{"id":105257,"date":"2016-11-29T15:29:41","date_gmt":"2016-11-29T20:29:41","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/?p=105257"},"modified":"2016-11-29T19:17:42","modified_gmt":"2016-11-30T00:17:42","slug":"jah-no-dead","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/2016\/11\/29\/jah-no-dead\/","title":{"rendered":"Jah No Dead"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><em>Peter Tosh\u2019s tomb and the roots of Rasta.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/11\/petertosh.jpeg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"aligncenter wp-image-105261\" src=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/11\/petertosh.jpeg\" alt=\"Peter Tosh\" width=\"1000\" height=\"727\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/11\/petertosh.jpeg 1456w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/11\/petertosh-300x218.jpeg 300w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/11\/petertosh-768x559.jpeg 768w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/11\/petertosh-1024x745.jpeg 1024w\" sizes=\"auto, (min-width: 62.5em) 67vw, 100vw\" \/><\/a><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>Peter Mackintosh was born in a small seaside village in Westmoreland. He was reared, like most Jamaicans, by his mother. He learned to play piano and sing, like most of the country\u2019s musicians, in her church. Peter\u2019s father was little seen in the village of Belmont (\u201ca bad boy, a rascal,\u201d Tosh described him, who \u201cjust go around and have a million and one children\u201d). Gainful work was scarce, too. Peter left the provinces to make a life in Kingston\u2019s slums. When he met Bob and Bunny, his fellow Wailers-to-be, he was selling sugarcane juice from a cart by Parade. When his life later ended under decidedly \u201cviolent \/ tragic circumstances\u201d (he was shot in his home at the age of forty-one), his body was brought back to the sleepy town where he was born.<\/p>\n<p>Belmont is a teeny village by the turquoise sea, not far from the old Spanish slave port of Savanna-la-Mar, whose most notable site is its favorite son\u2019s tomb. Tosh\u2019s mausoleum is a cement box painted red, gold, and green. It sits by the water, on the road that hugs Jamaica\u2019s sleepy south coast, in a shaded yard by the tidy little house that Peter bought his mother in the 1970s. It\u2019s a quiet tourist trap, most days, where the young men who work the rum shop by the yard\u2019s gate rouse themselves from their dominoes, when the few Tosh-obsessed Germans and Japanese who make it here turn up, to demand ten dollars apiece from visitors. Marley\u2019s tomb, across the island in Saint Ann Parish, is patronized not only by scores of such pilgrims daily but also by busloads of casual vacationers who sign up, in plush north coast resorts nearby, to visit the reggae king\u2019s home. Belmont, by contrast, remains outside the tourist circuit. But as perhaps befits its great son\u2019s contrasting place in Jamaica\u2019s memory, it does serve, as I saw visiting one Peter Tosh Day, as a pilgrimage site for Jamaicans. More especially, for believers of the born-in-Jamaica faith that island boosters claim is \u201cthe only major world religion born in the twentieth century\u201d\u2014in whose pantheon Peter resides, ever blacker and just a touch badder than Bob, too\u2014it is the resting place of an enduring saint.<\/p>\n<p>Rolling into Belmont, I turned my rental car\u2019s radio to 107.1, Irie FM. The deejay said that Jamaica\u2019s \u201croots radio\u201d had been broadcasting live from Peter\u2019s gravesite since six <small>A.M.<\/small> \u201cTha sisdren and bredren,\u201d he said, had been arriving since dawn. He introduced a snippet of recorded speech from Tosh\u2019s <em>Red X Tapes<\/em>, a posthumously released spoken-word album whose digressions Peter\u2019s admirers know by heart. \u201cI don\u2019t smoke marijuana.\u201d His baritone filled the car. \u201cMarijuana is a girl from Cuba. I smoke HERB.\u201d Tosh pronounced the last word with a hard <em>h<\/em>, emphasizing the sacrament it was. \u201cLawmakers make every name illegal, to incriminate the underprivileged \u2026 But herb, and music, is the healing of the nation. Key to the doors of inspiration. Without herb, any other thing cause distortion, and confusion. Seen?\u201d\u00a0<!