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Professor Carolyn Cooper Reviews Vybz Kartel’s Book

Professor Carolyn Cooper on Vybz Kartel book Voice of the Jamaican Ghetto April 2013VYBZ KARTEL BOOK THE VOICE OF THE JAMAICAN GHETTO REVIEWED BY PROFESSOR CAROLYN COOPER APRIL 2013

Do you read the Jamaican Glener often? If so you must have came across Carolyn Cooper’s latest article on World Boss Vybz Kartel in her Sunday’s Column for the Jamaican Gleaner Newspaper.




Caroline Cooper is a professor of literary and cultural studies at the University of the West Indies, Mona.

Professor Cooper writes a weekly column for the Jamaican National newspaper The Jamaica – Gleaner, on Sundays.

We already talked about her in different occasions like when Kartel was still a free man and Professor Cooper invited him at UWI for a speech that you can still watch clicking here.

In her Sunady column, a couple of weeks ago, Professor Caroline Cooper wrote about Vybz Kartel’s book, Voice Of The Jamaican Ghetto, that at missgaza we have been proudly selling since its release, from a different prospective, worth sharing here.




Vybz Kartel’s book, The Voice of the Jamaican Ghetto, co-authored with Michael Dawson of People’s Telecom fame, gives a penetrating account of the deadly conditions endured by too many youths who are barely surviving on the margins of Jamaican society.

Claiming the authority of the traditional warner man, Kartel compels his audience to pay attention to his prophetic story. You just can’t put the book down.

Kartel’s intention is not to entertain but to upset:


“As strange as it may sound, I hope you do not enjoy this book. I hope it disturbs you. I hope after reading you realise there is something wrong with Jamaica that needs to be fixed. I hope you will never look at a ghetto person the same again.”


Cynics have been asking if Kartel really wrote the book.

They clearly have not listened to his songs.

There’s an organic connection between the two:


“… After seeing the crowd’s response to my conscious songs, I wanted to tell more of the story that I could not capture in three minutes riding a riddim. So I started writing, still unsure at the time if a book was what I wanted to do.”


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VYBZ KARTEL BOOK THE VOICE OF THE JAMAICAN GHETTO REVIEWED BY PROFESSOR CAROLYN COOPER APRIL 2013

Each of the 10 chapters amplifies the core concepts of selected songs.

For example, chapter 1 is based on ‘Thank You Jah’:

‘Thank you, Jah’ is a prayer that every fundamentalist Christian in Jamaica can identify with – up to a point.

Kartel chants his gratitude to Jah in Old Testament lyrics.

But the song quickly changes tune and tone. ‘Thank you, Jah’ becomes a damning judgement on the failures of modern Babylon.

Kartel’s invocation of the psalm is decidedly ironic.

VYBZ KARTEL “THANK YOU JAH” 2010 

The Lord is certainly not keeping the city of Kingston. Babylon labours in vain to build a city founded on injustice.

The so-called ‘system’ brutalizes poor people in Jamaica. The profound philosophical question the song raises is whether or not ‘Jah tun him back’.

Are ghetto people the victims of divine indifference, as Babylon hopes? The song condemns the conspiracy of Church and State to keep poor people in bondage.

In the book, Kartel has ample room to elaborate on the inequities of Jamaican society, especially the apparent willingness of the Church to postpone justice until ‘Thy kingdom come’.

He gives a quick history lesson to demonstrate the origin of the racism at the root of imperial Christianity.

Kartel demolishes the myth of European conquest as a mission to save the souls of savages:


“Sometimes, I wish Gaza was around in those days when these men came off their ships, dressed in their stockings, short pants and funny hats to tell Portmore people they are heathens so they should come and work for free and these men in stockings will show them salvation.

I am confident you could stay from the toll road and hear those sailors begging for mercy when the Gaza done wid dem.”


BUY ONLINE VYBZ KARTEL’S BOOK VOICE OF THE JAMAICAN GHETTO CLICKING HERE

Although Kartel doesn’t want us to ‘enjoy’ the book, there’s lots of humor.





VYBZ KARTEL “THANK YOU JAH” LYRICS


Psalms 127 Selah, Except di Lord build di house,
Dey labour in vain dat build it, Except di Lord keep di city,
Di watchman watcheth, but in vain.
Thank yu, Jah, it’s just another day, selah,
It’s just another day, Thank yu, Jah, mi wake up dis mornin
Roll out di herbs before mi start yawnin
Tun round buss a kiss pon mi dawlin
Tell har seh, “Honey, mi ah touch inna di steet.”
In di street mi see poor people bawlin
Nuff juvenile no even nyam from mornin,
“Weh di black woman future?”, me ask him

“Weh di system a do fi she”?
Now big up di gyal dem weh fight it alone
An ah raise two, three pickney pon dem own,
Weh di man deh? No man no deh home,
Babylon have dem inna jail.
Big up di juvenile dem inna di street
Weh a seh dem haffi make it
An nah touch di chrome!

Dem no waan wi fi claim our own,
But Africa nah form no fool inna Rome,
Ghetto youth, we go on and on
Babylon waan wi gone,
Hungry from morning til night come,
Dem waan wi fi live our life so,
Dem a wonder if di youth dem a go stop, no!
A wonder if di ghetto a go drop, no!
Dem a wonder if wi ketch inna di trap, no!
A wonder if Jah tun him back, no





THE GARVEYITE AND THE BLEACHER


In a telephone interview last week, Michael Dawson explained his role in the creative process.

He sees the book as a recording of the ‘reasonings’ between himself and Adidja ‘Vybz Kartel’ Palmer.

In his ‘Preface’, Dawson admits the ironies of the project:


“Many people have wondered how this improbable collaboration came about.

How could someone who is a known Garveyite collude with the ‘Bleacher’ to write a book? … How did my Champion background find common ground with the Gaza?


Dawson gives an intriguing answer:


“I realised what Addi was reluctant to admit; that deep down he realized he had the gift of being a lyricist and the ability to put it on a dancehall rhythm like no one else had.

He feared, however (my observation), that being known as a conscious artiste would gain him a label that he did not want.”

It was the opportunity to lecture at the University of the West Indies that changed Kartel’s mind.

Wilmot Perkins must be turning in his grave. The ‘intellectual ghetto’ has clearly served its purpose, promoting dialogue between town and gown.

The Voice of the Jamaican Ghetto should be read in and out of school. It ought to be on the CXC social studies syllabus. It raises complex issues of social justice in an accessible way.

This book will engage the attention of every student, from Campion College to Gaza Secondary.

And Adidja Palmer needs to be given a fair trial. Quickly! Otherwise, we run the risk of turning Vybz Kartel into a political prisoner, fulfilling the expectation of the book cover.


Visit her bilingual blog at http://carolynjoycooper.wordpress.com.

Buy “Thank You Jah” on iTunes

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