Submitted by Melissa Martin, Ph.D., is an author, columnist, and educator. She lives in U.S.

The footprints of Bob Marley appear on the sand in Jamaica and across the earth wherever freedom is held hostage. Likened to Martin Luther King, Jr., Marley desired peace for his people. And for all humanity. Music was the vehicle for his message. His passionate personality was his vehicle for harmony in a chaotic world of violence.

I am remembering Bob Marley with my words in this column. “Bob, you are missed. But your legend of light shines on and on and on.”

Nesta Robert Marley was born in 1945. Being biracial, Marley was bullied as a child, but declared, “I’m not on the white man’s side, or the black man’s side. I’m on God’s side.”

Marley died of cancer in 1981 in Miami at the age of 36 years. He was laid to rest in Jamaica.

According to a 2014 article in the Jamaican Observer, “The lives of many people all over the world have been profoundly influenced by Jamaicans such as Ms Mary Seacole, Messrs Marcus Garvey, Bob Marley, Claude McKay and Usain Bolt. Some who were revolutionary political activists destined to change the world spent an important interval in Jamaica. The most famous was the liberator of Latin America, Simon Bolivar, who penned the famous ‘Jamaica Letter’ from these environs.” www.jamaicaobserver.com/.

Marley received The United Nations Peace Medal of the Third World in 1978. On April 22, 1978, the One Love Peace Concert was held at Kingston’s National Stadium where Marley asked two opposing politicians to join hands. “You entertain people who are satisfied. Hungry people can’t be entertained – or people who are afraid. You can’t entertain a man who has no food,” is a quote by Marley.

The 74th birthday of Marley, the reggae legend, was celebrated at the Bob Marley Museum on Hope Road in Jamaica in February 2019, according to The Gleaner www.jamaica-gleaner.com/.

The Bob Marley museum is situated on the site of the legendary musician’s home. “Bob’s home is filled with rich memories and treasured mementos, which seek to preserve the life and accomplishment of this great Jamaican and outstanding musician.” www.bobmarleymuseum.com.

The Bob Marley Foundation implements social intervention projects that aim to preserve the spiritual, cultural, social and musical ideals that guided and inspired him. “Never expect God to do for you what you don’t do to others,” Marley avowed.

A March 10, 2005 article published in the Rolling Stones sang a tribute to Marley. “But Marley’s early-to-mid-1970s Island recordings were also something a good deal more than pioneering entertainment: They put forth an uncompromising vision of a society kept in hell and ready to storm its gates. Songs like “Burnin’ and Lootin’,” “Small Axe,” “Concrete Jungle,” “Revolution,” “Them Belly Full” and “War” — especially “War,” with its proclamation of eternal worldwide conflict: “Until the philosophy which hold one race superior/And another inferior/Is finally and permanently discredited” — brandish unsettling images and incendiary pronouncements that are among the most authentic in modern music.”

So Much Things to Say, a book by Roger Steffens (Norton & Company, 2017) contains myriad interviews by those who knew Marley. His story begins when his white father abandoned his pregnant mother. From being raised in the slums to becoming a cultural icon, Marley remained true to his roots. He sang about the worst of humanity and the best of humanity.

Sinner, saint, or both. Marley was quite a colorful character. Fathering multiple children with multiple women. Being an advocate for marijuana as a spiritual restorative herb. Humanity’s heroes are not without flaws and foibles. “Who are you to judge the life I live? I know I’m not perfect — and I don’t live to be — but before you start pointing fingers, make sure your hands are clean!” stated Marley.

The legacy of Bob Marley, the singer, the humanitarian, and the man, remains.

181 responses to “Remembering Bob Marley”


  1. A house in London where Bob Marley sought refuge after the trauma of an assassination attempt in Jamaica is to have an English Heritage blue plaque installed, the UK Guardian newspaper reported yesterday.

    Marley and his band, the Wailers, lived at the house on Oakley Street, off King’s Road in Chelsea, in 1977. During that time they completed recording Exodus, Marley’s ninth studio album, described as a masterpiece and which was named by Time magazine as “The best album of the 20th century”.

    Exodus, which remained on the British album charts for 56 consecutive weeks, included the UK hit singles title track Exodus, Waiting In Vain, Jamming, and One Love.

    “When they were not recording they would make the short trip over the Albert Bridge to play football in Battersea Park,” the Guardian report stated.

    According to the Guardian story, in addition to Marley, novelist Angela Carter, writer and traveller Gertrude Bell, and war correspondent Martha Gellhorn were among a cluster of names announced yesterday as figures to be celebrated in 2019 by the London heritage scheme.

