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Mutabaruka
(formerly Allan Hope) was born in Rae Town,
Kingston on 26th December, 1952. After primary education he attended Kingston
Technical High School, where he was a student for four years. Trained in
Electronics, he left his first job after about six months and took employment at the
Jamaica Telephone Company Limited. During his time at the Telephone Company he
began to examine Rastafarianism and to find it more meaningful than either the Roman
Catholicism of his upbringing or the political radicalism into which he had drifted.
In the late 1960's and early 1970's there was an
upsurge of Black Awareness in Jamaica, in the wake of a similar phenomenon in the United
States. Muta, then in his late teens, was drawn into that movement. Illicitly,
in school he read many "progressive books" including Eldrige Cleaver's Soul
on Ice and some that were then illegal in Jamaica, such as The
Autobiography of Malcom X. Muta saw himself as a young revolutionary.
But when he deepened his investigation of Rastafarianism, which he had once regarded as
essentially passive, he came to find its thinking more radical than that of the
non-Rastafarian group with which he had associated. While still employed at the
Telephone Company, he stopped combing his hair, started growing locks, altered his diet,
and declared himself Rastafarian. A number of his friends thought he was going
mad.
After leaving the Telephone Company, Muta found
life in Kingston increasingly unsatisfactory. He and his friend Yvonne left Kingston
in 1971 in search of a more congenial environment. They have settled in Potosi
District, in St. James. They have two children and the house that Muta built.
Muta has had periods of close contact with the Negril Beach Village, where he has
explained to guests certain aspects of Jamaican culture. He has talked at great
length with many foreigners, and has found the experience broadening. To Muta now,
Rastafarianism is part of a universal quest which may also be pursued by other routes,
such as Hinduism or Buddhism or Christianity. He disapproves, however, of
institutionalized religion: the priest "has used your mind/to make love/with
the/dead."
Muta was the first well-publicized voice in the new
wave of poets growing since the early 1970's. They have developed a living
relationship between a poet and a fairly wide audience such as, in Jamaica, only Louise
Bennett has achieved before them. Early work by Muta regularly appeared in Swing,
a monthly that gave fullest coverage to the pop music scene. Introducing Outcry
(March, 1973) John A. L. Golding Jr. wrote: "In July 1971, Swing
Magazine published for the first time a poem by Allan Mutabaruka...Our readers were
ecstatic. Since then, and almost in consecutive issues, we have derived much
pleasure in further publication of this brother's works... They tell a story common to
most black people born in the ghetto... And when Muta writes, it's loud and clear."
That his poems in Sun and Moon (1976), a volume shared with
Faybiene, are quieter is one indication of Muta's particular development.
Like Louise Bennett (and like many of the Black
Americans of the sixties whose work they had sampled) the new and popular Jamaican poets
write mainly in the unofficial language of the people, feel close to Black musicians (to
whom they sometimes allude), and make good use of opportunities to perform. I can
still vividly recall the pleasure of hearing Muta read the the Creative Arts Centre in the
early 1970's. He more than holds his own in the company of other skilled performers
such as Mikey Smith and Oku Onuora (formerly Oralndo Wong) with whom he has recently
shared programmes. But though, like the others, he is on intimate terms with reggae
lyrics and he sometimes does angry poems. Muta resists the label of "dub
poet" as much as "protest poet". Each, he feels, refers to only one
aspect of his work.
Granted that many of Muta's poems are fully
realized only in performance, some of them seem to me far more successful than
others. My own favorite is "Nursery Rhyme Lament" which, I am told, is now
discussed in some of our schools. In "Dan is the Man in the Van", the
famous calypso song by The Mighty Sparrow, British nursery rhymes taught in colonial
schools are pilloried as absurdly irrelevant in that context; in Muta's "Nursery
Rhyme Lament" they are distorted into local meaning, they are reworked as history
into the patterns of harsh reality - water rates, light bills, overpopulation, meat
shortages and so on. The poem (especially when performed) is very funny; and deadly
serious in the criticism it implies. Another special favorite of mine is
"Revolutionary Poets" - "revolutionary poets/'ave become entertainers"
- with its multiple ironies, including some that surely touch that poem itself. If
few of the other pieces in this volume seem as fully achieved as these, this is, after
all, a collection of "the first poems", in which the voice of the young
Mutabaruka speaks to and for a host of troubled young people.
By: Mervyn Morris - From: Mutabaruka - The First Poems |