Marley knew the drill – in Jamaica, at the height of
his success, when music and politics were still one, before the fog of
censorship rolled into the island, old wounds were opened by a wave of
destabilization politics. Stories appeared in the local, regional and
international press downsizing the achievements of the quasi-socialist Jamaican
government under Prime Minister Michael Manley. In the late 1970s, the island
was flooded with cheap guns, heroin, cocaine, right-wing propaganda, death
squad rule and, as Grenada’s Prime Minister Maurice Bishop described it three
years later, the CIA’s “pernicious attempts [to] wreck the economy.”
“Destabilization,” Bishop told the emergent New Jewel
Party, “is the name given the most recently developed method of controlling and
exploiting the lives and resources of a country and its people by a bigger and
more powerful country through bullying, intimidation and violence.”
In response to the fascistic machinations of the CIA,
Marley wove his lyrics into a revolutionary crucifix to ward off the
cloak-and-dagger “vampires” descending upon the island. June 1976:
Then-Governor-General Florizel Glasspole placed Jamaica under martial law to
stanch the bloody pre-election violence. Prime Minister Manley’s People’s
National Party asked the Wailers to play at the Smile Jamaica concert in
December. Despite the rising political mayhem, Marley agreed to perform.
In late November, a death squad slipped beneath the
gates of Marley’s home on Hope Road in Kingston. As biographer Timothy White
tells it, at about 9 PM, “the torpor of the quiet tropical night was
interrupted by a queer noise that was not quite like a firecracker.” Marley was
in the kitchen at the rear of the house eating a grapefruit when he heard the
bursts of automatic gunfire. Don Taylor, Marley’s manager, had been talking to
the musician when the bullets ripped through the back of his legs. The men were
“peppering the house with a barrage of rifle and pistol fire, shattering
windows and splintering plaster and woodwork on the first floor.” Rita Marley,
trying to escape with her children and a reporter from the Jamaica Daily News,
was shot by one of the men in the front yard. The bullet caught her in the
head, lifting her off her feet as it burrowed between scalp and skull.
Meanwhile, a man with an automatic rifle had burst
through the back door off the pantry, pushing past a fleeing Seeco Patterson, the
Wailers’ percussionist, to aim beyond Don Taylor at Bob Marley. The gunman got
off eight shots. One bullet struck a counter, another buried itself in the
ceiling, and five tore into Taylor. He fell but remained conscious, with four
bullets in his legs and one buried at the base of his spine. The last shot
creased Marley’s breast below his heart and drilled deep into his arm.
The survival of the reggae singer and his entire
entourage appeared to be the work of Rasta. “The firepower these guys
apparently brought with them was immense,” Wailers publicist Jeff Walker
recalls. “There were bullet holes everywhere. In the kitchen, the bathroom, the
living room, floors, ceilings, doorways and outside.”
There has since been widespread belief that the CIA
arranged the hit on Hope Road. Neville Garrick, a Marley insider and former art
director of the Jamaican Daily News, had film of “suspicious characters”
lurking near the house before the assassination attempt. The day of the
shooting he had snapped some photos of Marley standing beside a Volkswagen in a
pool of mango-tree shade. The strangers in the background made Marley nervous;
he told Garrick that they appeared to be “scouting” the property. In the
prints, however, their features were too blurred by shadow to make out. After
the concert, Garrick took the photographs and prints to Nassau. Sadly, while
the Wailers and crew prepared to board a flight to London, he discovered that
the film had been stolen.
Many of the CIA’s files on Bob Marley remain
classified to the present day. However, on December 5, 1976, a week after the
assault on Hope Road, the Wailers appeared at the Smile Jamaica fest, despite
their wounds, to perform one long, defiant anthem of rage directed at the CIA –
“War” – suggesting the Wailers’ own attitude toward the “Vampires” from
Langley:
Until the ignoble and unhappy regimes
That now hold our brothers
In Angola, in Mozambique,
South Africa
In subhuman bondage
Have been toppled,
Utterly destroyed,
Everywhere is war…
Only a handful of Marley’s most trusted comrades knew
of the band’s whereabouts before the festival. Yet a member of the film crew,
or so he claimed – reportedly, he didn’t have a camera – managed to talk his
way past machete-bearing Rastas to enter the Hope Road encampment: one Carl
Colby, son of the late CIA director William Colby.
