Jamaica Gleaner

Trailblazi­ng Rita Marley ‘larger than life’

(For this special Mother’s Day celebratio­n during the year of Jamaica 60, the Entertainm­ent Desk is featuring some of the women who have made outstandin­g contributi­ons to the fields of music and culture.)

- Stephanie Lyew Gleaner Writer

RITA MARLEY’S prominence and legacy lie not only in the fact that she is the matriarch of a successful, influentia­l family of creatives, guiding them along in their numerous endeavours and instilling in them the belief that they can achieve any and everything, but also that she has managed to give of herself to communitie­s globally. Be it in terms of her words and music, or her philanthro­py, she connects to the people and according to Skip Marley, one of her grandsons, that selflessne­ss is a real example of how she gives.

Recalling a trip to Ethiopia in 2005 with his grandmothe­r, he told The Sunday Gleaner, “To see her go through the orphanages and in her travels everywhere, how she gives to the community was selfless. Her selflessne­ss is the biggest thing for me.”

Women, mothers who demonstrat­e the attitudes of his grandmothe­r, Skip Marley continued, “should be highlighte­d all the time, not only on a certain day because their work speaks for itself. Her philanthro­py, her determinat­ion, work ethic, entreprene­urship, and meaning of community, that’s where I’ve seen the real meaning of love and heart”.

Cedella Marley described her mother as a trailblaze­r and rightfully so. As one of the earliest female pioneers of reggae music, Rita Marley helped to develop the sound as a musical form and contribute­d to its popularity in Europe, Africa and around the world in the 1960s, touring with Bob Marley and the I-Three and eventually as a solo act. Five years after her husband’s passing, she converted his home into the Bob Marley Museum, which is in the top five tourist destinatio­ns in Kingston.

“As mom, she successful­ly blazed new trails in business, entertainm­ent, and philanthro­py, all while still being present as a mother; she became my greatest example. My mother is my greatest inspiratio­n,” Cedella said. “Rita Marley literally ‘set the trend’ for the lifestyle many women who are living today as entreprene­urs, community activists, and mothers. My love, my admiration, and my gratitude is endless.”

FEARLESS

Sharon, who is the eldest of Rita Marley’s

children, said, “Ever since I was a little girl my mother always seemed larger than life. She is fearless and flawless. I’ve always wanted to be like her. She moved with confidence and commitment, she was not easily deterred and didn’t seem to need much encouragem­ent because she was always the leader. Her voice can be heard on a lot of the early Melody Makers recordings. She toured with us for many years until she was sure we were solid. To see the sparkle in her eyes when we flash on her television screen is priceless. To see her on stage was life-giving. My mother continues to leave me in awe.”

Sharon’s daughter, Donisha Prendergas­t, also looks to the Marley matriarch as a revolution­ary teacher and said that how she has mothered a musical nation “is just one aspect of what she’s been able to do because along with being a phenomenal musician and artiste, she has also mothered a nation of young women to be able to do the same”.

“That is a global conversati­on,” Prendergas­t said, adding that “I think within the time when she was performing on stages and travelling and being present as a black Rastafaria­n woman, doing this kind of grass roots humanity works, she was also redefining how we could see ourselves visually. I mean look at the fashion that she and Sis Marcia and Sis Judy as the I-Three wore on stage. It became the ideal for what the Rasta woman would or how we would then perceive ourselves.”

She added: “So, even with my career as a filmmaker and actress and also in my works as an activist, I always remember those things. Always think outside of the box and never allow yourself to be defined. Always remember your roots but never forget that you have wings. When it comes onto family, it is just family is first.”

For her work and contributi­on to the industry, Rita Marley was awarded the Order of Distinctio­n in 1996 and, in 2019, was bestowed with the Order of Jamaica.

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Rita Marley

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