Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church
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The Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church is a religious group that first emerged in Jamaica during the 1940s[1] and later spread to the United States, being incorporated in Florida in 1975.[2] Its beliefs are based on both the Old and New testaments of the bible, as well as the teachings of Marcus Garvey, self-reliance, Afrocentricity and Ethiopianism. Their ceremonies include bible reading, chanting, and music incorporating elements from Nyahbinghi, Burru, Kumina[3] and other indigenous traditions. The group holds many beliefs in common with the Rastafari, including the use of marijuana as a sacrament, but differ on many points, most significantly the matter of Haile Selassie's divinity.[4]
The group expanded rapidly in the 1970s, under the leadership of 'Niah' Keith Gordon, attracting a new generation of white American followers to their "Gospel camp" in Jamaica.[5] The Coptic's pro-marijuana beliefs went as far as to consider distribution of the "sacrament" a righteous endeavour[6]: 125 and — assisted by the new arrivals — the group began to move ever-larger consignments of it from Jamaica to the United States.[6]: 122 These efforts enabled the Coptics to acquire significant land holdings in Jamaica,[7] as well as a luxurious 'embassy' in Miami.[5] They ran many farms, several businesses and provided badly-needed employment during Jamaica's turbulent 1970s.[7]
The group attracted widespread publicity in the early 1980s, when several of its members were prosecuted for importing marijuana to the United States.[8][9][10] The movement continues to this day, but went into decline when a large number of the American members were incarcerated in the 1980s,[11] followed by the death of Keith Gordon in 1986.[12]
Despite its name, the group is in no way affiliated with the Ethiopian Orthodox Church, the Coptic Orthodox Church or any other established Christian congregation.[13]
History
[edit]Early history under Louva Williams
[edit]The Coptic mansion emerged out of Jamaican chapters of the Ethiopian World Federation during the late 1940s. It was founded by Lovell Williams, known as Brother Louv (pronounced 'love'), who established the key doctrines of the group.[14] Brother Louv established the first headquarters at Mountain View Avenue[1] on the eastern side of Kingston at the foot of the Wareika Hills. It was one of many Rasta camps to the east of Kingston, including Count Ossie's, which had a different character from those in the west of the city.[15] These were typically squatter camps, set up on 'captured' government lands.[16] Brother Louv engaged in many 'reasonings' (discussions) during this time, both within the group and outside,[1] which were often accompanied by ganja smoking.[5]
The group continued with a small, dedicated group of followers throughout the 1950s and 60s, living a simple life in accordance with their strict beliefs. While it was an offshoot of the broader Rasta movement, many Coptic teachings conflicted with 'mainstream' Rasta belief, and neither side considered the other to be one and the same.
Brother Ivy Camp at Papine
[edit]After Louva Williams passed in 1969 the group splintered for a short time, until George Baker Ivy brought several of the original followers together[17] at a new camp in Hall's Delight above Papine in St. Andrew.[18] It was during this period that the first white American members joined the group[17][18]. Like most Rasta groups in the original years under Louva Williams whites were not permitted to join.[6]: 123 But Williams was said to have proclaimed that one day white people would come "seeking the doctrine"[19], and when the first curious Americans arrived at the end of the 60s Brother Ivy welcomed them. According to Clifton Middleton the first white convert to make his way to the camp was Howard Rosenbaum.[6]: 169 The group’s intense focus, even by Rasta standards, on ganja (marijuana), played no small part in attracting the newcomers. Some were also happy to be in Jamaica away from the threat of being drafted to fight in Vietnam.
Ivy was seen as a Christ-like figure by most of the new arrivals[20][19][6]: 109 , and he began to impart the doctrine to them. Members lived side by side, working together to build up the camp[19], which included an open area for prayer, separate communal sleeping areas for men and women and a large kitchen.[6]: 114 . The group aimed to be self-sufficient and grew various crops in addition to ganja.
