Skip to main content
Jamaica Moana looks into the distance, wearing a white shirt and with her hair out.
Conversations

Program: Dad, Bob Marley and me

Space to play or pause, M to mute, left and right arrows to seek, up and down arrows for volume.

Rapper Jamaica Moana was born to the music of Bob Marley on the Central Coast of NSW.

Her dad loved Bob’s music more than anything else and would listen incessantly on his interstate truck driving routes.

Jamaica was the beloved baby of six children, growing up in a Maori-Samoan family in the outer suburbs of Auckland.

When the family moved to Campbelltown in Western Sydney, Jamaica began to express her queer identity through the dance troupe The Pioneers.

Jamaica’s father rejected this new version of her, so different from the son he knew, and they became estranged. 

When he became seriously ill years later, Jamaica moved home to care for him and the pair renewed their relationship, staying close until his death.

With her brother, she eventually made a pilgrimage to Bob Marley's home town as a tribute to their father.

Deep in grief, it was a spiritual experience with a life-size statue of Bob at Nine Mile that convinced Jamaica everything would be alright.

Further information

Jamaica Moana's debut EP is Bud & Deni. 

Image Details

Human Interest, Reggae, R&B, Dance, Family, Grief, Immigration, Indigenous (Other Peoples)
Loading

Discover more podcasts

Download the ABC listen app to hear more of your favourite podcasts