    English Heritage trustee and blue plaques panel member, historian David Olusoga, was reported as saying he was particularly excited by the Marley plaque.

    “He was one of the first superstars to come from a developing country. He is one of the most famous faces in the world, one of the most recognisable faces in the world, and he blazed a trail for other artistes from developing countries,” the Guardian quoted Olusoga.


  2. Mariposa

    Like him or hate him … in my own individual judge I believe that Bob Marley has done more good for the secular world with his messages of peace, love and understanding than the politicians who have continually undermined the people confidence and trust…

    So me hafee give im aa bly… despite his shortcomings which are common to all men …


  3. Well if BOB Marley has done soo much for Peace . How come their is so much killings in his home land of Jamaica
    You guys teking this thing too seriously
    Bob Marley was singer ,He made music in accordance to the times he lived . His music was a reflection of a world that was dominated by selfishness hatred and greed
    He was no Martin Luther King


  4. Mariposa

    Why do think there is so much killing in Jamaica, Barbados, and the United States etc? Man loves evil more than good … If man use love as he uses he hate and violence the world would be a better place ..

    Moreover, many people made music according to the times Bob Marley was living in, but have long been forgotten….so you have to ask yourself: what makes Bob Marley anymore different than the rest?

    Nevertheless, there is something about Marley music that still resonates in the collective psyche of the world … what is it?


  5. Mariposa

    He was no Martin Luther King … True

    But ask the average kid today who is Martin Luther King or Bob Marley, and nine times out of ten they know Bob Marley over King …what is it about Marley that still stands out in the collective awareness of all generations today?


  6. What does that say for our educationsl system when children know more of Bob Marley than Dr. Martin Luther King
    What a dam shane


  7. @ Greene,

    Cultural appropriation is very important in defining what is Black culture. If the narrative is set by someone else we cannot complain ten, fifty, one hundred years from now.
    Take, for example, the European myth that civilisation began with the Greeks and look at the history of maths. Africa, West Africa in particular, has been written out of that history – with the exception of Egypt. That is allowed yo continue because we have not recaptured our history.
    Or here is another story: Ken Gabriel, the great digital scientist, said he was motivated to work in science when his grand father taught him to catch birds with what we call a fly stick. Why did he continue on and us Bajans, who were setting fly sticks before Gabriel was born, have in the main have not?
    At this stage in our history we must be responsible for writing about our culture. Others can join in, but in the right place, which is not a black-focused blog.


  8. Do you know a better way to shatter a myth as you have been railing than for the author to expose a Causation view how she sees Black culture on a Black dominated blog?


  9. Mariposa

    Why only King…? what about Harriet Tubman, Frederick Douglass and Marcus Garvey …? I knew very little about Frederick Douglass when I was in school, but I took the initiative to learn all about the man as I could…

    Nonetheless, no system of education can teach us about all of the persons that have made a contribution to Black culture… Just like no class in philosophy can focus on all of philosophers that have made a contribution to philosophy…

    Now Music is known as the International Language, and Marley conveyed his message through this medium so that is why he is still popular in the minds of the young and old population …

  10. SirSimpleSimonPresidentForLife Avatar
    SirSimpleSimonPresidentForLife

    The New Zealand gunman published “a “manifesto” in which he denounced immigrants, calling them “invaders”.

    According to Politico.com of 24 June, 2018,President Donald Trump tweeted “President Donald Trump on Sunday continued escalating his rhetoric about migrants, tweeting, “We cannot allow all of these people to invade our country.”

    https://www.politico.com/story/2018/06/24/trump-invade-country-immigrants-667191


  11. Mr. Lexicon

    You made some excellent points, albeit the argument is meaningless.

    You can’t seriously compare M.L. King with Bob Marley……… one was a civil rights activist, the other, an entertainer.

    People all over the world recognize “Martin Luther King’s Day,” which is celebrated on the third Monday in January. His legacy lives on.

    So what is the big deal if Caribbean people take time out to recognize a man of the region.

    For example, Sir Garfield Sobers is an icon, not only in Barbados but world-wide. He is revered by cricketers all over the world.


  12. I am trying to figure how much influence has Bob Marley music done for world peace
    Memory serves to remember the youth acceptance of Bob Marley and his music serving them as a stepping stone to smoking marijuana
    I dont remember anyone ever mentioning Marley and his music as a direction towards peaceful solutions
    As a matter of fact Bob Marley habit of smoking weed help to drive and gave way for Rastafarian religion to used Marijuana as a religious ritual

  13. WARU, Crazy & Unstable, Hogging the Blog Avatar
    WARU, Crazy & Unstable, Hogging the Blog

    “We cannot allow all of these people to invade our country.”

