Free at last! As i write this the world is celebrating the release of Aung San Suu Kyi, held captive for 15 years by the ruthless military government of Myanmar/Burma. What a moment! There arent too many womenor men like Suu Kyi, willing to sacrifice their freedom of movement in the name of moral principle, something completely lacking in politics today. Suu Kyi is an Alma Mater of the college i went to in Delhi, the venerable Lady Sri Ram College, whose initials, LSR, were said to be synonymous with Love, Sex and Romance for male students at Delhi University. Clearly besides being a source of girlfriend material, LSR has also produced stellar leaders with the moral fibre of the invincible Aung San Suu Kyi.
Closer to home and the mundane, my daily trod was enlivened yesterday by a Skype interview with an Israeli journalist, Nirit Ben-Ari, who contacted me last week with the following request:
I will be honored and thankful if you interview with me for the article I am writing forHaaretz newspaper on dancehall culture in Jamaica. I am mainly interested in your interpretation of the term Gaza and its possible implication of awareness of global politics. Do you think that the choice of the name Gaza represents a political awareness and identification with the underdog? I am also interested in your view on the global gaze on dancehall culture and the dangers of misinterpreting and misunderstanding dancehall culture outside of Jamaica. What do you think about the dissemination of dancehall images globally?
In response i sent her the paper i had given at the Reggae Studies Conference earlier this year: Eyeless in Gaza (and Gully): Mi deh pon di borderline; essentially i was trying to document and comment on the effects of the feud between two of Jamaicas top DJs, Vybz Kartel (Gaza) and Mavado (Gully) that resulted in the words Gaza and Gully being spraypainted or otherwise inscribed on surfaces all over Kingston, but also in places like Trinidad, Barbados as well as Brooklyn, London and the generalized Jamaican diaspora. I excerpt a relevant bit from my paper below:
Etymology of Gaza in the Jamaican context
It is commonplace in Jamaica for impoverished urban areas to be informally named after locations known globally as war zones. Thus there are locales named Angola, Tel Aviv, Vietnam and of course Gaza. In a widely publicized interview between Cliff Hughes, a prominent local journalist, and Vybz Kartel on TV Jamaicas Impact which aired on November 12, 2009, Hughes asked Kartel why he had chosen the name Gaza for his area, and what the frequently uttered phrase Gaza mi seh meant. Kartel who often refers to himself in the third person responded:
Gaza mi seh means Fight for what you believe in against all odds, against all adversity. When I left the Alliance Vybz Kartel came under so much pressure, I said to Black Rhino and others we need to form a group. But we need a perfect name. The first war was just happening in Gaza, Israel was bombarding them but the people were fighting back regardless, and Vybz Kartel said to Laing (Isaiah Laing, prominent promoter associated with the annual Sting show), were going to use that name coz it means to medem people deh serious and dem nah back down.
Interestingly, Kartel steered clear of the reason he felt obliged to look for a suitable name for the Portmore community associated with him, in the first place. The backstory is an interesting one umbilically connected to the complicated discourse around masculinity and sexuality in Jamaica. Yet the details of why the community of Borderline in Portmore came to be rechristened Gaza is one the media had never considered noteworthy enough to mention let alone dwell on.
But back to yesterday, I cant tell you how cool it was to be sitting in my living room in Kingston talking directly to Nirit in Tel Aviv, complete with images of ourselves and the rooms we were in. Viva Skype!
Nirit explained that she had wanted to read Carolyn Cooper and Donna Hopes books on dancehall culture but they werent available in Tel Aviv and she had ordered them on Amazon but hadnt recieved them yet. In the meantime someone referred her to my blog which is why she asked me to help her with the background on the use of the word Gaza in dancehall culture. Interestingly Nirit works for an NGO named Gisha an Israeli not-for-profit organization, founded in 2005, whose goal is to protect the freedom of movement of Palestinians, especially Gaza residents.
How do you get from Gaza to Ramallah? Play "Safe Passage"
Like Aung San Suu Kyi the Palestinians have had their freedom of movement severely curtailed by the state of Israel. As the Gisha website explains:
Since the 1967 occupation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip, Israels military has developed a complex system of rules and sanctions to control the movement of the 3.4 million Palestinians who live there. The restrictions violate the fundamental right of Palestinians to freedom of movement. As a result, additional basic rights are violated, including the right to life, the right to access medical care, the right to education, the right to livelihood, the right to family unity and the right to freedom of religion.
