Iyaric, also calledDread Talk orRasta Talk, is a form of languageconstructed by members of theRastafari movement through alteration of vocabulary. WhenAfricans were taken into captivity as a part of theslave trade, English was imposed as acoloniallanguage. In defiance, the Rastafari movement created a modified English vocabulary and dialect, with the aim of liberating their language from its history as a tool of colonial oppression. This is accomplished by avoiding sounds and words with negative connotations, such as "back", and changing them to positive ones. Iyaric sometimes also plays a liturgical role among Rastas,[1] in addition toAmharic andGe'ez.[2]
Iyaric shares phonological features withJamaican Creole, with certain sounds, such as /a/, being stressed for the purpose of group identification distinct from Jamaican Creole.[3] In 2015, Doctor of linguistics Havenol M. Schrenk adapted a phoneme inventory from the President Emeritus of the International Society for Pidgin and Creole Linguistics,Rocky Ricardo Meade, as follows:
Iyaric's lexical departure from the pronominal system of Jamaican Creole is one of the dialect's defining features.[5][6] Linguistics researcher Benjamin Slade comments that Jamaican Creole and Standard English pronoun forms are all acceptable in Iyaric, but speakers almost always use the I-form of first-person pronouns, while I-form usage for second-person pronouns is less frequent.[5] He details his findings in the table below:
Pronominal forms in English, Jamaican Creole, and Iyaric[5]
Some Rastas avoid using certain words in the English language because they contain phonetic sounds that invoke negative connotations. Iyaric vocabulary developed in response to this, resulting in a dialect that challenged the negative colonial framework Rastas perceive in Jamaica's vernacular English.[7]
The base word forms for Iyaric are imported fromJamaican Creole,[3] and the constituent phonemes for those words are analyzed for positive or negative connotation against an Englishlexifier. Words whose phonetic connotations conflict with the word's overall semantics are called the "Babylon" (colonial English) form of the word, and Iyaric uses a system called "Iformation" ("I" + transformation)[5] to substitute those incongruously connoted phonetic matches with new phonemes that match the connotation of the overall word. This process ofphono-semantic matching results in a lexicon containing only Zionic word forms, which exclude negative phonemes[8] from positive words and positive phonemes from negatively connoted words.
The purpose for favoring Zionic word forms over Babylonic word forms is toinfluence the speaker's cognition[9] through the structure of the dialect, with the intent to challenge colonial biases that may be inherent in the structures of English.
For example, the word "hello" is not used because they see it as containing phonetic matches for the negatively connoted English words "hell" and "low". Instead, expressions such as 'wa gwaan', 'yes I' and 'cool nuh lyah' (or 'cool alyuh'. 'alyuh'-all of you) are used because they uplift people. If at a Rastafari church, they would use their formal church greetings. For instance, the Rastafari branch known as the Twelve Tribes of Israel would say, "Greetings in that Most Precious and Divine Name of Our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, who has revealed Himself through the wonderful personality of H.I.M. Emperor Haile Selassie the 1st of Ethiopia".[10]
I replaces "me", which is much more commonly used inJamaican English than in the more conventionalforms.Me is felt to turn the person into anobject whereasI emphasises thesubjectivity of an individual.
I and I (also spelledI&I,InI,I-n-I orIhi yahnh Ihi) is a complex term, referring to the oneness ofJah (God) and every human. As quoted by Rastafari scholar E. E. Cashmore: "I and I is an expression to totalise the concept of oneness. . . When he's addressing a brethren as himself, he says "I am I" — as being the oneness of two persons. So God is within all of us and we're one people in fact." He continues: "I and I means that God is inall men. The bond of Ras Tafari is the bond of God, of man."[11] The term is often used in place of "you and I" or "we" among Rastafari, implying that both persons are united under the love of Jah. Also in theTwi language (in which patois uses a lot of Twi loan words) of Ghana, Me ne me is also said, which literally translates to "I and I".