--more--><\/p>\n<p>Seen. Into Peter\u2019s yard and through its gates, the sisdren and bredren streamed. Elder Rastas in army fatigues and colorful headwraps. A tattooed young woman wearing a gold necklace whose shape spelled <small>BAD<\/small>. A young man, shirtless and resting a flagpole on his shoulder, carrying a great banner in Rasta\u2019s colors of red, gold, and green. On a fence outside, someone had painted a big marijuana leaf, captioned with Tosh\u2019s most famous lyric. <small>LEGALIZE IT<\/small>. Right in front of it, a uniformed policewoman and policeman stood in their colonial-looking black caps. Jamaica\u2019s anti-cannabis laws are far stricter than most spring breakers here think. But this pair seemed little interested in enforcing them. I stepped into the yard to see a striking woman, six feet tall and wearing burlap robes accented with Rasta-colored trim. In her arm she cradled an immense bundle, like a baby, of pungent green herb. On a dais nearby, Mutabaruka, the deejay from Irie FM, wore his own robes to describe how in the 1760s the veterans of Jamaica\u2019s Maroons journeyed to Haiti and played crucial roles there in fomenting history\u2019s only slave revolution. Here, in their thousands, was a great convention of the Rastafari of Jamaica. Actual followers of this faith still amount to only a fraction of the number of Jamaica\u2019s Adventists or Baptists. But the Rastas\u2019 particular riff on Christian scripture, and the charismatic reggae-star apostles who\u2019ve embraced it, has played an outsized role in shaping Jamaica\u2019s external image and internal culture. And here, by the resting place of one of their great apostles, the sisdren and bredren had come to praise their lord, Jah.<\/p>\n<p>The roots of Rasta, like many strains of Jamaican culture, came from its makers\u2019 imaginative interpretation of mediated images from abroad. In Jazz Age Harlem, Marcus Garvey founded and built the Universal Negro Improvement Association. His stirring rhetoric\u2014\u201cAfrica for the Africans, at home and abroad,\u201d he said\u2014attracted many admirers on his home island. A few of these, watching a newsreel in Kingston\u2019s Carib Theatre in 1930, saw footage of a black king being crowned Ethiopia\u2019s new emperor, amid nuff pomp and pageantry. They grew convinced that one of his prophecies had come true. \u201cLook to the east,\u201d Garvey was supposed to have said, \u201cfor the crowning of an African king.\u201d Developing an elaborate eschatology built from the King James Bible, the Rastafari (named for Haile Selassie\u2019s Amharic honorific, Ras\u2014Prince\u2014Tafari) espoused the smoking of ganja as a sacrament (\u201cHe causeth the grass to grow for the cattle, and herb for the service of man,\u201d Psalms 104:14), and eschewed the eating of meat and the cutting of hair (\u201cThey shall not make baldness upon their head,\u201d Leviticus 21:5). For most of the next few decades, they remained an obscure, if visible, feature of Jamaican life. And then, in April 1966, Selassie visited the island.<\/p>\n<p>Among the thousands driven that day to worship Selassie as a living god were Peter Tosh and Bunny Wailer. Marley, having joined his mother in Delaware to \u201cwork some money\u201d as a custodian and assembly-line worker at a Chrysler plant there for some months, wasn\u2019t present. But he received a letter from his sweetie, Rita, back home, about how when the emperor waved to her from his motorcade, she\u2019d glimpsed Christ\u2019s stigmata on his palm. All three, upon Bob\u2019s return, stopped cutting their hair and began spending much of their time at the Trench Town yard of Mortimo Planno, the prominent Rasta who had hosted Selassie on behalf of Jamaica\u2019s government. Whatever their personal reasons for embracing the faith, Rastafari gave the Wailers a liturgical language that, in an era of Black Power and African freedom struggles, bespoke connections among black people everywhere. Their success in setting those links to music made them stars\u2014and forced Jamaican leaders like Michael Manley, in the 1970s, to embrace a sect whose adepts his father\u2019s generation had suppressed. In 1962, military police raided a Rasta camp in the hills over Montego Bay, beating and jailing its inhabitants\u2014a few were killed\u2014to signal the new state\u2019s determination that these unkempt cultists weren\u2019t welcome. A decade later, as that nation\u2019s dreadlocked singers won fame at home and abroad, this changed. Michael Manley traveled to Ethiopia and returned with a long staff he called the \u201crod of correction.\u201d He played hard to the Rastas, who called him \u201cJoshua,\u201d even advocating for laws allowing the Rastas their sacred herb. His government\u2019s main patrons in Washington, at the IMF and in the White House across Pennsylvania Avenue, put the kibosh on that. But this history may help gloss the reply supplied by the woman in burlap robes, there at Peter Tosh Day, when I asked her, as she cradled her weed amid the reggae filling the air around Tosh\u2019s tomb, why she wasn\u2019t concerned about the police outside. She looked at me hard. \u201cDi music mek it legal.