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Who Can Find A True Rasta Woman? Her Worth Is Far Above Diamonds... Written by Dr. Asantewaa Oppong The rare and precious Rasta woman is made so by the social conditions which limit female participation in the global black freedom struggle. The authentic Rasta woman who accepts without conditions the divinity of their Imperial Majesties Emperor Haile Selassie and Empress Menen, and has taken a decided stance against the international anti-black system of oppression is indeed rare! A woman who the world misunderstands…and cannot embrace. The world certainly makes itself accessible for the black woman who maintains the trajectory set for her during the murderous era of European enslavement and colonialism. The black woman who invests her intelligence solely into her appearance, practices profane sexual behavior, and most importantly remains mute in the face of the wickedness of current social order, can be seen strewn on the covers of western magazines, smiling on billboards, and ever-present in the Babylon business sector. This kind of black woman expresses profound gratitude for crumbs that fall for her from the table of the racially and politically privileged. Standing in contrast is the Rasta woman. She is criticized for giving sacred acknowledgment to someone other than the “white guy” (white Jesus) who lives in the sky. “How 42 Magazinesolstice 2014/15 winter / September 2012 could you possibly accept that a king of Ethiopia is God?” her companions ask. “Leave that for the men, we women don’t behave like that” she will likely be told. What her detractors miss is that one of the oldest definitions of God, as put forward for by our African Ancestors, the great ones of the Nile Valley, is that the King is God!! In fact, not only the king but the entire royal house is God manifest in human community. Thus, Rasta women are retaining and practicing one of oldest traditions known in the recorded history of the world. The throne of Ethiopia is renowned for its stance against injustice worldwide. The ancient forebears of this throne were called by historians, “the blameless Ethiopians.” With all of the governments around her showing passivity in the face of crippling oppression, the Rasta woman, her Kingman, and her family cry out incessantly for the return of the righteous government to earth. It is not only men who can recognize that the planet cannot be sustained by corporate greed, neocolonialism, and the wanton destruction of the earth’s natural resources. The Rasta woman who is fully realized may be among the fieriest contenders for justice, peace, and love-asa-behavior among human beings. After all, as the mother of all she has the most to lose when humans decay while alive, and the earth becomes an inhospitable place to live. Talking back to her detractors The late author Carol Yawney, in her article Rastafarian Sistren by the Rivers of Babylon, suggests that Rasta women are oppressed within the Rastafari faith tradition because she noticed that Rasta women were usually not included when Rasta men sat and burned the chalice together. She further mentions the modest dress of Rasta women including their head covering tradition as evidence of their oppression. It should be noted that Yawney was a European-Canadian who studied Rasta women academically. None-the-less, it is important that we address her concerns so that our daughters following behind us do not stumble. The Rasta woman and man have doubtlessly been contaminated by this long journey away from our traditional culture, and our proximity to a people who practice a way of life totally opposite from the way established by our ancient ancestors. The foreign culture that we were subjected to taught and teaches that women are inferior and in fact beings that need to be kept in strict subjugation. These ideas are alien to Africa in