Register a SA Forums Account here!
JOINING THE SA FORUMS WILL REMOVE THIS BIG AD, THE ANNOYING UNDERLINED ADS, AND STUPID INTERSTITIAL ADS!!!

You can: log in, read the tech support FAQ, or request your lost password. This dumb message (and those ads) will appear on every screen until you register! Get rid of this crap by registering your own SA Forums Account and joining roughly 150,000 Goons, for the one-time price of $9.95! We charge money because it costs us money per month for bills, and since we don't believe in showing ads to our users, we try to make the money back through forum registrations.
 
  • Post
  • Reply
Mr Hootington
Jul 24, 2008
Probation
Can't post for 2 hours!
https://twitter.com/VeteranIrish/status/1759676203638677823?t=_bwv_niLCY1ri-KChnOalw&s=19

1/2. ‘I’m a Rasta, I’m British, I’m an officer and a commando’.

Capt Kidane Cousland was the first officer of Rastafarian faith in the commandos. He went on to set up the Defence Rastafari Network to help support other Rastafarians in the military.

"I don't remember a time not wanting to join the Army," says 30-year-old Capt Kidane Cousland, known as Danny to his comrades.

"All the toys I had were little commando toys or Rambo bandanas. It just felt part of my internal narrative for as long as I can remember."

True to his childhood dreams, Danny grew up to become a commando himself. He joined the Army in 2008, completing his basic training in Harrogate before going on to be posted to 29 Commando Regiment and earning his "green lid" or beret. The green beret is only worn by Royal Marines or other personnel from the Army, Navy or RAF who have completed the gruelling commando course. Tests include a 30 mile (48km) cross-terrain endurance march and timed Tarzan assault course.

Danny was 18 when he did the course, a huge achievement - but his mother Maryam had been reluctant for him to join up at all, worrying he would not fit in.

"There were massive reservations from my family. They thought I would receive prejudice, they thought I'd have a hard time, they thought it wasn't the place for me," says Danny. "I'm a Rasta, I'm a Londoner, I'm British - but at the time those things didn't co-habit naturally. I don't think people expected you to be a Rasta and also want to join the British military."

In fact, the Army has been the making of him.

Danny says he didn't get on well at school. He "bounced" around different schools and remembers often sitting outside the headteacher's office.

"I had learning difficulties that weren't identified by my teachers, so I just became really disillusioned with it," he says. "I knew I was more intelligent than I was allowed to express, but I wasn't given that support, so I couldn't read until I was about 11 years old - I think that was a big challenge for me."

But there were other things that he was good at and which no-one ever recognised - which "all of a sudden aligned when I joined the Army," he says.

Danny is mixed race and says racism was "part of everyday life" growing up in Tottenham and other parts of London. But when he joined the Army he actually experienced less prejudice.

"When I was on the street and someone spat at me and told me to go back to my own country, there was no-one that I could go to to say: 'This person has done that.' Whereas in the Army, if anyone stepped over that line, that's them gone immediately, zero tolerance, and I know exactly who I can go to if I experience it."

That's far from a universal experience for ethnic minority recruits into the UK military, though. In 2019 the independent ombudsman overseeing the armed services, said "racism was prevalent" in the forces. At the time, Nicola Williams urged the Ministry of Defence to do more to root it out, In 2020, the chief of the defence staff, General Sir Nick Carter, said more must be done to tackle racial discrimination in the forces.

Danny did a tour of Afghanistan in 2010 and despite not having the necessary qualifications, was later recommended for officer training at Sandhurst. There he was awarded the Sword of Honour in 2016, given to the best officer cadet on the course. He rose to the position of Adjutant in the 29 Commando Regiment, looking after more than 400 commandos.

In 2021, he was awarded an MBE for his work setting up and building the Defence Rastafari Network. Created in 2017, the network supports serving Rastafarians in the military. Danny believes there doesn't need to be friction between faith and service.

2/2. Rastafari began in Jamaica in the 1930s, and grew out of the black improvement movement led by Jamaican activist Marcus Garvey, which promoted the idea that all people are equal.

"It countered the commonly-held supposition that black people were inferior," Danny explains.

But, he says, it is a faith that is sometimes still misunderstood, even trivialised. "It's caricatured as: they smoke marijuana, they have long hair and they're all Jamaican. That's just a lazy stereotype and obviously it's not the case.

"That's why the network [is] so important, because everyone has a right to express their faith without bias."

When Danny joined the Army, he was told by the recruiting sergeant, without malice, "You can't join with that hair," so he cut his dreadlocks. Some Rastafarians take a vow which forbids the cutting of hair, regarding it as a spiritual symbol of strength. Since the creation of the Defence Rastafari Network, the dress regulations have been amended to allow Rastafarian soldiers to wear a full beard, dreadlocks and turban, which is required by some denominations.

"It's been amazing," says Danny.

Adbot
ADBOT LOVES YOU

Dreylad
Jun 19, 2001
stay close to your computer
and post endlessly
and you too can be an officer in the King's army.

Weka
May 5, 2019

That child totally had it coming. Nobody should be able to be out at dusk except cars.
Around here commando just means you aren't wearing underwear

PERPETUAL IDIOT
Sep 12, 2003
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6N4wrrxgaWU

Pepe Silvia Browne
Jan 1, 2007

get up, stand up
stand up against their rights

StashAugustine
Mar 24, 2013

Do not trust in hope- it will betray you! Only faith and hatred sustain.

I do not feel ashamed

Gumball Gumption
Jan 7, 2012

I'm glad you're proud of your son hoot

Bro Dad
Mar 26, 2010


im a rasta, im white, i build missiles at boeing

Buck Wildman
Mar 30, 2010

I am Metango, Galactic Governor


I and I say step out of the domicile and lay on the ground with your hands over your head

titty_baby_
Nov 11, 2015

Jah!

Delta-Wye
Sep 29, 2005
dress regulations have been amended to allow rastafarian soldiers to wear a full beard, dreadlocks and turban, which is required by some denominations


lol

Mr Hootington
Jul 24, 2008
Probation
Can't post for 2 hours!
Bump for Vox gas.

Vox Nihili
May 28, 2008
reopening this one, it needs more space to breathe

Pepe Silvia Browne
Jan 1, 2007

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oby_0RrPC-k

DJJIB-DJDCT
Feb 1, 2024

Delta-Wye posted:

dress regulations have been amended to allow rastafarian soldiers to wear a full beard, dreadlocks and turban, which is required by some denominations


lol

Christ

nice obelisk idiot
May 18, 2023

funerary linens looking like dishrags
meredith brooks - bitch

Dr. Killjoy
Oct 9, 2012

:thunk::mason::brainworms::tinfoil::thunkher:
I’m white
I’m Rasta
I work for Babylon
And I vote!

Weka
May 5, 2019

That child totally had it coming. Nobody should be able to be out at dusk except cars.

Vox Nihili posted:

reopening this one, it needs more space to breathe

Lol

Mr Hootington
Jul 24, 2008
Probation
Can't post for 2 hours!
Time to go away.

Adbot
ADBOT LOVES YOU

Weka
May 5, 2019

That child totally had it coming. Nobody should be able to be out at dusk except cars.
You mean gweh

  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • Post
  • Reply