While the band prepared for the concert, a gift was
delivered, according to a witness at the enclave – a pair of boots for Bob
Marley. Former Los Angeles cinematographer Lee Lew-Lee [his camera work can be
seen in the Oscar-winning documentary The Panama Deception] was close friends
with members of the Wailers, and he believes that Marley’s cancer can be traced
to the boots: “He put his foot in and said, ‘Ow!’ A friend got in there… he
said, ‘let’s [get] in the boot, and he pulled a length of copper wire out – it
was embedded in the boot.”
Had the wire been treated chemically with a
carcinogenic toxin? The appearance of Colby at Marley’s compound was certainly
provocative. [And so was Colby's subsequent part in the fall of another black
cultural icon, O.J. Simpson, nearly 20 years later. At Simpson's preliminary
hearing in 1995, Colby - who resided next door to Nicole Simpson on Gretna
Green Way in Brentwood, a mile from her residence on Bundy - and his wife both
took the stand to testify for the prosecution that Nicole's ex-husband had
badgered and threatened her. Colby's testimony was instrumental in the formal
charge of murder filed against Simpson and the nationally televised fiasco
known as the "Trial of the Century."]
Seventeen years after the Hope Road assault, Don
Taylor published a memoir, Marley and Me, in which he alleges that a “senior
CIA agent” had been planted among the crew as part of the plan to “assassinate”
Marley. It’s possible that this lapse in security allowed Colby entrance to the
compound. It’s clear that the CIA wanted Marley out of the picture. After the
assassination attempt, a rumor circulated that the CIA was going to finish
Marley off. The source of the rumor was the agency itself. The Wailers had set
out on a world tour, and CIA agents informed Marley that should he return to
Jamaica before the election, he would be murdered.
Taylor and others close to Marley suspect that it was
more than a threat. Lew-Lee recalls: “I didn’t think so at the time, but I’ve
always had my suspicions because Marley later broke his toe playing soccer, and
when the bone wouldn’t mend the doctors found that the toe had cancer. The
cancer metastasized throughout his body, but [Marley] believed he could fight
this thing.”
British researcher Michael Conally observes: “They
certainly had reasons for wanting to. For one, Marley’s highly charged message
music made him an important figure that the rest of the world was beginning to
notice. It was an influence that was hard to ignore, least of all because
everywhere you went you saw middle- and upper-class white people sprouting
dreadlocks, smoking spliffs and adopting the Rastafarian lifestyle. This sort
of thing didn’t sit well with traditionalists and authoritarian types.”
The soccer game took place in Paris in 1977, five
months after the boot incident, Marley took to the field with one of the
leading teams in the country to break the monotony of the Wailers “Exodus”
tour. His right toe was injured in a tackle. The toenail came off. At first, it
wasn’t considered a serious wound.
But it would not heal. Marley was limping by July and
consulted a physician, who was shocked by the toe’s appearance. It was so eaten
away that doctors in London advised it be amputated. Marley’s religion forbade
it: “Rasta no abide amputation,” he insisted. He told the physician, “De living
God, His Imperial Majesty Haile Selassie I, Ras Tafari, Conquering Lion of the
Tribe of Judah…He will heal me wit’ de meditations of me ganja chalice.” No
scalpel, he said, “will crease me flesh… C’yant kill Rasta. Rastamon live out.”
He flew to Miami and Dr. William Bacon performed a
skin graft on the lesion. The disease lingered undiagnosed and spread
throughout his body.
Isaac Fergusson, a friend and devotee, observed the
slow death of Bob Marley firsthand. In the three years separating soccer injury
from cancer diagnosis, Marley remained immersed in music, “ignoring the advice
of doctors and close associates that he stop and obtain a thorough medical
examination.” He refused to give up recording and touring long enough to
consult a doctor. Marley “would have to quit the stage and it would take years
to recoup the momentum. This was his time and he seized upon it. Whenever he
went into the studio to record, he did enough for two albums. Marley would
drink his fish tea, eat his rice-and-peas stew, roll himself about six spliffs
and go to work. With incredible energy and determination, he kept strumming his
guitar, maybe 12 hours, sometimes till daybreak.” Reggae artist Jimmy Cliff
observed after Marley’s death: “What I know now is that Bob finished all he had
to do on this earth.” Marley was aware by 1977 that he was dying, and set out
to condense a lifetime of music into the few years remaining.