In an effort to raise funds for the group, as well as spread the ‘holy herb’, the first ganja-smuggling missions to the US were carried out during this time.[6]: 123 [6]: 170 The American converts were central to this development as they could travel freely to the US and had connections there to distribute the product.[21]
When George Ivy died in the early 1970s the group again experienced a period of instability. Some of the original black members felt the presence of the Americans was bringing too much heat, and some demanded they now leave. It was at this stage Keith Gordon, another elder from Louva William’s time, set up a new camp in Trelawney, and invited the white members to regroup with him there.[6]: 123
Leadership of 'Niah' Keith Gordon
[edit]The new camp in Trelawney was in the heart of Cockpit Country, in the inaccessible, mountainous interior of Jamaica. This rugged terrain had served as a refuge for Maroons escaping from slavery in previous centuries. The Coptics who moved there continued to live as they had in Papine, now under the leadership of Keith Gordon.[6]: 132
By all accounts Gordon was a dedicated member of the group and fully believed in the spiritual mission, but he also had a more practical side. He'd had a tough upbringing, hustling on the streets of Kingston as a child before meeting Louva Williams and joining the Coptics.[19] Rather than living at the camp full time he lived with his wife and family in Kingston[6]: 127 , and drove a vehicle. This gave him more contact with everyday Jamaicans than most members.
Under his guidance the ganja-smuggling enterprise intensified, with the stated goal of using the proceeds to expand the movement's physical presence in Jamaica.[22] The Americans would take turns making trips home on commercial flights, using a variety of means to conceal the ganja. The main method in the early days was to empty cartons of cigarettes and replace the contents with compressed bricks of ganja, but they would also fill cigar boxes or tape it to their bodies to evade customs[22]. Some got caught in the process and served short prison sentences[6]: 124 .
Expansion in mid-1970s
[edit]A rapid phase of expansion began at this time. The airport smuggling continued and got more frequent, with cash pumped back into developing the camp, purchasing more land for cultivation, building houses, adding electrification, plumbing, irrigation and other elements.[22] Much of the money being made was put into the purchase of a 34-foot long wooden boat, with the intention to use it for smuggling hundreds of kilos at a time from Jamaica to Florida.[6]: 124 This first effort failed, despite some of the members having previous sailing experience, when the boat was sunk on its first trip from the US to Jamaica[6]: 127 . Despite this setback the operation continued to grow, and in time several more boats were purchased which succeeded in smuggling ganja to the US.[6]: 148
As time went on the group found it increasingly difficult to manage their growing operation from the remote Trelawny camp, and wanted a base closer to Kingston. They found there were many wealthy Jamaican's leaving Jamaica in the 1970s, fearful of the democratic socialism of Michael Manley's PNP government elected in 1972, and upsurge in political violence in the following years. The Coptics were able to act as an unofficial foreign exchange service to those who wished to avoid Manley's capital controls, exchanging US dollars in America for land in Jamaica.[23]
The main properties they acquired were in St Thomas, on the eastern side of the island, starting with the Rozelle property, near White Horses, followed by the adjacent Creighton Hall estate near Yallahs.[7][24]. The group made this area in St Thomas their new base of operations, naming it 'Coptic Heights'. They began to work the land vigorously, planting multiple acres of coconuts, bananas, yams, tobacco, timber, sugarcane, ginger, carrots and other crops.[7] Clifton Middleton states that "in less than a year we owned over 20,000 acres of land in Jamaica, a trucking company, a furniture factory, a cement company, numerous other developments of roads, reservoirs and power plants", as well as employing thousands of people in these efforts.[6]: 149 Over the next years they carried out several building projects, built reservoirs and a saw mill, installed plumbing systems, and electrified the area. At the top of the hill overlooking the estate they built a tabernacle to hold their prayer meetings, painted red, gold and green. To celebrate its opening on August 6, 1978, the group held a large opening procession, at which members wore elaborate coloured robes.[25]
Later growth in United States
[edit]It first established its organization in the United States in Star Island, Florida with a commune of around 40 members. The commune follows a combination of teachings from the Bible, Old and New Testament, which have been compared to Billy Graham's fundamentalism, and Kosher law.[26] Similar to the Rastafari Movement, the Coptic's views are based on the teachings of Marcus Garvey and they use cannabis as sacrament.[27] It is a misconception that pious Rastafarians smoke marijuana recreationally, and some (in particular, the canonical Ethiopian Orthodox and classical Elders) do not use it at all. However, many Rastafarian teachers have advocated for controlled ritual smoking of 'wisdom weed' in private as a meditation tool and communally from 'chalice' pipes as an 'incense to please the Lord.'[28]
In 1979 the group was accused, tried, and convicted of smuggling massive amounts of potent cannabis from Jamaica to Miami in actions that kept the Jamaican economy afloat that decade. The then-Jamaican Prime Minister Edward Seaga told a U.S. interview "It's just a little sinsemilla that it keep the country going right now". The Coptics published a free newspaper promoting Garveyism and the decriminalization of marijuana titled "Coptic Times". They also appeared on 60 Minutes on October 28, 1979. The group's leader was Niah Keith Gordon, and its spokesman in the US was Thomas Reilly, also known as Brother Louv. During the same year, The Supreme Court of Florida found: "(1) the Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church represents a religion within the first amendment to the Constitution of the United States, and (2) the "use of cannabis is an essential portion of the religious practice."[29] "Further, the Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church is not a new church or religion but the record reflects it is centuries old and has regularly used cannabis as its sacrament".[29]
In 1986 the organization participated in the Drug Enforcement Administration's hearings on cannabis rescheduling in the United States.