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>In the decades since Rasta gained something like mainstream tolerance, if not full acceptance, in Jamaica, its faithful have weathered many crises, including the dawning realization on the part of many that their \u201cimmortal\u201d god was an earthly despot unrevered by his subjects. More challenging still was the fact that, a mortal man, and a frail old one at that, he up and died in 1975. Had the latter event occurred before reggae\u2019s greats \u201cwent Rasta,\u201d one wonders if Rasta would have survived. But luckily for the faithful, and Selassie\u2019s memory, those greats were already selling millions of records in 1975, when Marley wrote his response to his Jah\u2019s demise: \u201cJah no Dead.\u201d By the time Selassie passed, the cult he\u2019d inspired had spawned singing saints with prophecies of their own. And infelicities of earthly history aside, \u201cthe larger point of Rasta,\u201d a musician friend told me in Kingston, was that \u201cwe needed to connect some dots\u2014between now and our past, between here and Africa.\u201d Which, no matter the squiggly lines it used, was true. And there in Belmont, it was plain that Rasta was still furnishing a usable language and worldview for poor people seeking ways to grasp the larger history that made them poor, and to reject the larger \u201cBabylon system\u201d\u2014the entire white capitalist West\u2014that keeps them that way. And it still offered ways and means, with the help of excellent vibes and ital goods, to live outside Babylon\u2019s walls.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"http:\/\/www.penguinrandomhouse.com\/books\/225154\/island-people-by-joshua-jelly-schapiro\/9780385349765\/\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"aligncenter wp-image-105258\" src=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/11\/island-people-jacket.jpg\" alt=\"Island People\" width=\"600\" height=\"911\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/11\/island-people-jacket.jpg 790w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/11\/island-people-jacket-198x300.jpg 198w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/11\/island-people-jacket-768x1167.jpg 768w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/11\/island-people-jacket-674x1024.jpg 674w\" sizes=\"auto, (min-width: 62.5em) 67vw, 100vw\" \/><\/a><\/p>\n<p>Beneath the breadfruit and mango trees in old Tosh\u2019s yard, vendors peddled some of these. In front of <em>ital<\/em> food stalls, they hawked low-salt corn porridge and green callaloo. A juice stall\u2019s bottles were tagged with aphrodisiac names like <small>MANNISH WATA<\/small> and <small>FRONT-END-LIFTER<\/small>, and bore ingredient lists rich in Irish moss, ginger, and <em>ra-moon<\/em> bark. Next door, the turbaned proprietor of I-Nation Books and Necessities stood over tables stacked with not a few of the titles one sees lining the racks of \u201cblack book\u201d peddlers on 125th Street in Harlem. Perusing a comic-book biography of Marcus Garvey and another of Nanny of the Maroons, I passed over Eric Williams\u2019s <em>Capitalism and Slavery<\/em> and Elijah Muhammad\u2019s <em>Fall of America<\/em>. Eschewing a few others pertaining to numerology and Candle Burning Magic, I picked up a volume called <em>Olympic DNA: Birth of the Fastest Humans<\/em>. Its cover was done in the colors of the Jamaican flag. Its argument, I found when I read it, posited that all of Jamaica\u2019s world-class sprinters, for a complex mash of reasons pertaining to chromosomes and history, owed their gifts to the runaway Maroons whose resistance to slavery, and physical feats in Jamaica\u2019s jungle, helped their progeny develop insuperable speed\u2014and become the modern-day heroes of people like the man dressed in flowing golden robes who stopped me as I walked by with my purchase to point at <small>USAIN!<\/small> on its cover.<\/p>\n<p>I inspected the <em>ital<\/em> \u201cjewels\u201d the man in gold robes was peddling, and complimented the tray of necklaces he\u2019d laid on a cloth on the ground. They were made from dried bits of carrot and mango, accented with fish skin, and covered with clear rosin. His golden robes, he told me, signaled \u201cuplifment, yuh know.\u201d His name was Rasta Shaw, and he had come here from Sav-la-Mar, just up the coast, \u201cwhere di slave ships come,\u201d because \u201cPeter a revolutionary. Seen?\u201d Seen. \u201cHim stand up for equal rights. Equal rights \u2026 and justice.\u201d He sang the last words, as Peter did in a famous song whose chorus continued where Marley had left off in \u201cGet Up, Stand Up.