the belief in Selassie and Ethiopianism.
On
the one hand, Garvey does have the status of a prophet in the Rastafarian
worldview, and in some ways, Garveyism has influenced the Rastafarian
ideology. Indeed, Garveyism is said to be one of the ideological
foundations of the Rastafari religion,(37) a result of the
cross-pollination that occurred between the Garvey movement and those
who have been identified by scholars as the founders of Rastafari.
On the other hand, Rastafari was not a product of the Garvey movement.
The spread of Garveyism corresponds with black militancy after World
War I -- as seen, for example, in the labor movements among the Oil
Fields Workers Trades Union, led by Uriah Buzz Butler and Captain Author
Cipriani of Trinidad and Tobago -- and depended on the success of Garvey
in organizing and channeling that radicalism in Jamaica and parts of
the United States. The spread of Rastafari outside of Jamaica
in the late twentieth century has a different vehicle -- that of reggae
music and the dreadlocks images associated with Bob Marley.
Given
Jamaica's class, color, and race structure, some Garveyites from the
middle class held Rastafarians in contempt, and certainly did not subscribe
to any notion of the divinity of Haile Selassie. Garvey further
differentiated himself from Bedwardism(38) and revivalism.
Bedwardism took the name of its founder, Alexander Bedward (1859-1930),
a revival preacher who had been a migrant in Panama and whose headquarters
were in August Town (near the Mona sugar estate). The crucial
years for Bedwardism were the 1890s to the 1920s, and its primary supporters
were the poor underclass. The Garvey movement, by contrast, was
multiclass in its social composition and drew from the black petite
bourgeoisie or the emergent middle class: teachers, journalists, small
businesspeople, black industrial workers in the United States, and sugar
plantation and banana workers in Cuba and the Caribbean, most of whom
were peasants. Each of these groups brought to the Garvey movement
their view of the world, their distinct interests, and their common
experiences of racial oppression.
As
with any nationalist movement having a cross-class composition, conflict
was inevitable in the Garvey movement and emerged when the early Rastafarians
objected to Garvey's criticism of Emperor Haile Selassie's style of
leadership in the war with Italy in the 1930s. But even earlier,
Garvey had been critical of revivalist practices, Obeah (not in modern
Rastafari), and the smoking of ganja. An editorial in the New
Jamaican, commenting on a woman who died after "catching the
spirit" in the spirit possession of revivalism," clearly represented
Garvey's views: "There is good and there is bad in religion.
Some religions are foolish, and we have a lot of them in Jamaica.
We have religion here, that is running the people crazy.... In
different sections of our city, and for that matter, on the island,
scheming and wicked persons are promoting all kinds of fanatical religions,
and they are finding fertile fields among the unfortunate and ignorant
people."(39)
These
elements, as Chevannes and others have pointed out, were all present
in early Rastafari. That was a different phase of the movement,
and as such, it is necessary to distinguish among the Howellites, the
old supporters of Bedwardites, the revivalists who became Rasta and
initiated a campaign to recognize Haile Selassie as God, and the latter-day
Rastafarian movement that gained international currency with the music
of Bob Marley, Peter Tosh, and Bunny Wailer. Garvey knew the
Howellites, the Bedwardites, and the anticolonial milieu, and with these
Jamaicans he dialogued. It is the latter-day Rastafarians, however,
who, through reggae, have canonized Garvey and become the most active
force in Jamaica for perpetuating aspects of Garvey's philosophy.
Burning Spear was one of the earliest and still is the most persistent
of the "Garveyite" reggae-Rasta lyricists.
The
Garvey and Rastafarian movements were, of course, not the only trends
that were involved in the anticolonial struggle. Rastafari emerged
in a decade of intense social struggle in which the middle classes came
to the forefront of nationalist anticolonial politics, stirred into
action by the labor movement. The social context in which Rastafari
emerged was a trying one. In the world of British colonial Jamaica
in the 1930s, the racist attitudes of the white landowning and merchant
class, the colorist behavior(40) of the brown people, and
the hankering of black Jamaicans after a lighter skin color formed a
dominant ethos that was not only Britain-centered but also monarchyoriented.
Values such as admiration of and loyalty to the plantation owners and
the British king or queen were strong even among black peasants, moments
of resistance notwithstanding.
