Rasta documentary to premiere at Canadian film festival
RASTA: A Soul’s Journey, a feature- length documentary featuring Bob and Rita Marley’s eldest grandchild, Donisha Prendergast, will have its world premiere at the Festival du Nouveau Cinéma (FNC) in Montreal, Canada, on October 18 and 20.
The documentary directed by Stuart Samuels, is an exploration of Rastafari, the inspiration for Bob Marley’s music and his granddaughter’s desire to dispel any misconceptions about the world of Rastafari.
The FNC is one of Canada’s longest film festivals celebrating its 40th anniversary this year.
The documentary unfolds with Prendergast’s personal odyssey to challenge the perception of Rastafari, and her focus on putting the story and message of this movement into a personal and global perspective. In the film, she encounters Rastafari communities of all races in Israel, India, Jamaica, South Africa, Ethiopia, Canada, and the United Kingdom. In these countries, she meets with men and women who have chosen Rastafari. She explores how the movement evolved in that particular place and ultimately hopes to find her purpose as a young Rasta woman.
The documentary features interviews with British/Jamaican writer and dub poet Benjamin Zephaniah, who is strongly influenced by the music and poetry of Jamaica and what he calls street politics; Reggae artiste and successful entrepreneur Ras Levi-Roots, a Rastafarian who stands for peace, love and harmony amongst all people; Bob Marley’s youngest son Damian ‘Junior Gong’ Marley; widow Rita Marley; and Dr Jake Homiak, curator of the exhibit Discovering Rastafari at the National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institute.
Produced by Patricia Scarlett and Marilyn Gray, RasTa: A Soul’s Journey is a documentary that moves away from the more familiar images of Jamaica, towards the various ways in which the Rastafari movement has gone beyond the tiny Caribbean island. It reveals the ways in which the message of Rastafari has manifested itself in diverse cultures; how the tenants of Rastafari are rooted in history; and how they are made relevant to contemporary issues. The film’s narrative unfolds as a voyage of discovery, driven by a woman’s intense desire to understand the past and make a clear meaning of the present.