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::FILM NEWS::
LE Newsletter - February 2, 2012
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Bob Marley’s Granddaughter Takes Epic Journey In New Doc
About Rasta
Source:
www.thestar.com - By Garry Steckles
(Jan 30, 2012) The year is 1974, and the Ontario Provincial
Police has
just distributed its updated list of the 10 most wanted
criminals in the province. It lands on the news desk of the
Toronto Star.
The OPP communiqué identifies all 10 villains in painstaking
detail. But there is no mention of the religion of nine of them.
The 10th just happens to have dreadlocks and is, according to
the OPP, “a Rastafarian.”
The editors decide to cut that reference out, on the not
unreasonable grounds that (a) not everyone with locks is
Rastafarian and (b) if you’re going to print one person’s
religion, you’re obliged to print all 10 . . . and then deal
with the uproar that would inevitably ensue.
Fast forward almost three decades, and how Toronto has changed.
Just how much will be in evidence Wednesday evening, when the
documentary
RasTa: A Soul’s Journey
is screened at the Royal Ontario Museum, where it will be shown
regularly until the end of February.
It’s a joyous, uplifting, enlightening and occasionally
heart-rending documentary that explores and celebrates the
Rastafarian movement, its history and its growing acceptance and
influence around the world. It seems certain to have audiences
shedding tears in some parts and skanking in the aisles during
others, as Donisha Prendergast, the charismatic 25-year-old
granddaughter of Bob and Rita Marley, goes on a voyage of
discovery that takes her to eight countries — Jamaica, Canada,
Britain, the United States, Ethiopia, South Africa, Israel and
India.
It also happens to be a film that couldn’t have been made
without the determination and skill of three Ontario filmmakers:
producer Patricia Scarlett, director-producer-writer Stuart
Samuels and producer Marilyn Gray, a former Torontonian now
living on Manitoulin Island. A chunk of the funding for the
documentary came from Citytv and multifaith channel Vision TV,
along with a handful of private investors.
The creators of the documentary ran into many roadblocks before
persuading people that they had a viable project in the works.
Says Scarlett, who was born in Jamaica: “Most of the
broadcasters that I went to told me quite plainly that they
didn’t think there was an audience for this film and certainly
not a Canadian audience.
“Financing was a big issue,” Scarlett says. “Although our budget
of $650,000 was not over the moon, I suspect that some of the
broadcasters felt that I couldn’t raise the funds.”
Scarlett’s belief in the appeal of a movie exploring the history
and roots of Rasta was reinforced during her years working with
TVOntario as an international sales executive.
“I had the opportunity to travel extensively,” she says, “and
everywhere, I went I met Rastafarians. I remember being in
Stockholm, walking through the old town, when I heard a wicked
reggae beat. I followed the sound and discovered a lounge where
a couple of Jamaican Rastafarians had formed a band with a few
Swedes.
“A few years later, I was in Beijing on the edge of Tiananmen
Square. As I was standing there, buses were pulling into the
square with local tourists. When one of the buses pulled up
close to where I was standing, the door opened and ‘One Love’
was blasting through the square. I think that could have been
the moment when I decided that the story of the global impact of
Rastafari was an important one to tell,” Scarlett continues.
“When I came back to Canada, I told a few friends and they all
agreed it was a great idea. One friend did some of the early
research and the other helped me write the outline.”
Scarlett approached Prendergast about being in the doc, who then
told her grandmother about it.
“Mrs. Marley then invited the producers — Stuart, Marilyn and me
— to meet with her and family members at the Bob Marley Resort
and Spa in Nassau,” Scarlett says.
“We found Mrs. Marley to be a very gracious and gentle woman. We
also met Donisha’s mother, Sharon Marley, and her sister,
Stephanie Marley, and some of Mrs. Marley’s grandchildren. Over
lunch at Mrs. Marley’s home one afternoon, we pitched the
project to her and she gave it her stamp of approval.”
Samuels, an award-winning director with scores of critically
acclaimed documentaries to his credit, says it didn’t take much
persuading to get him involved in the RasTa documentary.
“I approached this story as a global story, not just a Jamaican
one,” Samuels says.
“I wanted to make a film that would be able to go beyond the
Rasta “brand” — ganja, reggae and dreadlocks — to present its
history in a worldwide context as well as a story that resonates
to people all over the world: a story of freedom, of the
relationship of Rasta history to the concerns of people today. I
wanted people to understand this movement inside this larger
global and historical context.
“I was surprised about how the Rastafarian movement has been
able to maintain its belief system despite the fact that it has
no church structure. No time- and place-based religious rituals.
I was surprised by the shifting story of Rasta, as it weaves
between being a religion and a lifestyle and how it has
developed along these untraditional methods of belief and
worship,” Samuels says.
“For people who have a nodding and stereotype view of Rasta, I
want the film to make them rethink their ideas and to understand
the movement, not as a pop style but as a way of life. For
people unfamiliar with Rasta, I want the film to make them more
curious, more connected to the history of this movement and its
importance to today.
Co-producer Gray found South Africa was the most memorable leg
of their international journey.
“The Rastas there practise an authentic, unified brotherhood for
the most part,” she says. “I especially appreciated going to
Judah Square (near Knysna, South Africa), where it was very
matriarchal. The women were treated with respect and the
children roam freely among the adults . . . it was an eerie
vibe.”
Prendergast’s views on the Rastafarian movement her grandfather
played such a huge role in bringing to world attention are
illuminating.
“It's not a religion,” she insists. “People project it to be a
religion because they don't understand it; they haven’t taken
time to do the research. But Rastafari is a culture that can be
practised by people of any kind of religion. You have Hasidic
Jews who are practising Rastafari, you even have Muslims who are
practising.
“Rastafari is a way of life. It’s the way that you treat the
world, the food that you eat. That message of peace and love,
that's the basis of Rasta.”
RasTa: A Soul’s Journey will have a special screening and VIP
reception at the ROM on Wednesday, followed by showings every
Saturday and Sunday until the last weekend in February. |
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