On January 19, 2017[30] James Tranmer, a member of the group, was pardoned and released from prison by Barack Obama before he left the office of the President of the United States. Tramner had received a 33 year prison sentence for possession of cannabis because he defended the sacramentality and goodness of cannabis without repentance. Today many are grateful for his sacrifice and his release is an acknowledgement in the paradigm change that has taken place since the majority of the population now see that to fight against a medicinal plant is a detrimental social policy.
Carl Olsen ran for governor in Iowa, as a Libertarian, in 1994 and for the U.S. House of Representatives, again as a Libertarian, in 1996. He is currently a priest in the Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church, and resides in Iowa.
The EZCC is not associated with either the Coptic Orthodox Church or the Coptic Catholic Church, both based in Egypt. The Coptic Orthodox Church has an Ethiopian sister church, which is also unrelated. The Garveyite Coptic were most closely tied to the African Orthodox Church than to Egypt. The EZCC gets its namesake from a 1959 mission to Ethiopia in which the archbishop brought a group of young Ethiopian priests and deacons to study in American universities. However, the clergy cut ties with the Garveyite Coptic organization in New York and set up its own parishes that addressed the needs of Ethiopian immigrants.[28]
The Zion Coptic Church appeared in the 2011 Billy Corben documentary Square Grouper: The Godfathers of Ganja, whose first section concerns the group and features interviews with former members. In Brazil there are the First Niubingui Church Etiope Coptic of Zion of Brasil.
External Links
[edit]- Official Website (US)
- Official Website (Jamaica)
- Marijuana & The Bible (Official Publication)
- Photo Gallery by the I'll Always Be Your Brother podcast
References
[edit]- ^ a b c Barnett, Michael (2017). "Chapter 3 - The different mansions of the Rastafari movement". The Rastafari Movement: A North American and Caribbean Perspective. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-138-68215-3.
- ^
"United States Tax Court Memo 1989-593". Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church. Archived from the original on January 12, 2024.
On April 15, 1975, ZCC was incorporated in the State of Florida
- ^ "Salvation Story" (video). Patrick White. September 2020.
- ^ Barrett, Leonard E. (1998). The Rastafarians. Boston: Beacon Press. p. 239. ISBN 978-0-8070-1039-6.
By 1976 the church had adopted Rastafarian-like beliefs without accepting the divinity of Haile Selassie
- ^ a b c Hiaasen, Carl (August 2, 1981). "The Law and Brother Louv". Miami Herald. Archived from the original on January 13, 2024.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Middleton, Clifton Ray (January 2, 2021). Ganja Warrior Priest: Genesis. ASIN B08RY4X1CY.
- ^ a b c d Williams, Lloyd (April 26, 1981). "The Coptics - a country within Jamaica". The Sunday Gleaner. p. 8. Archived from the original on Mar 28, 2024.
- ^ "Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church Members Arrive to Court (September 8, 1980)" (video). youtube.com. September 8, 1980.
- ^ "News reports on EZCC" (video). youtube.com. 19 September 2020.
- ^ Dickey, Christopher (November 10, 1980). "Offbeat Church, Outgrowth of Marijuana Trade, Prospers on Island". Washington Post. Archived from the original on January 15, 2024.
