A
SKETCH OF RASTAFARI HISTORY
by Norman Hugh Redington, Editor The
St. Pachomius Orthodox Library
INTRODUCTION:
The spread of Orthodox Christianity in the New
World has occurred mainly as a result of immigration from Eastern Europe.
There are two regions, however, where this is not
the case: Alaska and the Caribbean. The story of the conversion of the
Aleut, Tlingit, and Yupik nations in Alaska has often been told; by
contrast, that of the yet more improbable emergence
of Ethiopian churches in Jamaica is little known. My hope is that this
little tract will inspire someone with greater knowledge to study the
subject properly; if it also leads to a deeper
respect and understanding between mainstream Christians and the often-maligned
brethren in Jamaica, may the Lord be praised.
N.Redington, 1995
ORIGINS: THE GARVEYITE AFRICAN ORTHODOX CHURCH.
Marcus Garvey was a Jamaican-born Black nationalist
leader whose Universal Negro Improvement Association (UNIA) was the
most prominent Black Power organization of the 1920s. Although himself
a Roman Catholic, Garvey encouraged his followers to imagine Jesus as
Black and to organize their own church. To emphasize that the new church
was neither Catholic nor Protestant, the name "Orthodox" was
adopted and the filioque (a phrase added to the Latin version of the
Nicene creed in the early Middle Ages but rejected by the Orthodox)
was dropped.
The African Orthodox Church entered into negotiations with the Russian
Metropolia (now the OCA) for formal recognition as an Orthodox jurisdiction.
Unfortunately, these negotiations broke down: the Metropolia demanded
an unacceptable degree of administrative control, while the Garveyites
wanted to promulgate whatever doctrines they chose. Eventually, the
African Orthodox bishop was consecrated by the "American Catholics",
a group which had rejected the authority of the Pope but was otherwise
similar to the Roman Church.
The Garveyite Church had thousands of members on three continents, and
was a symbol of anti-colonialism in Kenya and Uganda. The African Orthodox
in those countries quickly broke off relations with the New York church
and instead became part of the Greek Patriarchate of Alexandria and
fully Orthodox. The same process repeated in Ghana more recently, where
Fr. Kwami Labe, a graduate of St. Vladimir's Seminary in New York, has
been building a strong
Orthodox community on the foundations laid by the Garveyites. (I am
distressed, however, that many now-canonical African Orthodox often
seem almost ashamed of their "heretical" origins, and try
to distance themselves from the earlier movement.)
Today the African Orthodox Church as such is largely defunct, although
the parish of St. John Coltrane (!) in San Francisco remains quite active.
MORE ORIGINS: THE BLACK ISRAELITES.
Black slaves always felt an obvious affinity to the enslaved Hebrews;
a few took this sympathy to its logical extreme and claimed to be, in
fact, Jews. This movement probably existed in the U.S. during slavery
times, and there was at least one Black convert in the synagogue of
antebellum Charleston. The spread of information about the Jewish "Falasha"
minority in Ethiopia contributed to the growth of Black Judaism during
the late 19th Century, and Jewish sects emerged in the northern ghettoes
alongside Muslim ones. A number of these, and similar groups of more
recent origin, remain very active today.
These groups (a few of them very anti-Semitic in their claim of being
"real Jews") are in some cases "Christian", although
with an Old Testament emphasis. Frequently they claim that whites have
distorted the text of the Bible, and there are attempts to "restore"
the text.
One of these, of importance in this story, is the "Holy Piby",
an occult bible allegedly translated from "Amharic" and emphasizing
the destruction of white "Babylonia" and the return of the
Israelites to Africa, the true Zion. The Piby was adopted by Rastafarians
as the source of their liturgical texts.
GARVEY THE PROPHET:
The Marcus Garvey of history books is a mainly political leader interested
in making the black race economically equal with the white. In oral
tradition, however, he appears as a divinely annointed prophet, the
Forerunner of Haile Selassie. In addition to many miracles and prophecies,
he is credited with having predicted that a "mighty king"
would arise in Africa and bring justice to the oppressed. When the Prince
(Ras) Tafari of Ethiopia was crowned emperor to world-wide fanfare,
many Jamaicans claimed the prophecy of Garvey had obviously just been
fulfilled: the Ras Tafari Movement was born.