I-tal orDi food fula itality is spiritually blessed food that has not touched modern chemicals and is served without preservatives, condiments or salts.Alcohol,coffee,milk, and flavoured beverages are generally viewed as not I-tal. Most Rastas follow the I-tal proscriptions generally, and many arevegetarians orvegans. Even meat-eating Rastas abstain from eatingpork, aspigs are scavengers of the dead, as arecrabs,lobsters, andshrimp (whose banning coincides with the restrictions ofKashrut).
I man is the inner person within each Rastafari believer.
Irie refers to positive emotions or feelings, or anything that is good. Specifically it refers to high emotions and peaceful vibrations. This is a phonetical representation of "all right".
Ites derived from English "heights", means "joy" and also the colour "red". It can also be short for "Israelites".
Idren orBredren andSistren refer to the oneness of Rastafari and are used to describe one's peers (male – "bredren", female – "sistren").
Itinually replaces continually. It has the everlasting/everliving sense of I existing continuously.
Inity replaces "unity", demonstrating a general pattern of replacing "you" and similar sounds with "I".
Iya (higher): Rastafari vocabulary is full of references to the "iya man", "stepping higher and higher", etc. It is not a reference to the "high" normally associated with cannabis, but to stepping into higher realms of reality, as in higher awareness. Iya is also used to refer to a friend. As in "Yes Iya", or "Cool (no) Iya".
Iyaric is the self-applied term for Rastafari language. It is formed by a combination ofIya (higher) andAmharic, the language spoken by Haile Selassie I. Other terms for Iyaric includeI-talk,Livalect, andWordsound.
Iwa replaces "time" or more accurately, "hour":"Inna this ya iwa."
Dreadlocks describes the locks commonly worn among Rastas, now universally called dreadlocks in English. The 'dread' component refers to the fear of the Lord, as well as the fear inspired when Rastas first began to grow locks in the 1940s in Jamaica. To Rastas, dreadlocks can be a deeply spiritual part of their identity. TheNazirite vow in theTorah and the story ofSamson are commonly cited: "And she made a vow, saying, 'O LORD Almighty, if you will only look upon your servant's misery and remember me, and not forget your servant but give her a son, then I will give him to the LORD for all the days of his life, and no razor will ever be used on his head'."1 Samuel 1:11. Rastas see this as the most natural way to grow one's hair, as well as a symbol of defiance of Rome and Babylon.
Dreads can refer to the dreadlocks, or to those who wear them. Because the latter sense of the word is a synonym for "Rasta", Iyaric is often calledDread Talk, as evidenced in the body of research by Jamaican linguistics scholarVelma Pollard.
Persons without dreads are sometimes calledbaldheads (somewhat derisive) orlack (more respectful); however as a common Rasta refrain points out, "It's not the dread upon your head, but the love in your heart that makes you Rasta..." meaning that many Rasta faithful themselves lack dreadlocks, while some non-Rastas,wolves inna sheeps clothes, may wear dreads solely for fashion. Dreads that were induced artificially or with additives, rather than allowed to take their natural course, are known asbathroom locks.
Babylon is an important Rastafari term, referring to governments and institutions that are seen as in rebellion against the will of Jah (God). The etymology of the word is rooted in the story of theTower of Babel, which is a Biblical origin story explaining the reasons why different cultures of the world speak different languages. In it, the Babylonians were an advanced civilisation who were constructing a tall tower, with the intentions of reaching the heavens. However, God intervened by confounding their speech, so that they could no longer communicate to each other, and subsequently could no longer construct the tower. This would have been an especially important story to the early Rastas, who all came from vastly different cultures and spoke different languages. This may also have given the early Rastas a sense of pride in their own dialect of the English language, which at the time was considered to be "broken English"; it is now officially recognised asJamaican Patois.Babylon is further used by some to mean specifically the racist European tyrants who had oppressed black people for centuries throughslavery, and people of colour through the system ofindentured servitude. It has gone on to also refer to corrupt members of government, or "politricksters" who continue to oppress the poor, regardless of race. Historically, the term Babylon may have been used to refer to theRoman Empire, who werepagans, and were known to scrutinise the early Christians and were also the ones who crucifiedYeshua. This relation was reinforced after the1935 Italian invasion of Ethiopia, then ruled by Rastafari's 'Living God', Haile Selassie I, and also partly because theRoman Catholic church, as an institution, was considered an opponent of Selassie I, and thus also of Rastafari.Babylon is also sometimes used by some Rastas with the more specific meaning of "police", insofar as they are seen as executive agents of Babylon's will. In a more general sense, it is used to refer tothe powers that be, any system that oppresses or discriminates against any peoples.
