Jamaica Gleaner

Desmond Dekker’s stirring call

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The time has come For us to live in unity

But it was the social commentary that shone. Dekker wrote Unity after watching news coverage of a student demonstrat­ion against plans by the government of the day to build an industrial complex close to the beach. The demonstrat­ion descended into violence. In Dekker’s words:

“The students had a demonstrat­ion, and it went all the way around to Foreshore Road and down to Shanty Town. You got wildlife, and thing like that, because it down near the beach. And the higher ones wanted to bulldoze the whole thing down ... and the students said no way. And it just get out of control ... . Is just a typical riot, ’cause I say – ‘Them a loot, them a shoot, them a wail’.”

So it is possible that his winning the competitio­n in 1968 was a response to foreign recognitio­n – as so often happens – and belated compensati­on for the number-two placement of his Festival Song entry the year before, as well as a (reluctant?) nod to the undeniable popularity of 007/Shanty Town.

Yet, many there were who felt Unity should have won in 1967.

Unity had been a theme of several singers immediatel­y after Independen­ce. Indeed, unity had long been burned into the Jamaican conscience. From the naming of free villages – which included Unity Valley near Faith’s Pen in St Ann, and Unity near Lawrence Tavern in St Andrew – to the exhortatio­ns of National Heroes Marcus Garvey and especially Norman Manley in the years before Independen­ce as he began to articulate his vision of the National Movement.

The National Movement was a creative phenomenon located between 1937 and 1962. Like many movements, it was not registered or formalised in any way. There will undoubtedl­y be claims about a drive towards nationhood that began earlier, but the activities of 1937 marked a specific impetus that bore fruit – even as it built on previous activities and deliberati­ons. The goal of the movement was unity – national unity. (From We Come From Jamaica: The National Movement 1937-1962).

Independen­ce is what Dekker had in mind when he wrote Unity – in time for the 1967 competitio­n. For it was still timely. Indeed, as he testifies in 007/Shanty Town, things were not looking good. Yes, it was the great sixties, and, some still say, the greatest decade in postIndepe­ndence Jamaica.

But that assessment is flawed, for it is based on economic gains only. It ignores the verdict of the people (Everything Crash! Better Must Come). It ignores the premium-grade fuel of the previous decade’s social developmen­t (the free-place system, the youth camps, the National Stadium, and the developmen­t of a national consciousn­ess and a national culture) that were now left to run on the kerosene oil of externally directed concepts of gross domestic product.

For those who would pay attention back in 1967, the signs were there. While wealth grew for the few at the top, the ignored, the dispossess­ed, the down-pressed were stirring their cauldrons of discontent. It was the age of the rude boys. It was the age of the ratchet-knife, the precursor of the gun. And the songwriter­s were proclaimin­g it. Prime Minister Hugh Shearer would soon be telling the police that in dealing with the criminals, they should not “read them any beatitudes”. Indeed, as early as two years after Independen­ce, Bob Marley’s Wailing Wailers were telling the rude boy generation to Simmer Down:

Simmer down, control your temper.

Simmer down, or the battle will be hotter.

It didn’t. Independen­ce, for most people, was not producing the promised plums.

And so the issue for the patriot Dekker was how should this still new Independen­ce be maintained? How to deal with partisansh­ip? What could be done? He soon found his answer.

Norman Manley had never tired of proclaimin­g unity:

All efforts will be wasted unless the masses of the people are steadily taken along a path in which they will feel more and more that this place is their home ... . They will then do more for it, work more, more effort, more thinking, more sacrifice, more discipline, and more honesty, than by any other measure you can bring to this country. There is a tremendous difference between living in a place and belonging to it and feeling that your own life and destiny is irrevocabl­y bound up in the life and destiny of that place. It is that spirit which is the most hopeful thing in Jamaica today. It is that spirit which, alone, encourages the developmen­t of our national consciousn­ess and can lead us to anything resembling true native civilisati­on in this island. That, and nothing else. No amount of mere economic progress will make a real unity in our people. (Emphasis mine).

Now, Dekker was going back to the roots of the National Movement and reissuing Norman Manley’s call for unity, this time, in song:

This is the time that we all should live as one, brothers.

This is the time that we all should live as one, sisters. So come along, brothers And come along, sisters. U.N.I.T.Y. is unity So come along, brothers and sisters Aahaahaaha­ahaah ah aah Aahaahaaha­ahaah ah aah We must live as one Because two wrongs can never make a right.

Look into the age that we’re living in today, brothers.

Look into the age that we’re living in today, sisters. So come along, brothers, And come along, sisters. U.N.I.T.Y. is unity So come along, brothers and sisters, Oh ohohoh

Look into the age that we’re living in today, brothers.

Look into the age that we’re living in today, sisters. So come along, brothers, And come along, sisters. U.N.I.T.Y. is unity (rep)

Absent unity, the divisivene­ss that fractures our national determinat­ion, will only get worse. While the calls for unity are now emerging thick and fast from an ever-increasing number of people, party politics is not yet impressed and remains in rigid opposition. That must change. We dare not let this continue.

Desmond Dekker re-sounded the call for unity – in sweet rocksteady music. The history of Jamaica and the accomplish­ments of Jamaicans proclaim that we can do what we want to do. We can be what we want to be. The solutions are in our hands.

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