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Cuba's Rastas:
the religious, the philosophical and those
making a fashion statement
The
Jamaica Observer,
April 11, 2004.
Rastas neither cut their
hair nor comb it, based on an interpretation
of the Bible, nor do they eat meat or consume
drugs - legal or illegal - with the exception
of marijuana, which they consider sacred.
HAVANA, Cuba (IPS) - Long dreadlocks stuffed
into trademark red, black, green and yellow
tams (knitted caps), which sometimes carry
a symbol of an Afro-Cuban religion or even
a US flag, Bob Marley t-shirts and camouflage
pants - that is the typical look of Cuba's
young Rastafarians, a growing urban presence.
The Rastas of this socialist island nation
are mainly found in Havana and tend to be
young Afro-Cuban men from poor neighbourhoods,
who seem to carry Reggae music in their
blood.
"People don't look on us kindly,"
Yosvany Reyes, a 27-year-old craftsman,
told IPS. "In Cuba, people don't know
very much about what being a Rastafarian
means. They generally think we're dirty
drug addicts or bums who just wander around
the streets not doing anything."
"They think we're like rock 'n' rollers
or rappers, people who just have a different
look or have adopted different cultural
codes. But being a Rastafarian is a way
of thinking, a philosophy, another way of
looking at life," he said.
Reyes can be seen just about every afternoon
chatting with his girlfriend and three or
four "brothers" on a bench in
Parque Central, a busy park in Old Havana.
He defines himself as a "pure Rastafarian",
but says not all of the local Rastas are
like that.
"It's true that evil can be found
in many people. There are young people who
adopt the Rastafarian symbols as a way to
make a living. They know that young black
men who look like us are a great attraction
for the tourists," he said.
Reyes complained that these "false"
Rastafarians, who he said are often involved
in prostitution and drug - including cocaine
- rackets, are responsible for society's
distorted image of the movement.
A Rastafarian in Jamaica, where the movement
started, smokes a marijuana pipe.
Rastafarianism is defined as a religion,
philosophy, or world view. Since it emerged
in the slums of another Caribbean island
nation, Jamaica, in the 1930s, the movement
has become truly international, winning
followers throughout the Caribbean and the
entire world.
Rastafarian communities believe that Haile
Selassie I, emperor of Ethiopia from 1930
until his downfall in 1974 (he died the
following year), was the incarnation of
God on earth, the second messiah.
The Bible is their gospel, and they see
Africa as the mother of life and birthplace
of humanity. Their basic dogma includes
black empowerment and a rejection of "Babylon"
- the white power structure.
Rastas also believe that Jah (God) can
be found in every person, and they identify
with Reggae music as a symbol of spirituality
and protest, especially since the days of
legendary Jamaican Rastafarian singer-songwriter
Bob Marley (1945-1981).
Rastas neither cut their hair nor comb
it, based on an interpretation of the Bible,
nor do they eat meat or consume drugs -
legal or illegal - with the exception of
marijuana, which they consider sacred. They
reject homosexuality, abortion and birth
control, and in traditional Rastafarian
belief, women are subservient to men.
According to Katrin Hansing, an anthropologist
at Florida International University in Miami,
"Not only is (Rastafarianism) now recognised
as one of the leading Afro-Caribbean religions,
but also as one of the most popular cultural
trends in the world".
She points out that "Rastafari communities
and dreadlocked-inspired youth" can
be found in Central America and Brazil,
North America and Europe, many parts of
Africa, and among the Maoris in New Zealand,
Native Americans in the United States, and
young people in Japan.
"The movement has been diffused in
very unguided and haphazard ways through
the medium of culture, particularly music,
mediated via technology and consumer capitalism,"
says Hansing in her study 'Rasta, race and
revolution: transnational connections in
socialist Cuba'.
Hansing describes how Rastafarianism has
been adapted, redefined and "reinvented"
in Cuba in accordance with local circumstances.
As a cultural phenomenon, she adds, Rastafarianism
is caught up in an ongoing process of 'Cubanisation'.
According to the researcher, there are three
manifestations of the movement in Cuba:
the religious Rastas, the philosophical
Rastas, and the Rastas who are making a
fashion statement.
Practically unknown a decade ago, Cuba's
Rastafarians began to grow in number and
visibility in the mid-1990s.
That decade witnessed a severe economic
crisis in Cuba triggered by the loss of
the country's main trading partners, the
Soviet Union and the east European socialist
bloc; an opening up of the island to foreign
tourism; and growing religious tolerance.
In a survey of Cuban Rastafarians headed
by sociologist Angie Alejandra Larena, respondents
complained of racial discrimination in Cuba,
in the shape of stereotypes and prejudice
towards blacks.
The Rastas interviewed by Larena, a researcher
with the government Centre for Psychological
and Sociological Research, said they have
no leaders, and are opposed to the monolithic
character of the socialist system.
However, "the heterogeneity, the different
positions, the fact that they do not recognise
internal leaders, and their scant weight
in society in both quantitative and qualitative
terms" make it very unlikely that Rastas
will act in favour of social change, adds
the researcher.
By smoking marijuana, the "pure"
Rastas are breaking the law. But what most
worries Reyes is not the possibility of
being arrested for smoking ganja, but the
"people who hang around, pretending
to be Rastas, to get money from the European
tourists".
"They are responsible for the bad
reputation we have in Cuba, and also for
the lack of information. Sometimes, even
among us we find people who don't really
know what it's all about. They think it's
just a question of not combing their hair,"
he complained.
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