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Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Reflections on Bad Friday 2026


Rasta, Redemption, and Reconciliation in the Second City

A 2026 Reckoning

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“True reconciliation is never cheap, for it is based on forgiveness which is costly. Forgiveness in turn depends on repentance, which has to be based on an acknowledgment of what was done wrong, and therefore on disclosure of the truth. You cannot forgive what you do not know.”

—Archbishop Desmond Tutu, November 30, 1995

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Do you remember the Coral Gardens incident? Yes, knatty remember… out of nowhere, soldiers and police treating them as hooligans and thieves. Yes, knatty remember. Knatty just can’t forget.


For decades, that memory lived in the margins—whispered among Rastafari elders, dismissed by official histories, buried beneath the weight of Jamaica’s post‑independence amnesia. But memory has a way of rising. In 2017, the Government of Jamaica issued a formal apology for the 1963 Coral Gardens tragedy. A monument now stands. A trust was established, and some compensation was disbursed to survivors and affected families. These were not empty gestures; they were the first fruits of a long‑overdue reckoning.


Yet if we listen closely to the voices in Montego Bay today—to the Rastafari fishermen whose beachfront stalls are swept aside for resort expansion, to the elders still denied burial rights in their own communities, to the youth who wear their locks with pride but face the same old prejudices in hiring and housing—we hear a question that lingers beneath the official ceremonies: What, then, is reconciliation after the apology?


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This is a story of an island whose modern history began in blood—Taino blood, African blood, and the blood of our own hands against ourselves. After slavery, one of our first collective acts was to launch an assault upon our own indigenous spiritual manifestations: Rastafari. In 1963, not one full year after independence, on a Good Friday now known in the community as Bad Friday, Rastafari faithful were ambushed, rounded up, humiliated, and massacred. The incident ended, as so many have, in black incarceration, black segregation, black tragedy.


For a long time, I wrote that we needed official recognition and amends. Now that we have taken that step—imperfect though it may be—the question shifts: What are the variables affecting Rastafari in Montego Bay and Jamaica today, and how do we move from acknowledgment to genuine redemption?



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The Economy of Appearance


Montego Bay is a tourist city. Its economy runs on image—on what the visitor expects to see. For decades, that image has included “Rastas” as either folkloric decoration or security risks. Today, the global wellness industry has discovered what Rastafari has always known about the sacred use of cannabis, natural living, and holistic health. But while international brands market “Rasta-inspired” aesthetics, local Rastafari entrepreneurs still struggle for licenses, for access to capital, for the right to operate their Ital cafés and herb farms without harassment. The compensation from the Coral Gardens trust, while meaningful, does not dismantle a system that continues to criminalize the same locks and lifestyle it now commodifies.


In Mobay, this contradiction plays out daily. A young man with a well‑kept beard and neat locks might be welcomed as a “cultural ambassador” at a five‑star hotel while being stopped and searched three times walking through the Hip Strip. Reconciliation, if it is to be more than a press release, must address the gap between economic utility and fundamental dignity.


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Land, Legacy, and the Right to Remain


The Coral Gardens area itself tells a story. In 1963, it was a Rastafari settlement—a place of self‑determination and communal life. Today, much of the land that once belonged to that community has been absorbed into resort developments, gated communities, and commercial zones. The survivors and their descendants have largely been displaced. The monument stands, but the people have been moved.


Across Jamaica, Rastafari communities face similar pressures—from the hills of St. Thomas to the outskirts of Kingston. In Montego Bay, where the demand for hotel real estate intensifies each year, the question of land rights is inseparable from the question of historical redress. What good is an apology if the people who received it no longer have a place to stand?


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The Unfinished Work of Reparations


The Government’s apology and the Coral Gardens trust were significant steps, but they were never meant to be the final word. In the spirit of the National Commission on Reparations—which has long included the Rastafari community’s Coral Gardens trauma in its remit—we must ask what a fuller reckoning would look like. Does it include educational scholarships that center Rastafari history? Does it include the return of ancestral lands? Does it include the release of all Rastafari members still incarcerated for cannabis possession, now that the Dangerous Drugs Act has been amended to decriminalize small quantities and recognize sacramental use?


The answer in 2026 is a mixed one. Decriminalization has eased some burdens, but the licensing regime for cannabis remains prohibitively expensive, shutting out the very communities that maintained the knowledge of the plant for generations. The spirit of Bad Friday was one of persecution; the spirit of today, if we are not careful, will be one of exclusion by other means.


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Generational Consciousness


Perhaps the most hopeful variable is the youngest generation. Rastafari youth in Montego Bay today are not content to simply carry the banner of their elders—they are building. They are digital creators, agro‑processors, musicians who blend roots reggae with modern production, activists who understand that the struggle for Rastafari dignity is intertwined with the struggle for affordable housing, environmental justice, and the decolonization of education. They do not see Coral Gardens as a closed chapter but as a foundation. They ask not only for apology but for partnership—for a seat at the table where decisions about Montego Bay’s future are made.


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The Road Forward: From Acknowledgment to Beloved Community


True reconciliation, Desmond Tutu taught us, is never cheap. The apology was a beginning, not an end. If we are serious about redemption—the kind that Martin Luther King Jr. linked to the creation of the beloved community—then we must look at the variables shaping Rastafari life in Montego Bay and Jamaica today and ask ourselves: Are we willing to move beyond symbolism into structural change?


The beloved community is not a monument. It is a fisherman from Flankers being able to access a loan without cutting his locks. It is a Rastafari elder from Coral Gardens passing down land to his grandchildren, not watching it sold to a hotel chain. It is a legal framework that respects sacramental use as a right, not a concession. It is a nation that no longer treats its most distinctive spiritual tradition as an embarrassment to be dressed up for tourists and hidden from the official story.


We have broken the silence. We have built the monument. Now comes the harder work: ensuring that the generation coming of age in 2026 inherits not just an apology but a society where Rastafari—and all that it represents—can flourish in full citizenship, in Montego Bay, and in the land of wood and water.


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Yannick Nesta Pessoa holds a B.A. in Philosophy from UWI, Mona. A writer and cultural commentator, he has spent the years advocating for historical reckoning and social evolution in Jamaica. He lives and works in Montego Bay.


© 2026 Yannick Nesta Pessoa






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