Garvey himself was still alive, although his movement had largely collapsed
and he himself had been jailed on (subsequently disproved) allegations
of business fraud. Garvey was no admirer of Haile
Selassie, observing that slavery still existed in Ethiopia, and he attacked
the Rastafarians as crazy fanatics. They, however continued to revere
Garvey nonetheless, remarking that even John the
Baptist had had doubts about Christ!
THE CLASSICAL PERIOD:
From 1930 until the mid '60s, Rastafari was a local Jamaican religious
movement with few outside influences. Several Garveyite leaders had
independently declared that Haile Selassie fulfilled Garvey's prophecy,
and the movement remained dominated by independent "Elders"
with widely varying views.
Not only did no Jamaica-wide "Rastafarian Church" develop,
but there was not even agreement on basic doctrine or a canon of Scripture--both
the Holy Piby and the King James Bible were used
by various Elders, but were freely emended and "corrected".
OVERSTANDING: This
"anarchy" was considered a virtue by classical Rastas. Rastafari
was not a religion, a human organization, or a philosophy, but an active
attempt to discern the will of JAH
(God) and keep it. Classical Rastas were mainly uneducated Third World
peasants, but they approached Rastafari in an almost Talmudic spirit,
holding "reasonings" --part theological debate, part prayer
meeting-- at which they attempted to find the Truth.
Their attitude differed, however, from that of Protestants interpreting
the Bible. They were certain that they would arrive, by divine guidance,
at an "overstanding" (rather than understanding) of the Truth.
The Truth cannot be known by human effort alone, but "Jah-Jah come
over I&I", one can participate in the One who is Truth.
MYSTICISM:
Early Rasta mystical experience
emphasized the immediate presence of JAH within the "dread"
(God-fearer). The doctrine of theosis was expressed with great subtlety
(although not all Elders correctly distinguished essence from energy).
Through union with JAH, the dread becomes who he truly is but never
was, a process of self-discovery possible only through repentance. (For
this reason, Rastas did not proselytize, but relied on compunction sent
by JAH.)
The mystical union was expressed by the use of the pronoun "I&I"
(which can mean I, we, or even you, with JAH present) or simply "I"
in contrast to the undeclined Jamaican dialect "me".
COMMUNITY: Many Rastas
lived (and live today) in the bush in camps ruled by an Elder. Some
of these camps are segregated by sex and resemble monasteries (down
to the gong at the gate); more often, they are reconstituted West African
villages. The dreads observe the rules of "ital", a dietary
code based on the Pentateuch with various additions, and otherwise observe
a spiritual rule. Males are
usually bearded (uncommon in Jamaica during the classical period, and
a cause of social and religious discrimination, so that Rastas who held
jobs often were "baldfaces" who kept their affiliation secret.)
The famous "dreadlocks" were worn during the classical period
only by a minority of dreads, mostly those who had taken the oath of
Nazirite. Very recent historical research suggests that the dreadlocks
were popularized by a monastic movement which opposed the unrestrained
and potentially corrupting power of the Elders. These celibate and almost
puritanical "nyabinghi warriors" objected particularly to
"pagan holdovers" in Rastafari, the continued use by dreads
of ritual practices associated with the voudoun-like folk religion of
the Jamaican peasantry.
HINDUISM:
Another source of "pagan" thought in Rastafari was the religion
practiced by the thousands of East Indian labourers imported to Jamaica
after the abolition of slavery. Classical Hinduism is a major religious
force throughout the West Indies, especially on Trinidad, but its
influence on Rastafari has been little remarked. The dreadlocked, ganja-smoking
saddhu or wandering ascetic is a well-known figure in India, and bands
of saddhus often live in Rasta-style camps and
smoke marijuana from a formally-blessed communal chalice-pipe. The Hindu
doctrine of reincarnation is also advocated by many dreads, although often
with a subtle twist: to say that (for example) today's Jamaicans are reincarnated
Israelites, and even "I myself have felt the slave-master's whip",
means to some dreads not that they personally have lived before, but that
their solidarity with their ancestors is so great that there is a "oneness
through time".