- ^ "Nine members of the Jamaica-based Ethiopian Zion Coptic church were convicted by a federal jury". United Press International. June 19, 1981. Archived from the original on January 15, 2024.
- ^ "Woman, son stabbed dead". The Daily Gleaner. Jamaica. September 20, 1998. p. 1.
Keith 'Nyah' Gordon, the leader of the Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church who died around two years ago.
- ^ Akladios, Michael (October 11, 2020). "Holy Smoke: Egypt's Copts Discover the Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church". Egypt Migrations. Archived from the original on March 29, 2024.
- ^ Barnett, Michael (June 1, 2005). "The many faces of Rasta: Doctrinal Diversity within the Rastafari Movement". Caribbean Quarterly. 51 (2): 67–78. doi:10.1080/00086495.2005.11672267.
- ^ Lee, Hélène (2004). "28 Count Ossie". The First Rasta: Leonard Howell and the Rise of Rastafarianism. p. 248. ISBN 978-1-55652-558-2.
Up until this point, Wareika and Rockfort had been the towns of the free thinkers among the Rastas. According to Verona Reckord, the movement's "Big Three" were Count Ossie, his saxophonist friend Big Bra Gaynair, and Bro Filmore Alvaranga (today the patriarch of the Mystic Revelation of Rastafari). To those must be added Brother Love, a Rasta elder who used to preach in Mountain View on the western slope of the Wareika Hills.
- ^
Wells, Walter W. "Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church, History in this Present Generation". Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church. Archived from the original on January 12, 2024.
most of our Camp sites were on captured government lands. We were in those times called squatters by our religious and political oppressors and society as a whole.
- ^ a b Hiaasen, Carl (August 9, 1981). "Zion Coptics vs US Government". The Sunday Gleaner. p. 15. Archived from the original on Jan 3, 2025.
- ^ a b Tranmer, James (March 2, 1999). "Tranmer Letter 13". Archived from the original on Jan 3, 2025.
- ^ a b c d Meyerson, Alan (2023). "I'll Always Be Your Brother Episode 2 - Arabs Have Oil, Americans Have Timber, Our Wealth Is Ganja" (Podcast). Interviewed by Anstey, Benji. Archived from the original on Jan 3, 2025.
- ^ Tranmer, James (1996). "Tranmer Letter 4". Archived from the original on Jan 15, 2024.
- ^ Gorman, Peter (2010). "35-YEARS ON A TRUMPED UP CONSPIRACY: The James Tranmer Story". Archived from the original on Jan 15, 2024.
- ^ a b c Meyerson, Alan (2023). "I'll Always Be Your Brother Episode 3 - This is a Battle, This is the Battlefield" (Podcast). Interviewed by Anstey, Benji. Archived from the original on Jan 3, 2025.
- ^
Williams, Lloyd (December 16, 1996). "The money laundering game". The Daily Gleaner. p. 56. Archived from the original on Jan 3, 2025.
Many a respectable Jamaican businessman during the lean 1970s was supplied with hard-to-get U.S. dollars by the Ethiopian Zion Coptics
- ^ "Creighton Hall, Jamaica". Centre for the Study of the Legacies of British Slavery. Archived from the original on Jan 17, 2024.
- ^ Church opening procession. St Thomas, Jamaica: Patrick White. August 6, 1978.
- ^ "Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church, CBS News - 60 Minutes, Volume XII, Number 7, Oct. 28, 1979". Retrieved 11 October 2022.
- ^ Marijuana and the Bible
- ^ a b Hugh Redington, Norman (1994). "Rastafarians and Orthodoxy" (PDF). Retrieved 11 October 2022.
- ^ a b "Town v. State, 377 So.2d 648 (Fla. 1979)". November 1, 1979. Retrieved March 1, 2017.[permanent dead link ]
- ^ "Commutations Granted by President Barack H. Obama (2009-2017)". 12 January 2015. Retrieved 19 January 2022.
- History of the Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church, by Walter Wells.
- The Law and Brother Louv, The Miami Herald, August 2, 1981
- Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church, CBS News - 60 Minutes, Volume XII, Number 7, Oct. 28, 1979.