\u201d Tosh demanded not just equal rights now, but redress for past wrongs as well. This may have been what distinguished Tosh, most of all, to his admirers here. The flyer Rasta Shaw handed me agreed. <small>COMMEMORATION CORAL GARDENS<\/small>, it read, in gold ink. <small>ATROCITY AGAINST RASTAFARI<\/small>. Coral Gardens is the name of the old Rasta camp by Montego Bay that was devastated by the \u201cBad Friday\u201d massacre in 1962. In a couple of weeks, many of those gathered here would reconvene for \u201ccultural presentations, drumming,\u201d and a stage show featuring a pair of performers called Mackie Conscious and Ranking Punkin. On the flyer, an outline of the African continent was overlaid with a slogan that was also a statement of faith. <small>VICTORY OF GOOD OVER EVIL<\/small>, it said.<\/p>\n<p>I took the flyer from Rasta Shaw\u2019s hand, with thanks, and moved on.<\/p>\n<p>Down by the stage, a few dozen Rastas sang and drummed along with one of Peter\u2019s sons. Dressed in camo pants and a black T-shirt printed with the block-lettered phrase <small>BABYLON CAN\u2019T WIN<\/small>, he mouthed his dad\u2019s songs into a mic. At the yard\u2019s other end, I approached a small house on whose porch a stooped old woman sat. She was dressed in a high-necked gray blouse and an ankle-length skirt. I mounted her porch\u2019s stairs to pay respects. This was Mrs. Coke: Peter\u2019s mum. Her unseeing eyes were mostly shut; whiskers ringed her chin. I told her how pleased I was to meet her, touching her hand, and she smiled gently. I asked her how it felt to welcome all these thousands of people to her yard, to honor her son. \u201cBless,\u201d she nodded. \u201cJoy.\u201d Which seemed about right for a ninetysomething woman. As I took my leave, I pressed a small bill into her palm, as seemed to be the custom here, and turned to greet a man, standing on the porch nearby, whom I\u2019d noticed before.<\/p>\n<p>He wasn\u2019t the only other white person here. Ganja Man\u2014a Nebraskan pot lawyer I\u2019d encountered often\u00a0in Jamaica\u2014was also on the scene, naturally. He was everywhere. He\u2019d spent much of the afternoon on the dais with Irie FM\u2019s deejay, reasoning with passion on air about the <em>ital<\/em> importance of ensuring balance in your endocannabinoid system. There were also a few aging bohemians, led by the ex-wife of the novelist Russell Banks, who kept winter homes in the area and whom I recognized from meeting at a restaurant down the way. This fellow, though, was different. He was youngish, but with a proprietary air. He had the shabby-chic facial hair and skinny stylish girlfriend of an LA hipster. James Baldwin wrote, \u201cOne Negro meeting another at an all-white cocktail party \u2026 cannot but wonder how the other got there.\u201d The same, but different, could have been said about us. But this man\u2019s alibi, and larger hustle, became clear when I shook his hand. He was the person now in charge of Tosh\u2019s estate. It was his dollars, rather than Peter\u2019s mum\u2019s, that were underwriting this free celebration of a figure whose brand\u2019s star, he was convinced, could rise even higher than Bob\u2019s. He\u2019d worked closely with the family since winning the estate manager\u2019s role a couple of years before, to get a new \u201cPeter biopic\u201d off the ground, and, more generally, to leverage the departed\u2019s memory, and tunes, for good and for cash. \u201cThe Beatles had McCartney and Lennon,\u201d said Mr. LA. \u201cBut one of them\u2014Lennon\u2014will always feel cooler. Peter is that. Marley is McCartney; Peter is John. That\u2019s what we want to do.\u201d I wished him luck.<\/p>\n<p>I wasn\u2019t sure if Tosh\u2019s avowedly black act, and message, had the same crossover potential twenty years after his death as the mixed-race Obama-ite figure his old friend Bob became. But at this party, where, Peter\u2019s estate manager told me, everyone was performing for free, the reverence accorded \u201cthe Toughest\u201d by the sisdren and bredren singing his songs, anyway, was clear. For them, the question of how the great Peter Tosh could be sold to kids in Peoria was as irrelevant as Babylon\u2019s impertinent queries about their god\u2019s end. And up onstage, the Rastas were pounding their drums, dozens strong, with open palms. The elders waved their flags in time, and then parted behind them to allow a new party to come to the fore.<\/p>\n<p>A diminutive figure, stepping from between two bearded drummers, shuffled onstage. He was spectacularly attired. He wore a mock policeman\u2019s outfit, made of pink cloth, topped off by a matching pink sailor cap with gold and green piping. Down his back, a single cord of braided dreadlocks hung, reaching nearly to his knees. It was the last of the Wailers. Bunny. In a pink sailor cap and all. Burdened with the weight of being both the least charismatic and the least successful of Jamaican culture\u2019s holiest trinity, Bunny is also the only Wailer not to have been martyred before middle age. When he left the group, he took their name as compensation: he has gone, for forty years, by \u201cBunny Wailer.