Not really, but who needs to tell the truth when you can make funny videos!
Buju Banton is one of the biggest names in dancehall music. He’s been making records for over 20 years, some of his undeniably great music has made him one of the biggest stars in Jamaica, and regarded by many as a voice for the poor majority.
Unfortunately, he’s also a violent homophobe. LGBT rights groups around the world have picketed his shows and called on promoters not to book him because of his anti-gay tunes. The most significant is ‘Boom Bye Bye,’ which is basically about killing LGBT people. It advocates shooting, burning and pouring acid as methods.
Many of his defenders claim that he was still a teenager when he released this tune in 1992, and he’s since moved on and doesn’t perform it any more. The truth is that Banton knows that it’s controversial, and so he’s careful about when he performs it because it can potentially get him in trouble. That doesn’t mean he doesn’t do it though, with his mike being cut off at a 2007 show in New York when he began the song.
It would be one thing if his hatred of LGBT people was confined to records, but it’s not. Several witnesses have identified him as part of a mob that broke into a home in Kingston in 2004 shouting homophobic insults, and then beat two men severely, leaving one of them blind in one eye.
Banton denies the claims, and the police have yet to charge him in connection with the attack. But the Jamaican police are notorious for the lack of care for violence against LGBT people, as homosexuality remains completely illegal in Jamaica and punishable by prison with hard labour.
Also in 2004, the founder of the Jamaican Forum for Lesbians, All-sexuals and Gays, (an organisation fighting for LGBT rights under very difficult circumstances and desperately in need of support), Brian Williamson, was murdered in his home by multiple stab wounds from a machete.
Buju Banton himself is currently in US prison after being charged with possession with intent to distribute cocaine last year. But in the meantime, his homophobic lyrics continue to be a rallying cry for hate, which is why the Eclectic Method have put together this little video to set the record straight:
I wonder if Jamaicans have the same perplexed look I have on my face when I listen to Buju Banton when they watch Sweet Sixteen or listen to Matt McGinn.
I lived in Jamaica with my Jamaican boyfriend – no problem ( man )
Was quite a while ago , mind. Here’s links to article about homophobia being
colonial legacy, review of film Darker Side of Black ,
made by black gay filmaker Isaac Julien and upcoming film , Taboo….Yardies
Colonial Legacy
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2004/jul/03/gayrights.comment
Darker Side of Black
http://movies.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=990CE7D7103CF935A35752C0A963958260
Taboo ..Yardies
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-a4OTQ95K0U&playnext_from=TL&videos=uCeVY154lek
You can still find this video “Buju Banton Comes Out The Closet” at a number of locations on the internet:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=akOdgE302eA
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tGK0Z1Ft5Uw
http://vimeo.com/13509735
http://www.metacafe.com/watch/4942075/buju_banton_is_out/
To find out what all the hooha about Mark Myrie, aka “Buju Banton,” is about see http://cancelbujubanton.wetpaint.com/
Thanks Sam, I hadn’t noticed it wasn’t embedded any more, fixed it now!