: KINGSTON, Jamaica (AP) _ Rastafarians gathered Wednesday for a : huge reggae concert and other events to mark the 100th anniversary : of the birth of Emperor Haile Selassie I of Ethiopia, whom the : Rastas consider their god. : The week of festivities starts Thursday with a free concert at : the National Arena. Freddy McGregor, Third World, Ziggy Marley and : The Melody Makers, Beres Hammond, the Mystic Revelation of : Rastafari, Judy Mowat Mutabaruka and I Jahman Levi will perform. : The Rastafarians, distinguished by their dreadlocks hairstyle, : abstinence from salt and belief that marijuana is the biblical weed : of wisdom, also plan a motorcade retracing the route followed by : Selassie during an April 1966 visit to Jamaica. : "We are His Majesty's children in the West and it is only : fitting that we mark his 100th birthday with a celebration filled : with the honor, respect and majesty that he is due,'' said Minion : "Minnie'' Phillips, the organizer of the "Jah Live'' concert. : Members of the Rastafarian cult, which originated in Jamaica, : say Selassie, who was born July 23, 1892 and died in 1975, a year : after being dethroned in a Marxist takeover, was reincarnated as : the black Christ. : They also advocate a return to Africa, which they regard as the : spiritual home of all black people. : ARTICLE Rastafarians : TEXT {rah-stuh-far'-ee-uhnz} Rastafarians are members of a Jamaican : messianic movement dating back to the 1930s in 1974 they were estimated : to number 20,000 in Jamaica. According to Rastafarian belief the only true : God is the late Ethiopian emperor HAILE SELASSIE (originally known as Ras : Tafari), and Ethiopia is the true Zion. Rastafarians claim that white Christian : preachers and missionaries have perverted the Scriptures to conceal the : fact that Adam and Jesus were black. Their rituals include the use of marijuana : and the chanting of revivalist hymns. REGGAE music is the popular music : of the movement. The Rastafarians, who stress black separatism, have exercised : some political influence in Jamaica. : BIBLIOG Bibliography: Barrett, Leonard E., The Rastafarians: Sounds of : Cultural Dissonance (1977) Sparrow, Bill, and Nicholas, Tracy, Rastafari: : A Way of Life (1979). : ARTICLE Haile Selassie, Emperor of Ethiopia : TEXT {hy'-lee suh-lahs'-ee} Haile Selassie was emperor of Ethiopia : from 1930 to 1974. A cousin of Emperor MENELIK II, he was born Tafari Makonnen : on July 23, 1892. Menelik was succeeded in 1913 by his grandson Lij Yasu, : a converted Muslim. When Lij Yasu attempted to change the official religion : of Ethiopia from Coptic Christianity to Islam, Tafari Makonnen drove him : from the throne and installed (1916) his aunt as Empress Zauditu. Assuming : the title Ras Tafari, he named himself regent and heir to the throne. He : became de facto ruler of the country and was crowned king in 1928. Two : years later, after the mysterious death of the empress, he became emperor : as Haile Selassie I. Haile Selassie ruled as an absolute monarch, centralizing : Ethiopia and instituting a number of reforms, including the abolition of : slavery. In 1935, after the Italian Fascist troops of Benito MUSSOLINI : had invaded Ethiopia, Haile Selassie gained the admiration and sympathy : of the world with his impassioned plea for aid from the League of Nations. : The league was powerless to act, however, and Mussolini consolidated his : gains and officially annexed Ethiopia to Italy. Haile Selassie was forced : into exile. Ethiopia was liberated early in World War II, and Haile Selassie : regained his throne in 1941. After the war he resumed his long-range plans : to modernize Ethiopia. He continued his autocratic rule, however, and opposition : to him grew. Beginning in 1960 a series of coups d'etat were attempted, : and in reaction his rule became increasingly despotic. Finally, in 1974 : the army succeeded in seizing control. Haile Selassie was stripped of his : powers, and later that year he was removed from the throne and placed under : house arrest. He died in Addis Ababa on Aug. 27, 1975.BIBLIOG Bibliography: : Clapham, Christopher S., Haile Selassie's Government (1969) Legum, Colin, : Ethiopia: The Fall of Haile Selassie's Empire (1975) Mosley, Leonard, : Haile Selassie: The Conquering Lion (1964) Shwab, Peter, ed., Ethiopia : and Haile Selassie (1972). :
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