The CIA Rocks Trenchtown
In 1975, US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, on a
diplomatic junket to the island, had assured Prime Minister Manley in a private
meeting that there was “no attempt now underway involving covert actions
against the Jamaican government.” But in the real world, something of a
Caribbean pogrom was underway, overseen, of course, by the CIA. As Kissinger
croaked his denials to Manley, the destabilization push was already afoot. The
emphasis at this stage was on psychological operations, but in the election
year of 1976 a series of covert interventions – employing arson, bombing and
assassination as required – completely disrupted Manley’s democratic-socialist
rule.
An arsenal of automatic weapons somehow found their
way to Jamaica. The CIA’s thugs, directed by a growing coven of pinstriped
officers reporting to the US embassy in Kingston, quietly organized
secret-police cadres to stoke political violence. Huge consignments of guns and
advanced communications gear were smuggled onto the island. One such shipment
was intercepted by Manley’s security patrols – a cache of 500 man-eating
submachine guns.
The firearms were shipped to the island from Miami by
the Jamaican Freedom League, a right-wing paramilitary faction with roots in
Langley, financed largely by drugs. Peter Whittington, the group’s
second-in-command, was convicted of drug trafficking in Dade County, Florida.
The funds were laundered by the League at Miami’s Bank of Perrine, the key
American subsidiary of Castle Bank, then the CIA’s financial base in Latin
America. The bank was owned and operated by Paul Helliwell, bagman for the Bay
of Pigs invasion, accused even by the conservative Wall Street Journal of
involvement in the global narcotics trade.
A paramilitary force was mustered to quell the
Rastafarian backlash, and the inevitable CIA-trained Cuban exiles beached in
Jamaica. Among them was Luis Posada Carriles, once a secret-police official
under deposed Cuban dictator Fulgencio Batista, currently a full-fledged agent
of the CIA.
The “duppies” [ghosts] policed dissent by incarnating
the chemical-warfare tactics of the 1960s. In a year’s time, Marley saw the
Rastafarian resistance disintegrate with the rise of a ruthless, highly
organized narcotics syndicate, apparently from the Jamaican sand. The sudden
abundance of hard narcotics in Jamaica wounded the Rastafarian movement with
the burning spear of addiction. Marley and former Wailer Peter Tosh promoted
ganja as an alternative to cocaine and heroin, a statement of independence and
cohesion against the brutal stratagems of colonial rule.
For the first time in Jamaican politics, public
figures roundly criticized the governing elite. Peter Tosh, in particular,
split form his peers in the local music scene by serving up impassioned
political “livalogues” at his public performances. Tosh pushed on, a cursing,
joint-smoking, speechifying black militant, until his murder six years after
the passing of Marley.
The suppression of Rastafarian protest escalated in
the late 1970s, and grotesque human-rights abuses were commonplace. And the
political climate in the Caribbean sweltered with the escalation of American
covert operations well into the next decade.
The Nazi Doctor
In September 1980, Bob Marley suffered a stroke while
jogging in New York’s Central Park. He was released by a physician the
following day and recuperated in his room at the Essex Hotel. Rita Marley
choked when she saw him. Her fears rose into uncontrollable sobs, “Wha’ has
happened to you?” “Doctor say brain tumor black me out,” Marley told her. Isaac
Fergusson had caught the dying rebel’s performance at Madison Square Garden a
few days before, and had realized then that something was terribly wrong, even
as Marley gripped his guitar “like a machine gun” and “threw his ropelike hair
about,” a “whirlwind around his small black face. The crack of a drum exploded
into bass, into organ.” Midway into the set, the Wailers stood back and Marley
did a solo: “These songs of freedom is all I ever had…” Why, Fergusson
wondered, was he singing this alone? Why the past tense?