Politricks is a Rasta term replacing English "politics", because so many politicians, etc. turn out, they say, to be more like tricksters.Politrickster n.
Everliving replaces "everlasting", particularly in the context of Life Everliving. The "last" in "everlasting", although actually implying survival (to "last" is to "survive" or "bide through"), is seen by the Rastas as implicative of an end (as in the term "at last"), and as the life the Rastas have will never end according to them, they being immortalists. Often used in the phrase "I and I is Everliving, Everfaithful, Eversure. Ras Tafari."
H.I.M. (His Imperial Majesty), pronouncedhim, and referring to Haile Selassie I.
Downpression replaces "oppression", because oppression holds man down instead of keeping him up (pronouncedop inJamaican patois.) Similarly "downgression" = "violence" (fromaggression).Downpressor n.
Livication replaces "dedication", to rid itself of a connotation of death.adj. Livicated. v. Livicate.
Outvention replaces "invention", because mechanical devices are seen as outward; it is the inner experience of being Rastafari that is invention.
Overstanding (also "innerstanding") replaces "understanding", referring to enlightenment that raises one's consciousness.
Apprecilove replaces "appreciate" because of the similarity to hate.
Amagideon/Gideon is a Rasta theological concept meaning the general state the entire world is in now, and has been getting progressively deeper in since 1930, and especially since 1974. This is a slight mutation ofArmageddon, a name appearing in Revelation.
Zion refers to either Ethiopia or the whole continent of Africa, after the Day of Judgment, as well as a state of mind one can enter through Rastafari.
Know replaces "believe". Rastafari would not say they "believe" Haile Selassie is Jah and that they, the Rastas, are the chosen people. They would say they "know" these things.
Wordsound is a name for Iyaric derived from the Rastafari principle of "Word, Sound and Power", which several scholars[who?] have compared to West African concepts regarding a power or essence being encapsulated within the pronounced sound of a name or word.[citation needed]
The earliest origin of Iyaric is debated, though it is generally agreed that the dialect was deliberately created by Rastas as anargot.[12] Despite the dialect's secretive beginnings, Iyaric words and meaning have migrated outside of Rasta communities into wider usage around the globe throughreggae music and media.[13] The termdreadlocks, for example, is used worldwide for the hairstyle that was popularized by the Rastafari movement. Rastafari metaphors likeZion andBabylon, as well as the Iyaric words "overstand" and "politricks" have enteredhip hop culture through Caribbean-American and Caribbean-British rappers/musicians.[citation needed] In Europe, perhaps influenced by popular culture depictions of or actual encounters with Afro-Caribbean "rude boy" gangs, the termBabylon is sometimes used to refer to the police.[citation needed]
^Hollington, Andrea. “Movement of Jah People: Language Ideologies and Music in a Transnational Contact Scenario.” Critical Multilingualism Studies 4.2 (2016): p. 141. ISSN 2325-2871.
^Barnett, Michael (2018).The Rastafari movement : a North American and Caribbean perspective. Abingdon, Oxfordshire.ISBN9781138682146.OCLC985268340.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
^Cashmore, Ernest (1979).Rastaman: The Rastafarian Movement in England (1st ed.). London: George Allen & Unwin. p. 67.ISBN0-04-301108-X.
Johnson, Ken (1972)."The vocabulary of race". In Kochman, Thomas (ed.).Rappin' and Stylin' Out: Communication in Urban Black America. Chicago: University of Illinois Press. pp. 140–151.ISBN978-0-252-00237-3.