\u201d He is a tricky figure. Given to reclusive paranoia and mad pronouncements, he is a man more warily respected, even among his fellow Rastas, than actively loved. But on this day, his pro bono appearance at what felt like a family reunion shook with meaning. Bunny embraced Peter\u2019s son, in his black T. Taking the mic in hand, he extended a pink-sleeved arm.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cGet up, stand up!\u201d The elders beat their drums, good and slow. Bunny growled. \u201cStand up for your rights.\u201d The song is known as Marley\u2019s, but it was one of the last songs the original Wailers recorded together\u2014and its most searing verse, as all Jamaicans know, and as Bunny sang, loud and strong, by its author\u2019s grave, was penned by Peter Tosh.<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<p>We\u2019re sick and tired of your ism-schism game<br \/> Dyin\u2019 \u2019n\u2019 goin\u2019 to heaven in-a Jesus name, Lord<br \/> We know when we understand<br \/> \u00a0 \u00a0 Almighty God is a living man<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>The last living Wailer, his sailor hat bobbing in the fading light, conducted his flock.<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<p>You can fool some people sometimes<br \/> But you can\u2019t fool all the people all the time<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>We all sang along.<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<p>So now we see the light (what you gonna do?)<br \/> We gon\u2019 stand up for our rights!<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>As the sun dipped into the waves, I piled back into the rental car with Ganja Man and pair of new Rasta pals who I watched flick their half-smoked spliffs into the sea. The music might have legalized the herb for the afternoon, but not now. \u201cToo much Babylon on di road.\u201d We pulled out into traffic. And then, after pausing in Sav-la-Mar, where old Tosh\u2019s forebears were unloaded as slaves and our friends took a pee break by a seawall scrawled with the phrase \u201cDon\u2019t Piss Yah,\u201d we hopped back in the car and rolled on toward Jamaica\u2019s western tip.<\/p>\n<p><em>From the book <\/em><a href=\"http:\/\/www.penguinrandomhouse.com\/books\/225154\/island-people-by-joshua-jelly-schapiro\/9780385349765\/\" target=\"_blank\">Island People<\/a><em>\u00a0by Joshua Jelly-Schapiro, copyright 2016 by Joshua Jelly-Schapiro. Published by arrangement with Alfred A. Knopf, an imprint of The Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group, a division of Penguin Random House LLC.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>Joshua Jelly-Schapiro is a geographer and writer whose work has appeared in <\/em>The New York Review of Books<em>,<\/em> New York<em>, <\/em>Harper\u2019s<em>, the<\/em> Believer<em>, <\/em>Artforum<em>, and <\/em>The Nation<em>, among many other publications.<\/em><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Peter Tosh\u2019s tomb and the roots of Rasta. &nbsp; Peter Mackintosh was born in a small seaside village in Westmoreland. He was reared, like most Jamaicans, by his mother. He learned to play piano and sing, like most of the country\u2019s musicians, in her church. Peter\u2019s father was little seen in the village of Belmont [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":202,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[4393],"tags":[17823,25940,25944,23108,25946,25947,25941,25948,18644,1650,46,25938,25937,25939,1651,339,25942,25943,6171,25945,10608],"class_list":["post-105257","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-first-person","tag-17823","tag-april-20","tag-belmont","tag-bob-marley","tag-bunny-wailer","tag-haile-selassie","tag-herb","tag-jah","tag-jamaica","tag-marijuana","tag-music","tag-peter-mackintosh","tag-peter-tosh","tag-peter-tosh-day","tag-pot","tag-radio","tag-rasta","tag-rastafarians","tag-reggae","tag-the-wailers","tag-tourism"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v25.4 (Yoast SEO v25.4) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>Jah No Dead: A Jamaican Pilgrimage to Peter Tosh\u2019s Grave<\/title>\n<meta name=\"description\" content=\"In an excerpt from his book \u201cIsland People,\u201d Joshua Jelly-Schapiro visits Peter Tosh\u2019s mausoleum for a memorial celebration of reggae and Rasta culture.\" \/>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/2016\/11\/29\/jah-no-dead\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Jah No Dead by Joshua Jelly-Schapiro\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"November 29, 2016 \u2013 Peter Tosh\u2019s tomb and the roots of Rasta.&nbsp;Peter Mackintosh was born in a small seaside village in Westmoreland. 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