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Best Deals In The Caribbean - Jamaica
Jamaica is an island nation of the Greater Antilles, 240 kilometres
(150 mi) in length and as much as 85 kilometres (50 mi) in
width situated in the Caribbean Sea. It is 635 kilometres (391
mi) east of the Central American mainland, 150 kilometres (93
mi) south of Cuba, and 180 kilometres (112 mi) west of the
island of Hispaniola, on which Haiti and the Dominican Republic
are situated. Its indigenous Arawakan-speaking Taíno
inhabitants named the island Xaymaca, meaning either the "land
of springs," or the "Land of wood and water." Formerly
a Spanish possession known as Santiago, then the British West
Indies Crown colony of Jamaica, the country's population is
composed mainly of the descendants of former African slaves.
It is the third most populous Anglophone country in the Americas,
after the United States and Canada.
Though a small nation, Jamaica is rich in culture, and has
a strong global presence. The musical genres reggae, ska, mento,
rocksteady, dub, and, more recently, dancehall and ragga all
originated in the island's vibrant popular urban recording
industry. Internationally known reggae musician, the legendary
Bob Marley, was born in Jamaica, and is very well respected
there. The genre jungle emerged from London's Jamaican diaspora.
The birth of hip-hop in New York also owed much to the city's
Jamaican community.
Christianity remains a strong influence on cultural life,
particularly in music. Most people learn their music at church,
and biblical references are often used in popular songs. It
is not uncommon for musicians to be playing dance music on
Saturday night, and church music on Sunday morning.
Rastafarianism was founded in Jamaica. This Back to Africa
movement believes that Haile Selassie of Ethiopia is God incarnate,
the returned black messiah, come to take the lost Twelve Tribes
of Israel back to live with him in Holy Mount Zion in a world
of perfect peace, love and harmony. Bob Marley, a convert to
the faith, spread the message of Rastafari to the world. There
are now estimated to be more than a million Rastafarians throughout
the world.
The American film Cocktail, starring Tom Cruise, is one of
the most popular films to depict Jamaica. A fascinating look
at disturbed, godless youth in Jamaica is presented in the
1970s cops-and-robbers musical film The Harder They Come, starring
Jimmy Cliff as a frustrated reggae-musician who gets caught
up in crime.
Jamaica slowly gained increasing independence from the United
Kingdom, and in 1958 Jamaica became a province in the Federation
of the West Indies, a federation between all the British West
Indies. Jamaica attained full independence by leaving the federation
in 1962.
However, the initial optimism following Jamaican independence
for the next decade or so vanished as Jamaica lagged economically.
Rising foreign debt under the government of Michael Manley,
who was determined to alleviate Jamaica's severe economic inequality,
led to the imposition of IMF austerity measures. Deteriorating
economic conditions and the involvement of the Central Intelligence
Agency due to Manley's international socialism and friendship
with Fidel Castro led to a desperately fought re-election campaign
between Manley's People's National Party and the main opposition,
the Jamaica Labour Party. Both political parties became linked
with rival gangs in Kingston, which were duly armed. This policy,
along with the increasing emergence of Jamaica as a smuggling
point for cocaine during the 1980s, led to recurrent violence
and only served to increase the impoverishment of a large section
of the Jamaican populace. The ultimate result of this cycle
of violence, drugs and poverty has been the brutal gun warfare
seen on Kingston's streets from the mid-1990s onwards. The
Jamaican police force has also been accused of complicity in
this murderous side of the island. It must be noted, however,
that the rural sections of the island, especially in and around
the resort towns of Negril, Montego Bay, Ocho Rios, and Port
Antonio, remain relatively safe.
The former capital of Jamaica was Spanish Town in St. Catherine
parish, the site of the old Spanish colonial capital. The Spanish
named the town Santiago de la Vega. In 1655 when the British
captured the island, much of the old Spanish capital was burned
by the invading British troops. The town was rebuilt by the
British and renamed Spanish Town. It remained the capital until
1825, when the city of Kingston was named capital under questionable
circumstances.
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