
Mutabaruka - Photos by Mel Cooke
By Mel Cooke
In one of the four final panels on the final day of the inaugural Rastafari Studies Conference, poet and broadcaster Mutabaruka was examined from four perspectives at the University of the West Indies (UWI), Mona.
The panels' placement in the largest room utilised by the conference, the N1 Lecture Theatre, may have indicated expected audience size at last Friday's session. If so it was justified, as a large audience turned out to hear Professor Carolyn Cooper, Michelle 'DJ Afifa' Harris, Hugh Miller and Ras Takura present, Velma Pollard chairing the session.
The papers were as varied as Mutabaruka is multifaceted, but Harris hit on a common thread during the post-presentation interactive session. Harris, whose paper was titled 'Mutabaruka: the Icon', said that "he is a practical example ... . Everything about his life shows you how you can question". So Mutabaruka can say Rasta and still not smoke.

Rapacious explorer
Cooper said that in Colombus Ghost Mutabaruka takes on the mask of a rapacious explorer, quoting from the poem at length. She said that in his poetry Mutabaruka "brings to the surface the history of African peoples" and termed his work "revisionist history".
Miller spoke on 'Mutabaruka - A Global Development Theorist: A Sociological Perspective'. So he looked at Mutabaruka as a development thinker, seeing the poet's decision to go barefooted as a profound statement on freedom as development.
He is also concerned with "terminologies or what people will think when you say a particular phrase or word like 'God' or 'Bible'." "Sociology would see Mutabaruka as a cultural relativist," Miller said. He added that "Mutabaruka's developmental thinking has also helped us in overstanding Rastafari".
However, Miller cautioned that "not for a moment would I suggest that Mutabaruka would want to be called a development theorist".

Ras Takura gave a personal, heartfelt presentation in 'Mutabaruka: I n I Teacher', against the backdrop of a slide show of Mutabaruka images. Opening with the statement "Muta is Rasta. And him no really compromise that. Him often say religion was created by insecure men to oppress women. The man live Rasta".
He spoke to Mutabaruka addressing issues such as sex, money and death, which some Rastafarians would avoid. He analysed Mutabaruka's 'Whiteman Country' and said he has reasoned with returning residents who have said that poem made them come back to Jamaica.
In broadcasting, Ras Takura said "Muta authenticate Patois as an official language to use on the radio in Jamaica".
And on a personal level, he said "Muta teach I to grow still. As a youth is one of the only people who when him talk I understand. I never know my personal father until I was 20. Muta adopt that space in my mind".

Ras Takura closed with an excellent delivery of Mutabaruka's celebrated 'Dis Poem', Pollard commenting "you will agree with me that he has done his teacher proud".
The first comment from the audience was a personal testimony to Mutabaruka's honesty as a businessman.
Source jamaicagleaner.com


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