REPATRIATION: Among
the few things all Elders agreed on were that Haile Selassie was "divine"
(although what that meant was much debated) and that he intended to restore
New World Blacks to Africa. Although a mystical interpretation of "repatriation"
was advanced, there is no doubt that all early Elders (and most modern
ones) expected outward literal return as well. This gave Rastafari an
overt political dimension: the Rastafarians all, without exception, wanted
to immediately emigrate to Ethiopia. This was a situation with no analogue
except Zionism, and was beyond the ability of the Jamaican authorities
to deal with. Revolutionaries are one thing, but the Rasta slogan was
not "power to the people", but "let my people go".
As time passed, Rastafarian frustration at this unmet demand became explosive.
The situation grew especially tense after 1954, when the government overran
a Rastafarian mini-state called the Pinnacle, ruled by Elder Leonard Howell
in exactly the style of a traditional West African chief. Howell's followers
migrated to the slums of Kingston, and the movement went from a rural
peasant separatist movement to one associated with the ghettoes of the
capital. In the late '50s and early '60s, a few Rastas in desparation
rejected the non-violent teaching of all authentic Elders
and mounted a series of increasingly violent uprisings, culminating in
several deadly shoot-outs between Rastas and British troops.
With this violence, the existence of Rastafari came to (negative) worldwide
notice; more positive publicity was brought by the popularity of Rasta-performed
reggae dance music a few years later. The classical period of isolation
was at an end.
ETHIOPIANISM: I will
now treat the issue of direct contact between Rastafari and the Ethiopian
Orthodox Church.
THE ETHIOPIAN WORLD FEDERATION (EWF):
As an African country mentioned in the Bible and the only African nation
to successfully resist colonialism, Ethiopia was always prominent in New
World Black consciousness, but actual contact was minimal until the Second
World War.
In 1937, Haile Selassie's government in exile founded EWF to raise money
and political support from Black nationalist groups in the West. After
the war, the EWF continued to exist in various forms,
some completely under local control but all providing at least some contact
with Abyssinia.
TRINIDAD & TOBAGO:
In the 1940s, a Garveyite bishop named Edwin Collins set up what he said
was a legitimate Coptic church under the Patriarch of Alexandria. However
the Garveyite Coptics were tied more closely to the African Orthodox Church
than to Egypt, and their canonicity was
widely doubted. In 1952 the Garveyite Coptic diocese of Trinidad and Tobago
broke away and placed itself under Addis Ababa. Clergy were imported from
Africa and a fully canonical church was organised in the islands. Trinidad
is an Ethiopian Orthodox success story: native born clergy (including
old-time Garveyite leaders) were rapidly ordained and parishes were founded
all over the country and in Guyana.
ABBA LAIKE MANDEFRO:
In 1959 the central Garveyite Coptic organisation in New York tried to
improve its canonical status. The archbishop went to Ethiopia, where he
was supposedly ordained chorepiscopos, and returned with a group of young
Ethiopian priests and deacons who were to study
in American universities. These clergy almost immediately broke with the
Garveyites, however, and set up parishes more oriented to the needs of
Ethiopian immigrants; the Garveyite Coptic church which had sponsored
them went into an evidently irreversible decline. One of the young priests
who came over at this time soon became Ethiopian Orthodoxy's main representative
abroad. He is Laike M. Mandefro, now Archbishop Yesehaq, exarch of the
Western Hemisphere and many would add Apostle to the Caribbean.
