
Letâs rewind to Brixton, South London, sometime in the late 1970s. The sunâs low, the streets are humming. Kids are kicking footballs between parked cars, elders are posted up on their front steps, and someoneâs blasting roots reggae from a battered speaker. You can smell fried plantains and engine oil. And if you listen closely, youâll hear poetry â not just rhymes, but resistance.
This is the world of Linton Kwesi Johnson (LKJ), the godfather of dub poetry. His voice didnât just echo through speakers â it shook institutions. And the backdrop? Brixton. A place that, like Rotterdamâs own Crooswijk or Afrikaanderwijk, carries the weight of migration, marginalization, and music.
đ§ Whoâs LKJ, and Why Does He Matter?
Linton Kwesi Johnson is a Jamaican-born, British-raised poet and activist who turned spoken word into a weapon. His style? Dub poetry â rhythmic, political, raw. Think reggae beats under verses about police brutality, racism, and the Black British experience. He didnât rap about Bentleys or bling. He wrote about brothers getting stopped and searched, mothers losing sons, and communities rising up.
His track âSonnyâs Lettahâ is basically a letter from a young man in jail, explaining how he ended up there after defending his brother from police harassment. Itâs not just a song â itâs a testimony.
đ Brixton in the â70s: Not Just Vibes
Brixton wasnât always the trendy spot it is now. Back then, it was a hub for Afro-Caribbean migrants â many from the Windrush generation â who came to rebuild Britain after World War II. But instead of gratitude, they got suspicion. Instead of opportunity, they got surveillance.
The police ran operations like âSwamp 81,â flooding the streets with officers and stopping young Black men at random. Sound familiar? Itâs the same energy that fuels protests today â from Ferguson to Schilderswijk.
In 1981, Brixton exploded. Three days of riots â or uprisings, depending on who you ask â shook the city. LKJ called it âDi Great Insohreckshan.â Not just chaos, but a reckoning.
đś Reggae as Resistance
Reggae isnât just chill beach music. In the hands of artists like LKJ, Bob Marley, Peter Tosh, and Lucky Dube, itâs a sonic protest. Itâs the soundtrack of Babylonâs downfall.
In Rastafari culture, Babylon represents the corrupt system â colonialism, capitalism, racism. Zion, on the other hand, is liberation, spiritual peace, Africa. So when LKJ spits bars over dub beats, heâs not just vibing â heâs fighting.
Reggae became the language of the oppressed. It gave voice to the voiceless. And in Brixton, it turned frustration into fire.
đĽ The Crack Epidemic & Gary Webbâs Bombshell
Fast forward to the â80s and â90s. Across the Atlantic, Americaâs inner cities are drowning in crack cocaine. Communities are collapsing, families are torn apart, and prisons are filling up â mostly with Black men.
Then comes Gary Webb, a journalist who dropped the Dark Alliance series in 1996. He exposed how the CIA turned a blind eye to drug trafficking by Nicaraguan rebels â the Contras â who were selling cocaine to fund their war. That coke ended up in U.S. ghettos, cooked into crack, and sold on the streets.
The system didnât just fail Black communities â it targeted them. Babylon wasnât just metaphorical anymore. It was chemical.
đď¸ Rotterdamâs Echoes
Now letâs bring it home. Rotterdam, like Brixton, is a city of migration and contradiction. Itâs proud of its diversity, but still struggles with systemic inequality. The Afro-Dutch community â many with roots in Suriname, the Antilles, or West Africa â knows what itâs like to be seen as âother,â even when Dutch is your mother tongue.
In the â70s and â80s, the Netherlands welcomed thousands from Suriname after independence. But many arrived to find themselves boxed into the lowest social strata â single mothers, unemployed youth, and families placed in underfunded neighborhoods. Not because they lacked potential, but because the system lacked vision.

And while the Dutch didnât have a crack epidemic like the U.S., the stigmatization was real. Media narratives painted Afro-Dutch youth as troublemakers, and policies often reinforced exclusion.
đ§ Identity Politics: Blessing or Burden?
Today, identity politics is everywhere. Some see it as a tool for empowerment â a way to name injustice and demand change. Others feel itâs divisive, creating echo chambers and moral hierarchies.
LKJ didnât use the term âidentity politics,â but he lived it. His poetry was rooted in Black British identity, but it spoke to anyone whoâs ever felt unseen, unheard, or unwanted.
In Rotterdam, identity politics plays out in debates about education, housing, and representation. Who gets to speak? Who gets funding? Who gets stopped by the police?
Itâs messy. But itâs necessary.
đ¨ Art as Survival
What LKJ teaches us â and what reggae embodies â is that art isnât just decoration. Itâs survival. Itâs how communities process trauma, reclaim dignity, and imagine freedom.
In Brixton, poetry and music turned pain into power. In Rotterdam, we see the same in spoken word collectives, street art, and underground music scenes. From Crooswijk to Delfshaven, young artists are telling stories that mainstream media wonât touch.
And platforms like Dutch Echo exist to amplify those voices â not sanitize them.
đ Why This Matters Globally
Whether youâre in Brixton, Brooklyn, or Bospolder-Tussendijken, the themes are the same:
- Migration without integration
- Policing without protection
- Culture without credit
Reggae, dub poetry, and grassroots journalism like Gary Webbâs work remind us that truth doesnât always come from the top. Sometimes it comes from the block, the beat, or the broken heart.
đ§ Final Word: Babylon Still Standing?
Babylon hasnât fallen yet. But itâs shaking. Every protest, every poem, every beat is a crack in the foundation.
LKJâs legacy isnât just musical â itâs moral. He showed that you donât need a podium to speak truth. Just rhythm, rage, and a reason.
So whether youâre a new Rotterdammer trying to find your place, or a global reader tracing the echoes of resistance â know this: the struggle is real, but so is the art. And sometimes, the art hits harder.




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