    Says the lowlife racists who invaded and are still squatting on native lands in the Americas, US, Canada, Australia, NZ….and everywhere else they have infested.

  14. William Skinner Avatar
    William Skinner

    @ Mariposa

    You ought not to delve into matters of which your knowledge is shallow.
    Marley successfully brought Manley and Seaga together when Jamaica , was sinking into the well of violent garrison politics.
    Marleys music highlighted the plight of the poor and downtrodden.
    He used his music to cultivate peace at home and abroad and we can go on and on.
    Take it easy , you have clearly demonstrated that you know little of his impact and influence on the broader world peace movement.


  15. Respect.


  16. Marley released the liberation struggle song “Zimbabwe” in 1979. He premiered it later that year at the Amandla Festival of Unity at Harvard Stadium in Boston, Massachusetts.

    “During the years of Chimurenga, Bob Marley’s music had been adopted by the guerrilla forces of the Patriotic Front; indeed, there were stories of ZANLA troops playing Marley cassettes in the bush,” University of Zimbabwe professor Fred Zindi tells Forbes. “Certainly, Marley’s music has potency and a commitment which goes far beyond simple entertainment. He now enjoys a special place in Third World culture; an artist who directly identifies with the black African struggle. Thus, he was the only outside artist asked to participate in Zimbabwe’s independence celebrations.”

    In 1980, Marley performed a concert at Harare’s Rufaro Stadium in celebration of Zimbabwean Independence.


  17. Africa unite.


  18. Listen.


  19. Memories of Alexandra’s and my miss spent younger days. lol


  20. What some of us have come to know is that it does not matter the good some men and women have done while on this earth, there will always be somebody prepared to rubbish their contribution.


  21. Now when some here suggest that Marley is a MLK then i have to ask for proof of such recognition


  22. @ David,

    Anyone who listened to the lyrics in Bob Marley songs would know the relevance of his music.

    I am a fan of Bob Marley and the Wailers and enjoy the quality playing of the lead guitarist.


  23. I am still waiting to hear if Mariposa is in favour of taking down Errol Barrow’s statue. Brother Bob was a man. He had his failings. But Brother Bob was a man of peace and love – and the uplifting of the oppressed, particularly the despised black man.. He preached it in a most enjoyable but thought provoking way. Some people heard and acted accordingly. Some had their minds opened. Some dismissed his message and continued on their violent path. That is how it always was, is and ever shall be. Dr. King’s work is still in progress. Mandela’s work is still in progress. Bob Marley’s work is still in progress. Their messages still resonate even with those who were born after their death.

    People work through different media according to their talents. Music is a powerful force and should not be underestimated. Why would we be railing about messages in music, for example, on mini buses if we did not recognise that. We cannot have it both ways. Positive music is powerful just as negative music is powerful. Why do you guys have campaign jingles? Why do believers sing during worship? Why do nursery schools and infant classes spend so much time singing?

    ABCDEFG…HIJKLMNOP…. QRSTUV….WXY and Z
    Now I know my ABC
    Next time won’t you sing with me

    Much easier to learn.

    Even people who never sat and thought, read a book, watched a documentary, went to a lecture or a worship session would have heard Bob’s music. He reached those whom the intellectuals would not reach.

    The arts are very important for those reasons and very influential.

    Nothing you or others have said can take away from the man or his message. Not what you perceive as his adultery, weed smoking or anything else that has been publicized about him. He believed what he said and lived it. But most of all he was HUMBLE. As we all need to be.

    Please note that Rastafari men were allowed to have more than one woman. I think they err in that respect as I do in others. But nobody, including myself, gets it all right in my experience.

    David,

    Religion is supposed to be a way of life. To the believer there would be no secular and non-secular world.

    Greene,

    One cannot discuss Brother Bob without discussing religion because he was a religious man with a religious message. This site is not meant for just those who contribute but for those who read. There is a wider audience out there who may gain something from the discussion. Why does not Hal submit on cultural appropriation? Is he not a writer? Do what I do when i am familiar with a person’s posting style and message – scan and scroll!

    GP,

    My comment re the above, as you should now see, was meant for Greene and not for you.




  24. Uh -oh!

    As true as those to videos are this is what ! meant to post.


  25. Excuse me! I am so tired I think I need to sleep.

    Third time lucky, I hope.


  26. One of the greatest songs shared by Bob Marley with the world is Emanciaption Song.


  27. I am trying to post Black Man by Red plastic Bag. something is going wrong. Will try again later.


  28. Redemption song,


  29. Donna

    That was a deep piece of wisdom above …

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