There is no hard evidence that strongman Samson had dreadlocks as portrayed by actor Nonso Anozie in
the Downey-Burnett television series, The Bible, which aired on the History Channel in March 2013.
Today, I guess, the latter would include the designer dreads with their fictive philosophy and
coiffed hairdos, and those with artificial tresses hanging down the sides of
their heads.
Samson was one of the last judges (rulers) of Israel during the
Philistine occupation. With his supernatural strength anchored in his locks, he
ruled the land for some 20 years. But during his tenure he violated his
commitment to God – that is, the Nazirite vow – on several occasions. The Bible
even paints him as a whore-monger. In fact, Judges 16 tells the story of how he
went to Gaza and spent the night with “a harlot there” while the Philistines
waited “at the gate of the city to ambush him.”
DREADLOCKS & RASTA
Samson lived between 1200 and 1000 BCE (Before our Common Era)
and words such as “dreadlocks” and “Rasta” would not have entered the Hebrew
lexicon. These terms would've been nonexistent everywhere. And, there
is no indication that the people of ancient Israel – especially in the little
town of Zorah where Samson was born – would’ve used any word that could’ve been
translated to mean dreadlocks or Rasta.
It’s crystal clear however, that Rasta and Rastafari are eponyms
of Ras Tafari Makonnen who was born in 1892 in Ethiopia. Later when he was
crowned Emperor Haile Selassie I, he ruled Ethiopia from 1930 to 1974.
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A hideous dreadlocks |
Even after his death at age 83 in 1975, Rastas throughout the world still referto the late emperor as Jah (Jehovah, God) and sometimes can be heard chanting: Jah Rastafar-I, ever living, ever faithful … or some mumbo jumbo like that.
One thing for sure, Selassie, or Jah Rastafari, or just plain
Jah, didn’t wear dreadlocks. But as the reggae group Morgan Heritage
sings, You don’t ha fi dread to be Rasta/This is not a dreadlocks
thing.
When the Rasta movement started in Jamaica in the 1930s, the
newly crowned Selassie was “revered as the returned messiah of the Bible.”
In fact, his imperial lineage (through Emperor Menelik I) is
often traced to a sexual encounter between the great King Solomon of Israel and
the mysterious Queen Makeda, Empress of Axum, who visited him in Jerusalem. The
Bible tells us that King Solomon, obviously a known lothario, had 700 wives and
300 concubines (mistresses).
Makeda – also known as the Queen of Sheba – apparently had the hots for Solomon. She was the wealthy ruler
of her own domain – the Kingdom of Sheba or Axum (now a city in northern Ethiopia).
There’s no information to suggest she was ever included among the king’s
permanent female conquests.
REAL PURPOSE
What’s the real purpose of a Rastaman’s dreadlocks? I can’t
recall if the real reason has ever been publicly enunciated.
If we took a cue from the Bible, however, the wearing of long locks in ancient Israel would’ve been part of the Nazirite (or Nazarite) vow. (In his 1993 song Nazerite Vow Jamaican recording artist Tony Rebel claimed that he had taken the vow). Under the vow, a person would’ve been required to submit his actions and desires to the will of God, as indicated in the Bible at Numbers 6.
If we took a cue from the Bible, however, the wearing of long locks in ancient Israel would’ve been part of the Nazirite (or Nazarite) vow. (In his 1993 song Nazerite Vow Jamaican recording artist Tony Rebel claimed that he had taken the vow). Under the vow, a person would’ve been required to submit his actions and desires to the will of God, as indicated in the Bible at Numbers 6.
Back then, the conditions of such commitment would’ve included:
abstention from alcohol, no cutting of the hair, no contact with dead bodies and
adherence to a strict dietary regimen.
Samson was a Nazirite from birth, the Bible says, and the secret
to his unbridled strength was his uncut locks, of course. But his downfall came
after the Philistine warlords offered his live-in girlfriend Delilah 5,500
silver coins to divulge the secret to his strength. (Judas Iscariot got a
measly 30 silver coins for the alleged betrayal of Christ). After she sold him
out, the Philistines cut off his locks, gouged out his eyes and Samson became
“as weak as any other man.”
Young Samson had a penchant for sexy Philistine women during his
womanizing days. And, he got married to a Philistine woman from Canaan despite
the objections of his parents. In his heyday he probably had worn his hair in
different styles and fashion to attract the ladies. If he had taken the time
and trouble to style his hair in seven locks, as the Bible says, I doubt very
much that his coif would’ve been as hideous as the unsightly dreadlocks on the
heads of some Rastamen.