The
Jamaican political elite continued to favor the British monarch being
recognized -- albeit indirectly -- as the head of state in the new Jamaican
Constitution. In planning constitutional reform in the 1950s both
major political parties, the People's National Party and the Jamaica
Labour Party, agreed to replace the queen of England with a Jamaican
president. However, substantial disagreement remained between
the two parties as to whether the final court of appeal should continue
to be the British Privy Council. The People's National Party favored
dispensing with the British Privy Council and establishing a Caribbean
court of appeal. The Jamaica Labour Party favored continuing
with the British Privy Council, because it felt that local political
interference would affect the due process of law in a Caribbean court.
This legal recognition of, and contention over, the British monarchy
is a consequence of the extended period of acceptance of the legitimacy
of the British sovereign that has been a central part of Jamaica's colonial
political culture. In their advocacy of Ethiopian monarchism
over against British monarchism, Jamaican Rastafari challenged the colonial
mentality in the national British conception of monarchy, but they were
quite at home with the political conception and ideas justifying the
Ethiopian monarchy in Africa. Garvey criticized both monarchies
and their support in Jamaica.
British
cultural institutions transplanted to Jamaica still make up part of
Jamaica's way of life and contribute to the shaping of regional and
national norms in the anglophone Caribbean. A good case in point
is the English game of cricket, which not only has been mastered but
has been modified in style and substance by the English-speaking Caribbean.
The West Indies cricket team dominated world cricket from the 1970s
to the 1990s.
Jamaican
middle-class culture was situated at the axis formed by this British
cultural-political legacy and its roots in the postemancipation peasantry
and working class. The social and economic trajectory of the middle
classes for nearly 160 years has, at best, been characterized by considerable
ambivalence toward Africa, on the one hand, and cultural certainty about
Britain and Europe, on the other. I have corrected many undergraduate
essays, at the University of the West Indies, in which students automatically
refer to Britain as "the mother country." Rastafari
needs to be seen in the context of these social and racial struggles
over a Jamaican identity that is heir to both British and African cultures.
Rastafari is therefore the continuation of efforts toward black
self-determination on the collective as well as the individual level,
and in this respect, it parallels the efforts of the Garvey movement.
Self-determination, in this context, is not restricted to political
nationalism but extends to what Rastafarians have called "livity,"
which covers the totality of one's being in the world.
Garveyites
and Rastafarians were active in the anticolonial and labor struggles,
but the outcomes of those struggles were determined by other players:
the British government; the landed oligarchy, who had been shaken by
the events but not defeated; and the political brokers drawn from the
middle classes. Political leadership drawn from the black and
brown middle, classes negotiated independence from Britain during the
1960s and, in their nation-building efforts, took some elements of Garvey's
program but rejected much of his black assertiveness and pride.
They substituted other notions with which the light-skinned upper classes
and the British would be comfortable, and to which the majority of the
black population acquiesced. One example of the negation of Garveyism
is frequently referred to in the Jamaican press; some people claim that
the color black in the colorful Jamaican flag, which supposedly represents
the dominant race in the country, instead symbolizes hardship.
This stereotypes black Jamaicans who would like the flag to represent
more positive aspects of their reality, aspirations, and dreams as a
nation. Jamaican scholars such as Rex Nettleford and Phillip Sherlock
have been campaigning for a change in this symbolism, which Nettleford
links to the recognition of Emancipation Day as a national holiday.
(It is so recognized in such Caribbean countries as Trinidad and Tobago.)
Hence, in a letter to the press, Nettleford wrote, "The
people in Jamaica House [office of the Prime Minister] need, however,
to act -- take the 'hardship' out of the black in the flag (see my Mirror,
Mirror of 1970) and restore Emancipation Day allowing Independence
Day (August 6) to fall where it will!"(41)
Some
of the sharpest critiques of the neocolonial conceptions of the nation
have come from old Garvey activists and Rastafarians who had articulated
varied conceptions of Jamaica as a black nation and of its relationship
to Africa. The brown and black middle class, who benefited considerably
from the transition to independence-given the expansion of education
and the opening up of the civil service as well as of the executive
and legislative areas of government -- tended to turn its back on Garvey
or used his ideas as a means of social control. In this context,
from the 1940s to 1960s, Garveyism tended to be equated with Rastafari,
since the Rastafarians embraced Garvey as their prophet. In the
thinking of the Rastafarians, after Garvey's death in 1940, he assumed
mythic proportions, second only to Emperor Haile Selassie. Barry
Chevannes has identified four themes in his Rastafarian informants'
understanding of Garvey: Africa for the Africans, black unity, self-reliance,
and racial pride. He has also exposed the myths that have developed
about Garvey, which he groups into the categories "Garvey as divine,"
"Garvey as John the Baptist," and "Garvey as prophet."