“Emancipate yourself from mental slavery…”
Fergusson noticed that Marley “was always rubbing his
forehead and grimacing while performing.” The following weekend, Fergusson
stopped to visit Rita Marley and Judy Mowatt. He asked about Bob’s condition.
“We don’t know for sure,” Rita told him. “The doctors say he has a tumor in his
brain.” In a silent moment, Fergusson realized that Marley was dying.
He was convinced at last to seek medical treatment.
Marley was admitted to the Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in Manhattan. Tests
revealed that the cancer had spread to his brain, lungs and liver. The reggae
legend received a few radiation treatments, but checked out when the New York
papers let on that he was seriously ill. Marley consulted physicians in Miami,
briefly returned to Sloan-Kettering, then to Jamaica, where he met with Dr.
Carl “Pee Wee” Fraser, recommended to him by fellow Rastafarians. Dr. Fraser
advised that Marley talk to Dr. Josef Issels, a German “holistic comprehensive
immunotherapist” then practicing at the Ringberg Clinic in Rottach-Egern, a
small Bavarian village located at the southern end of Tegernsee Lake.
Marley traveled to Bavaria and checked into the
clinic. Dr. Issels met him, looked him over and allowed, without naming
sources: “I hear that you’re one of the most dangerous black men in the world.”
The portrait offered by publicity releases from the
Issels Foundation is imposing enough: Dr. Issels, born in 1907, founded the
first hospital [financed by the estate of Karl Gischler, a Dutch shipping
magnate] in Europe for comprehensive immunotherapy of cancer in 1951. He was
the medical director and director of research.
All well and good… until it is considered that by this
time, Dr. Issels was 44 years old. Certainly, his medical career did not begin
in 1951. Why the unexplained gap in his bona fides? During World War II, it
seems, Dr. Issels could be found plying his “research” skills for Hitler’s SS.
Lew-Lee claims that Dr. Issels was assigned to the Auschwitz concentration
camp, working alongside Dr. Josef Mengele. But author Gordon Thomas, in a
long-out-of-print biography of Issels, contends that the doctor served in the
SS only briefly. At any rate, he was indeed a member of the Nazi Party and
served under Heinrich Himmler. Bob Marley, the “dangerous” black upstart, had
placed his life in the hands of a Nazi doctor.
Lew-Lee recalls that Marley rejected conventional
cancer treatments, “wanted to do anything but turn to Western medicine. This
may have been a mistake.” Evidently so. “Dr. Issels said that he could cur Bob.
And they cut Bob’s dreadlocks off. And he was getting all of this crazy, crazy
medical treatment in Bavaria. I know this because Devon Evans [a musician then
playing with the Wailers] told me that Bob was receiving these medical
treatments.” Evans came by “every two or three months – 1979-80 – and told me:
‘Yeah, man, they’re killing Bob. They are KILLING Bob.’ I said, ‘What do you
mean ‘they are killing Bob?’ ‘No, no, man,’ he said. ‘Dis Dr. Issels, he’s a
Nazi!’”
Dr. Issels was one of the scores of Nazi practitioners
to escape the attention of the Nuremberg tribunal. Michael Kater, a professor
of history at York University in Canada, informs us that physicians of the
Hitler period were steeped in Nazi racial doctrines at medical school, that
many of them continued to practice undisturbed by war-crimes tribunals: “It was
in a conventional medical culture, infiltrated from one side by a science
alienated from humanity and from another by charlatanry, that young physicians
in the Third Reich were raised to learn and prepare for practice, with many
predestined to practice after 1945.”
Dr. Josef Issels first offered his alternative cancer
therapies in a Nazi-fied atmosphere of ruthlessness and quackery. In the 1930s,
chronic cancer patients consulted Dr. Issels and received his experimental
“combination therapy,” a regimen of diet, homeopathic remedies, vitamins,
exercise and detoxification, among other holistic approaches. Today, his clinic
offers training in cancer immunization vaccines, UV blood irradiation, oxygen
and ozone therapy, “biological dentistry” [tooth extraction], immunity
elicitation by mixed bacterial vaccine, blood heating, and so on.