THE EWF IN JAMAICA: All
of the above developments took place independently of the Ras Tafari Movement,
which was still confined to Jamaica. An EWF chapter had opened there in
1938 and been almost immediately taken over by Rastafarians, in particular
by the prominent Elders Joseph Hibbert
and Archibald Dunkley. Both men were noted mystics and initiates of an
all-Black "Coptic" Masonic lodge in Costa Rica; some might therefore
find it ironic that they more than anyone else would prove responsible
for the arrival of Orthodoxy in Jamaica!
"GROUNATION DAY":
Presumably because of the spread of the Ethiopian Church in Trinidad,
Haile Selassie was invited to visit that country in 1966. Jamaica was
then in the throws of an ongoing national social crisis in which Rastas
were perceived by the establishment as a revolutionary threat which had
to defused; a team of social scientists had advised the government that
one way to do this was to foster close ties with the real Ethiopia. Accordingly,
the Emperor was invited to make a stop in Jamaica.
On April 21 -- "Grounation Day" to Rastas ever since -- Haile
Selassie arrived in Kingston. Contrary to the widely repeated claim that
the Emperor was "amazed" or "bemused" upon "discovering"
the existence of the Rastafarians (the greater number of whom by 1966
believed him to be God in essence), there is much evidence that Haile
Selassie's whole purpose in visiting Jamaica was to meet the Rasta leadership.
Greeted at the airport by thousands of dreads in white robes chanting
"Hosanna to the Son of David", Haile Selassie granted an audience
to a delegation of famous Elders, including Mortimo Planno and probably
Joseph Hibbert. The precise details of this historic meeting cannot be
reconstructed, and there exist countless variants in Jamaican oral tradition.
Almost certainly, he urged them to become Orthodox and held out the possibility
that Jamaican settlers could receive landgrants in South Ethiopia. Most
traditional versions of the meeting specify that he also gave the Elders
a secret message, very much in keeping with the Emperor's known policies
on Third World development: "Build Jamaica first."
THE JAMAICA MISSIONS: In
1970, at Hibbert's invitation, Abba Laike Mandefro began to evangelize
the Rastafarians in person. In the course of a year he baptized some 1200
dreads and laid the foundation for the church's subsequent growth. He
also encountered fierce opposition from those Elders who taught that Haile
Selassie was Jah in essence and demanded "baptism in Ras Tafari's
name". In Montego Bay, only one dread accepted Orthodox baptism;
Laike Mandefro baptized him Ahadu -- "One Man".
THE ECUMENIST CRISIS:
A major crisis struck the young church in 1971, when a public service
marking the ninth anniversary of Jamaican independence was held in Kingston.
Anglican, Roman Catholic, and Orthodox (Greek and Ethiopian) clergy all
participated in the service. The Rastas were scandalized that Orthodox
would pray with representatives of "false religions"; hundreds
of baptized members defected, and an entire parish was lost. Many of these
persons no doubt joined the organized Rastafarian churches which were
beginning to replace the traditional Elder system, and which soon incorporated
widely varying degrees of Ethiopian Orthodox liturgical and theological
influence.
EWF RASTAFARI: Besides
the heretical syncretist groups, however, a legitimate Orthodox Rastafari
Movement continued to flourish as the backbone of the Jamaican church.
The EWF under the leadership of Dunkley and Hibbert had enormous prestige,
being tied both to the roots of the movement in Garveyism and directly
to Jamaica. The EWF retained the political and social aspects and the
distinctive cultural features of classical Rastafari while advocating
a rigorously correct and canonical Orthodoxy, venerating the Emperor as
a holy living ikon of JAH but not worshiping him. The first steps toward
Orthodox Jamaica were being taken - albeit by people whose main secular
goal
was to leave the country as soon as possible!
COMMENT FOR NON-ORTHODOX READERS: Orthodox
theology distinguishes : several levels of divinity. Only the Uncreated
is "God-in-essence"; humans can become "divine by participation";
ikons are visible channels through which divine energy enters the world.
The question which divides the "canonical" brethren from non-Orthodox
groups is which of these levels of divinity applies to Emperor Haile Selassie.