These understandings stand in sharp contrast to what are referred to
as "Garvey's curses": financial disaster with the purchase
of the worthless Black Star Line and his poor management skills as a
leader and financial planner.(42)
Pressures
from the rest of society against Rastafari, in the years leading up
and subsequent to political independence, have created closer bonds
between Rastafari and Garveyism while not eroding differences in outlook
among their followers. Moreover, while Rastafari as a movement
has grown and spread internationally, no Garvey movement exists, in
an organic sense,(43) at the end of the twentieth century.
But Garvey's ideas and views remain important and are a point of reference
at the popular level as well as in Jamaican state and local politics,
due to his status as one of Jamaica's national heroes. An appropriate
question to raise is: What will be the future of Rastafari? Might
it suffer the fate of Garveyism, maintaining a legacy without a movement?
Might it become organized into a political force that would cause it
to lose its cultural dynamics and forget its roots and ethos?
Perhaps its decentralized and less organized (than Garveyism) nature
will prove to be Rastafari's own salvation.
Notes
1.
Cited in Robert Hill, ed., Marcus Garvey and the Universal Negro
Improvement Association Papers, vol. 7: November 1927 - August
1940 (Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press,
1990), 442.
2.
Ibid., 440-41.
3.
The quotation from Psalm 68:31 -- "Princes shall come out of Egypt;
Ethiopia shall soon stretch out her hands unto God" (KJV) -- was
used by Garvey in developing his Pan-African message. See Robert
Hill, "Leonard P. Howell and Millenarian Visions in Early Rastafari,"
Jamaica Journal 16, 1 (1983): 24-39.
4.
For a review of The Coronation of an African King, see The
Blackman, June 21, 1930, 3. See also Beverley Hamilton, "Marcus
Garvey: Cultural Activist," Jamaica Journal 20, 3 (1987):
21-30, for discussion of Garvey's cultural activities in Jamaica.
5.
K.W.J. Post, Arise Ye Starvelings: The Jamaican Labour Rebellion
of 1938 and Its Aftermath (The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff, 1978), 160.
6.
According to Robert Hill, the Holy Piby was written and published
by Robert Athlyi Rogers in 1924, in Newark, New Jersey. The Royal
Parchment Scroll of Black Supremacy was published by the Reverend
Fitz Balintine Pettersburgh. See Hill, "Leonard P. Howell,"
27.
7.
Leonard Howell is said to have plagiarized the Holy Piby in his
1935 text titled The Promised Key. See Chapter 21 on The
Promised Key in this book.
8.
Rastafarian writer E.S.P. McPherson argues that Rastafari had pre-Columbian
roots in that Ethiopian people came here before the Spaniards.
He does not provide any evidence other than the oral tradition of certain
Rastafarian elders. See E.S.P. McPherson, Rastafari and Politics
-- Sixty Years of a Developing Cultural Ideology: A Sociology of Development
Perspective (Kingston: Black International Iyahbinghi Press Production,
1991), 22.
9.
On Kumina, see an interesting article by Kenneth Bilby and Elliott Leib,
"Kumina, the Howellite Church and the Emergence of Rastafarian
Traditional Music in Jamaica," Jamaica Journal 19, 3 (1986):
22-28.
10.
Maureen Warner-Lewis, "African Continuities in the Rastafari Belief
System," Caribbean Quarterly 39, 3-4 (1993): 108-23.
Garvey, of course, would have had less respect than most Rastas for
revivalism and Kumina.
11.
Joseph Owens, Dread: The Rastafarians of Jamaica (Kingston: Sangster's
Book Stores, 1976), 18-19.
12.
Barbara Makeda Lee, Rastafari: The New Creation (London: Jamaica
Media Productions, 1982), 14-15.
13.
In the 1920s, Garveyites in New York described Howell "as being
a 'con-man' but also 'a samfie [Obeah] man'" (Hill, "Leonard
P. Howell," 30).
14.
Cited in Horace Campbell, Rasta and Resistance: From Marcus Garvey
to Walter Rodney (London: Hansib Publishing, 1985), 71.
15.
For an insightful discussion of the Rastafarian use of the Old Testament,
see Dennis Forsythe, Rastafari: For the Healing of the Nation
(Kingston: Zaika Publications, 1983); and Post, Arise Ye Starvelings.
16.