The medical establishment, particularly in the UK, has
long rallied against some of Issels’ therapies. A former BBC producer reported
in a televised documentary that Dr. Issels was arrested in September 1960. The
police warrant alleged, “The accused claims to treat… cancer…. In fact [he] has
neither reliable diagnostic methods nor a method to treat cancer successfully.
It is contended [that] he is aware of the complete ineffectiveness of this
so-called… tumor treatment.” It also called Issels a flight risk, noting that
“he had prepared for all contingencies by depositing huge amounts in foreign
banks.”
Marley, unaware of his physician’s past, was placed on
a regimen of exercise, vaccines [some illegal], ozone injections, vitamins and
trace minerals.
In time, Dr. Issels also introduced torture. Long
needles were plunged through Marley’s stomach through to the spine. The
patient-victim was told that this was part of his “treatment.” The torture
continued until Marley foundered on the threshold of death.
Cedella Booker-Marley, his mother, visited him three
times in the course of the “treatments.” She found Dr. Issels to be an
“arrogant wretch” with the “gruff manners of a bully,” who subjected her dying
son to a bloodless brand of “hocus-pocus” medicine. Booker-Marley: “I myself
witnessed Issels’ rough treatment of Nesta [Marley]. One time I went with Nesta
to the clinic, and we settled down in a treatment room. Issels came in and
announced to Nesta, ‘I’m going to give you a needle.’” Dr. Issels “plunged the
needle straight into Nesta’s navel right down to the syringe. [Marley] grunted
and winced. He could only lie there helplessly, writhing on the table, trying
his best to hide his pain. ‘Jesus Christ,’ I heard myself mumbling.” Issels
yanked out the needle and strolled casually out of the room. Marley was left
groaning with pain. “I went and stood at his side and held is hand.
.
“With every visit,” she recalls, “I found him smaller,
frailer, thinner. As the months of dying dragged on, the suffering was etched
all over his face. He would fall into fits of shaking, when he would lose all
control and shiver from head to toe like a coconut leaf in the breeze. His eyes
would turn in his head, rolling in their sockets until even the white jelly was
quivering.”
Marley’s torment was aggravated by starvation. “For a
whole week sometimes,” Booker laments, her son “would be allowed no nourishment
other than what he got intravenously. Constantly hungry, even starving, he
wasted away to a skeleton” – starved to death like an Auschwitz inmate. “To
watch my first-born shrivel up to skin and bone ripped at my mother’s heart.”
Marley weighed 82 pounds on the day of his death. The starvation diet must have
devastated his immune system and rushed his demise, not prolonged his life as
Dr. Issels and some biographers have contended. It also caused him intense
pain. “It would drag on so, for one long painful month after the other, and
every day would be a knife that death stabbed and twisted anew in an already
open, bleeding wound.” The agony “wrapped him up like a crushing snake.”
Death finally claimed Marley on May 11, 1981. In
Jamaica, May 20 was declared a national day of mourning. Marley’s wake at the
National Arena was attended by some 30,000 mourners.
He was survived by his old partner Peter Tosh, who was
shot to death in 1987. Marley and Tosh were not the only musicians murdered for
political reasons in Jamaica. By the end of the decade, all Jamaican musicians
were censored and subject to shell-casing politics.
The island’s Daily Gleaner reported in 1987 that
Winston “Yellowman” Foster, stopped at a police roadblock and frisked for
drugs, resisted detainment. One of the officers hissed, “You want to go like
Tosh?” When Tosh went, there was nothing random about it. Witnesses and friends
insist that he was a political hit. Two of the gunmen fled to New York to
remain at large. The third was Dennis “Leppo” Lobban, an ex-con sentenced for
the murder after an 11-minute trial.
Like Marley, Peter Tosh found the bloodshed and hypocrisy
of death squad justice and CIA covert ops in the Third World unbearable. He was
so obsessed with hidden evil and the upswell of violence in Jamaica that they
visited him in his sleep. He had “visions” of “destruction [and] millions of
people inside of [a] pit going down. And I… say, ‘bloodbath, where so much
people come from?’ and looking in the pit, mon, it the biggest pit… but the way
the people was crying, it was awful.”
High Times
The following
article originally appeared in the February 2002 issue of HIGH TIMES Magazine
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