The Orthodox say he is divine by participation and ikonicity, and thus
merits "douleia" ("veneration"); the Tribes say he
is divine in essence and merits "latreia"or absolute worship.
REGGAE: This was also
the time when reggae music was at the height of its popularity, and when
explicitly religious lyrics were the norm within reggae. Many popular
bands were Orthodox, notably The Abyssinians, a group with priestly and
monastic connections. The family of reggae's "superstar", Bob
Marley, were mostly Orthodox, although Marley himself was for most of
his career a member of the Twelve Tribes sect. In his last years, dying
young of cancer, Marley underwent a remarkable spiritual transformation
(evident in his music also) culminating in his baptism; his Orthodox funeral
in 1981 was attended by tens of thousands of mourners.
THE SHEARING OF LOCKS: Haile
Selassie was reported dead in 1975 (to the disbelief of many Rastas even
today). The Ethiopian church, like many Orthodox churches under communist
rule, endured terrible persecution which it survived partly by compromise
with the persecutors. The Marxist regime in Addis Ababa was very unenthused
that an emperor-venerating and/or worshiping cult was flourishing in a
part of the world otherwise ripe for revolution.
In addition, I have the impression that some of the increasingly numerous
and often middle-class Ethiopian emigres in the West looked down on Rastafarians.
The pious suspected their Orthodoxy (no doubt often rightly; that many
"Orthodox" Rastas continued to secretly harbor heretical views
is quite likely); the staid resented association with an impoverished
and reputedly criminal Black underclass. The latter consideration was
especially strong in Britain, where all forms of Rastafari spread rapidly
among the West Indian minority in the '70s.
(It is important to add, however, that England's Ethiopian community also
provided legal and other support for Rastas subjected to racist and police
harassment during this period, especially in the Handsworth section of
Birmingham.)
For whatever reason, in 1976 all Orthodox Rastas were required to cut
their locks and to make an elaborate formal repudiation of heretical emperor
worship (latreia). Whatever its long-term wisdom, this decree forced people
who were "growing into an overstanding" by the slow traditional
process to make a sudden decision; the cutting of locks, a purely external
issue, seemed to many a repudiation of the movement's history.
SYNCRETISM: In spite
of these not-inconsiderable conflicts, the Ethiopian Orthodox Church has
spread through the Caribbean thanks to the Ras Tafari movement. While
only a minority of Rastas have actually become Orthodox, nearly all have
been influenced by Orthodoxy. The makwamya (the prayer stick used by Ethiopian
clergy) is ubiquitous among dreads; items of clerical garb are also frequently
adopted. Rastafarian painters have been heavily influenced by ikonography.
Syncretism is particularly evident in the organized sects which have partly
supplanted the charismatic Elder system.
THE TWELVE TRIBES OF ISRAEL
(unrelated to the various Black Hebrew churches of the same name) are
probably the largest and most famous of the sects. Founded in 1968 by
Vernon Carrington (the Prophet Gad), the Tribes hold that Haile Selassie
is Jesus Christ returned in majesty as King: the Second Coming has already
happened. Their coherent theology and tight organization have won them
many converts, including most of the famous reggae singers of the '70s.
Something of the syncretistic feel of later Rastafari is conveyed by the
cover art on the album "Zion Train" by Ras Michael (a brilliant
hymnographer and one of the Ras Tafari Movement's more impressive living
spokesmen). The painting shows two clerically-turbaned dreads before the
open Royal Doors of an ikonostasis -- beyond which, however, is only a
view of mountains against a red sky.
"PRINCE" EDWARD EMMANUEL,
founder of another prominent sect, was a famous Elder of the classical
era, responsible for convening the first "Nyabinghi" or Rastafarian
general synod in 1958. The Prince was already a controversial figure who
claimed to be one of the Holy Trinity along with Haile Selassie and Marcus
Garvey; presumably, he hoped the Nyabinghi would recognize this claim
(which it did not). Thereafter the Prince began transforming his large
band of worshipers into an organized church, complete with dogma, liturgy,
hierarchy, and a kind of monasticism. The group's priests, some of whom
have actually been to Ethiopia, wear Orthodox vestments.