On the worldwide spread of Rastafari, see Neil Savishinsky, "Transnational
Popular Culture and the Global Spread of the Jamaican Rastafarian Movement,"
New West Indian Guide 68, 3-4 (1994): 259-81. See also
Chapter 7 by Savishinsky in this anthology.
17.
Barry Chevannes, Rastafari: Roots and Ideology (Syracuse, N.Y.:
Syracuse University Press, 1994); idem, "Introducing the Native
Religions of Jamaica," in Barry Chevannes, ed., Rastafari and
Other African-Caribbean Worldviews (The Hague: Macmillan Publishers/Institute
of Social Studies, 1995).
18.
The Rastafarian movement developed an urban character with the drift
to Kingston in the 1940s-1950s, and only during the 1960s did it gain
significant numbers of adherents among the middle class.
19.
For more information on Howell and his role in Rastafari, see William
David Spencer's commentary on The Promised Key in Chapter 21,
below.
20.
Hill, "Leonard P. Howell," 32.
21.
Chevannes, Rastafari, 127.
22.
Editorial, Plain Talk, July 20, 1935.
23.
Editorial, Plain Talk, October 26, 1935.
24.
Robert Weisboard, "British West Indian Reaction to the Italian-Ethiopian
War: An Episode in Pan-Africanism," Caribbean Studies 10,
1 (1970): 35-36.
25.
Ibid.
26.
Jamaica Standard, January 14, 1939, 24.
27.
Plain Talk, August 7, 1937, 7.
28.
Cited in Rupert Lewis, Marcus Garvey: Anti-Colonial Champion
(Trenton, N.J.: Africa World Press, 1992), 172.
29.
Robert E. Hood, Must God Remain Greek? Afro Cultures and God-Talk
(Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1990), 91. See Plain Talk, April
10, 1937, 7; May 1, 1937, 10. See also Hill, ed., Marcus Garvey,
7:698-703, for correspondence between Garvey and Una Brown of New York
City over Garvey's criticisms of Selassie.
30.
Una Brown wrote, "I feel like a lot of others that you have been
quite unfair in your writing" (in Hill, ed., Marcus Garvey,
7:699).
31.
Virtually all the scholarly and popular literature on Rastafari accords
Garvey this status. See Jabulani I. Tafari, "The Rastafari:
Successors of Marcus Garvey," in Rex Nettleford, ed., Caribbean
Quarterly Monograph: Rastafari (Kingston: Carribean Quarterly, University
of the West Indies, 1985), 1-12, for a statement on Rastafari as successors
of Marcus Garvey.
32.
Rodolfo Sarracino, Los que volvieron a Africa (Havana: Editorial
de Ciencias Sociales, 1988).
33.
Hill, ed., Marcus Garvey, 7:997-1000.
34.
See Philip Potter, "The Religious Thought of Marcus Garvey,"
in Rupert Lewis and Patrick Bryan, eds., Garvey: His Work and Impact
(Trenton, N.J.: Africa World Press, 1991), 145-163.
35.
Scholars are divided on whether ganja was brought on the plantations
by indentured Indian laborers or by enslaved Africans (see Bilby and
Leib, "Kumina," 23). See Neil Savishinsky's "African
Dimensions of the Jamaican Rastafarian Movement," Chapter 7 in
this book, for details.
36.
Marcus Garvey, Editorial, "The Dangerous Weed," New Jamaican,
13 August 1932.
37.
Chevannes, Rastafari, 87.
38.
See Chevannes, Rastafari, 39, 126-27, 78-80, for the impact of
Bedward on early Rastafari. For the political impact of Bedwardism,
see Lewis, Marcus Garvey.
39.
Marcus Garvey, "The Death of a Fanatic," New Jamaican,
11 August 1932, 2; The editorial is very critical of "bad religion."
40.
Jamaican novelist Erna Brodber used the term colorist behavior in her
199 5 emancipation commemoration lecture "Emancipation --The Lesson
and the Legacy: . . . As We Forgive Those Who Trespass against Us .
. ." (lecture presented at the Bethel Baptist Church, Kingston,
Jamaica, on Sunday, July 30, 1995; Kingston Emancipation Commemoration
Committee).
41.
See Rex Nettleford, "Letter to the Editor," Daily Observer,
August 5, 1995, 8.
42.
Chevannes, Rastafari, 87-99, 100-110.
43.
By "organic sense" I mean that a social movement has to be
an expression of a particular moment and has to grow and change in ways
corresponding to the interests and agendas of its members. Research
on the Rastafarian movement shows an organic change. However,
there is no comparable evidence among those who call themselves Garveyites.
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