Rastafarianisim, Religion &
Jamaica’s visit of His Majesty Emperor
Haile Sellasse I
Haile Sellasse I
Costantinos Berhutesfa Costantinos
Ethiopian Patriots Diamond Jubilee CXVIII-II,
MMXVI,
Talk @ Scouts, Addis Abeba, May 5, 2016
Above
all, Haile Sellasse has created a general, warm and blind sympathy for
uncivilized Ethiopia throughout civilized Christendom. In the wake of the
world's grandiose Depression, with millions of white men uncertain as to the
benefits of civilization, 1935 produced a peculiar Spirit of the Year in which
it was felt to be a crying shame that the Machine Age seemed about to intrude
upon Africa's last free, unscathed and simple people. They were ipso facto
Noble Savages, and the noblest Ethiopian of them all naturally emerged as Man
of the Year.”
TIME, Man of the Year, XVI, Nov 18, 1936
Summary
Jamaica of Rastafarians received HIM Emperor
Haile Sellasse’s memorable visit to Jamaica on April 21 1966 as if it were the second coming of Christ.
No other state visit has captured the triumph of human spirit as this. This
lecture is about religion, a set of beliefs vis-à-vis the cause, nature, and
purpose of the universe, especially when considered as the creation of a super
human agency or agencies, usually involving devotional and ritual observances,
and often containing a moral code governing the conduct of human affairs.
Calvinistic Methodists were born out of the Methodist Revival in 18th Century
Wales (after John Calvin). They survive as a body of Christians now forming
the Presbyterian Church of Wales. Wesleyanism is a movement of Protestant
Christians who seek to follow the methods or theology of the eighteenth-century
evangelical reformers John Wesley and
his brother Charles Wesley. Martinism is a form
of Christian mysticism and esoteric Christianity concerned with the fall of
the first man, his state of material privation from his divine source, and the
process of his return, called 'Reintegration' or illumination.
So what is wrong with the Rastafarianism as
a ‘religion’? Rastafarisim is an Abrahamic belief, which
developed in Jamaica in the 1930s, following the coronation of Haile Selassie
I as Emperor of Ethiopia in 1930. Its adherents worship him in much the same
way as Jesus in his Second Advent. The father of African independence and
African unity is being dully remembered by the Rastafarians, who deserve credit
for this at a time when our historic leaders are being denied recognition by
present generations.
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