THE ZION COPTIC CHURCH,
a semi-moribund Garveyite Orthodox denomination, was revitalized by white
hippie converts in the '60s; despite its partly foreign leadership, it
enjoyed explosive growth among Black Jamaicans disillusioned with the
canonical church's approach. Although the "Coptics",
as they are called, insist that they are a legitimate Orthodox jurisdiction
and even publish tracts on such theological issues as the _mia physis_
and the Council of Chalcedon, they also engage in some very questionable
speculations verging on Gnosticism. To their credit, they have gone much
further than the canonical church in incorporating the best of classical
Rastafrian culture into church life, and their retention of dreadlocks,
nyabinghi drumming, etc. has helped them gain many converts.
This success is reflected in their great material wealth, for which they
have been criticized (they are supposedly among the largest landholders
in Jamaica). One aspect of their "reverse syncretism"
has caused much controversy, as well as a landmark church-state case which
landed the Coptics' leadership in prison: their gnosticizing theories
are used to justify ritual consumption of marijuana.
GANJA: Contrary to
popular belief, pious Rastas do not smoke marijuana recreationally, and
some (the canonical Ethiopian Orthodox and also the followers of certain
classical Elders) do not use it at all. Most Rastafarian teachers, however,
have advocated the controlled ritual smoking of "wisdomweed"
both privately as an aid to meditation and communally from "chalice"
pipes as an "incense pleasing to the Lord". The argument is
that ganja is the "green herb" of the King James Bible
and that its use is a kind of shortcut version of traditional ascetical
practice. The Ethiopian Church, of course, strongly discourages this:
Orthodox monks have learned over centuries of experience that such shortcuts
are at best dangerous and at worst soul-destroying. The issue, however,
has been much sensationalized by the press, in keeping with the racist
stereotyping of Rastas as stoned criminals.
CONCLUSION: I believe
that the Rastafarians have been greatly underestimated by the outside
world, including, to some extent, many elements in the Orthodox community.
The classical Rastas were sophisticated theological and philosophical
thinkers, not cargo-cultists worshiping newspaper
photos of an African despot. They had discovered many sophisticated theological
concepts for themselves, and had retraced many of the Christological and
other debates of the early Church. They brought a truly rich cultural
and artistic legacy, including some of the twentieth century's most moving
hymnography..
While Abuna Yesehaq, at least, certainly seems to recognize this, in practise
Rastas often seem to be told by the church that they must become Ethiopians
in order to become Orthodox. Many are willing to do this, so great is
their thirst for Truth and so acute their sense of having lost their true
African culture. More, however, are not--and in a way rightly so. The
Church is the poorer to the extent it does not incorporate what is good
about the Rasta experience and instead tiresomely emphasizes the heresy
of emperor-worship" and "herbal sorcery". What is forgotten
is that the existence of the Rastafari movement is a miracle: a forgotten
people and a lost culture bringing itself by "reasonings" to
the very edge of Orthodoxy. Surely this is a supernatural event, and so
the Orthodox Rastas see it.
An anonymous nyabingi chant goes:
Michael going to bring them, bring them to the Orthodox
Church.
No matter what they do, no matter what they say.
Gabriel going to bring them, bring them to the Orthodox Church.
Raphael going to bring them, Uriel going to bring them,
Sorial going to bring them, Raguel going to bring them,
Fanuel going to bring them, bring them to the Orthodox Church.
I will conclude with a song by Berhane Selassie
(Bob Marley), written around the time he was converting to Orthodoxy from
the Twelve Tribes and summing up the whole Orthodox Rasta "seen":
Old pirates, yes, they rob I
Sold I to the merchant ships,
Minutes after they took I
From the bottomless pit.
But my hand was made strong
By the hand of the Almighty.
We followed in this generation, triumphantly.
Won't you help to sing these songs of freedom?
Cause all I ever have: redemption songs,
These songs of freedom.
This was the last song on the last album Marley
released before his death. |