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Leonard Howell

 
Wikipedia: Leonard Howell

Rastafari movement

Main doctrines
Jah · Afrocentrism · Ital · Zion · Cannabis use
Central figures

Jesus Christ · Haile Selassie · Marcus Garvey · Leonard Howell · God

Key scriptures
Bible · Kebra Nagast · The Promise Key · Holy Piby · My Life and Ethiopia's Progress · Royal Parchment Scroll of Black Supremacy
Branches and festivals
Mansions · United States · Shashamane · Grounation Day
Notable individuals
Bob Marley · Walter Rodney · Mutabaruka
See also:
Vocabulary · Persecution · Dreadlocks · Reggae · Ethiopian Christianity · Index of Rastafari articles

Leonard Percival Howell (June 16, 1898 – 1981) was a Jamaican religious figure. He was one of the first preachers of the Rastafari movement (along with Joseph Hibbert, Archibald Dunkley, and Robert Hinds), and is sometimes known as "The First Rasta."

Born in May Crawle River, Jamaica, Howell left the country as a youth and returned in 1932. He began preaching in 1933 about what he considered the symbolic portent for the African diaspora—the crowning of Ras Tafari Makonnen as Emperor Haile Selassie I of Ethiopia. His preaching asserted that Haile Selassie was the "Messiah returned to earth." Although this resulted in him being arrested, tried for sedition and imprisoned for two years, the Rastafari movement grew. [1]

Over the following years, Howell came into conflict with all the establishment authorities in Jamaica: the planters, the trade unions, established churches, police and colonial authorities. Nevertheless, this movement prospered, and today the Rastafari faith exists worldwide.

Leonard Howell died in Kingston, Jamaica.

Howell's doctrine of Rastafari

Though imprisoned for it, Howell published his doctrine with the title The Promise Key under the pen name G.G. Maragh. Some of the themes were later discarded in the movement, but the main ones in this book included:

  • Opposition to the wickedness
  • The dignity of the Black race
  • God's revenge on the wicked for their wickedness
  • The negation, persecution and humiliation of the government and legal bodies of wicked world
  • Preparation to return to Africa
  • Acknowledgment of Emperor Haile Selassie I as the Supreme Being and the only ruler of the Black people.

References

  1. ^ Barrett, Sr., Leonard E.; Lee, Helene, Davis, Stephen (foreword) (2005). "The Rastafarians". The First Rasta: HON.Leonard Howell and the Rise of Rastafarianism. Chicago Review Press, USA. ISBN 1-55652-558-3. 

External links


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