Gisha, whose name means both access and approach, uses legal assistance and public advocacy to protect the rights of Palestinian residents. Because freedom of movement is a precondition for exercising other basic rights, Gishas work has a multiplier effect in helping residents of the occupied territories access education, jobs, family members and medical care.
Funnily Nirit told me that a Palestinian friend of hers got a chance to spend two months in Jamaica and was exulting at the thought of getting away from it all to a tropical island far from the rigours of life in Gaza, only to arrive in Kingston and find the word Gaza graffiti-ed all over the city.
Vybz Kartel was certainly aware of and sympathetic to the Palestinian cause but sympathetic is actually too weak a word to describe the admiration he expressed for the people of Gaza in that interview with Cliff Hughes: dem people deh serious and dem nah back down and Gaza mi seh means Fight for what you believe in against all odds, against all adversity. On the other hand im not sure how widespread Kartels view of the Palestinians is. Could one say that most of Dancehalls core constituents (to use Ragashantis apt term) are sympathetic to those trapped in Gaza? I dont know.
What i do know is that Jamaican dancehalls focus on Gaza has had an interesting ripple effect. When i tweeted a few days ago about being contacted by an Israeli journalist about the name Gaza in the Jamaican context one of my tweeple, Sweden-based @johannakey said Ive done a story on the same subject. Theres a Swedish song about it here. The song Real Gaza mi seh! is so addictive i cant get it out of my head.Its a beautiful song, in which connections are made between Gaza and universal oppression using the vehicle of dancehall and the refrain If you kill one of us, you kill all of us listen to it below:
Eyes of the world pon the Gaza mi seh Well dem say Gaza, dem say Gully dem say Congo and Kinshasa Everywhere i turn i see pure passa passa I remember Kid Fruss?? used to talk about La Raca Its all tribal warpeoplei cant take it any longer
Hopefully one day the residents of Gaza willlike Aung San Suu Kyiregain their freedom. Till then Gaza mi seh!
i understood wat the the report saying but the argument still stands
for a man a kartel calibre of intelligence, im sure another name cud be used
check the last paragraph in the stance
"On the other hand im not sure how widespread Kartels view of the Palestinians is. Could one say that most of Dancehalls core constituents (to use Ragashantis apt term) are sympathetic to those trapped in Gaza?"
how much a di fans really know di histry a gaza vs palestine war? how much really care?
i nuh come to argue wid no1 but make the facts strate as how they are?
if someone in the middle east mek a crew and call it "PNP" or "JLP"....wud u look at that as something appreciative or crazy? how much they kno bout they political factions? and da histry that exist?
usain bolt go pan a tele and say on foriegn tv "a gaza mi seh" how does it look when he deh in some middle east country athletic meet not knowing what he saying...u kno dat may be life threatning for his career?
JOPWISEH U KNOW WEH U AH SAY KARTEL IS VERY INTELLIGENT YUTE AND NUFF TIME HIM USE DAT INTELLIGENCE TO BRAINWASH AND KEEP UP F***ERY UNNO WEH JUMP UP KNOW WAH GAZA MEAN?? GO BACK INNA D BIBLE AND READ BOUT D GEHENNA (biblical name for hell) AND SEE WEH IT DEH D WHOLE GAZA MOVEMENT APPEALS TO THE REBELLIUS NATURE OF IGNORANT YOUTHS AGAINST GOVERNMENT, JAH, AND AUTHORITY ON DA WHOLE AH DAT KINDA TING HIM USE MIX UP WID ALL D FREAKINESS INNA UNNO WEH UNNO DID WAH EXPOSE BUT NEVER AVE D CHANCE CUH JAMAICA NEVER LIKE FREAK B4 KARTEL BUSS IT HIM CREATE AN AVENUE FI UNNO FI UNNO FREAK AND ATHEIST EXPRESS UNNO SELF UNNO GWAN SUPPORT HIM CUH HIM FREE UP SUCK HOOD AND BLEACHING INNA JA....TING WEH UNNO FREAKY TYPE DID DO LAAANGGG BEHIND CLOSE DOOR...AS LONG AS THERE IS MORE EVIL IN THIS WORLD THAN GOOD....KARTEL AND ALL THE OTHER ADVOCATES FOR THE ILLUMINATI REBELLIOUS MOVEMENT AGAINST GOD AND HIS PPL WILL ALWAYS STRIVE
IT IS WRITTEN:
as it was in Sodom and Gomorrah and in the days of Noah so shall it be in the last days
EVIL GWAN THRIVE AND DEM MESSENGERS WILL REACH ALL CORNERS OF THE EARTH AND THE WORDS OF THE RIGHTEOUS WILL FALL ON DEATH EARS'