Mark Mohr assaulted by reggae star Buju Banton because of Christian beliefs
THE LEAD singer of gospel singer Christafari, Mark Mohr, was assaulted by
reggae star Buju Banton because of Mohr's Christian beliefs. The
incident occurred in the lobby of Cleveland's Omni Hotel when both
artists were on tour. Cleveland police were called after Banton
punched Mohr in the neck and then swung a knife at him. Earlier to the
assault Christafari
had been acclaimed as being the first Christian band ever to perform
at the prestigious Reggae Sunsplash Tour alongside mainstream reggae
acts Big Mountain, Wailing Souls, Aswad and Buju Banton. Christafari's
performance drew rave reviews.However, midway through the tour a
member of the Sunsplash production crew found a copy of a book Mohr
had written, Rastafari And The Bible. The book was passed around to
almost everyone on the tour. Commented Mohr, "We went from being
everybody's best friend to being excommunicated and called a 'tool of
Satan'. People I'd revered and honoured and who had been some of the
biggest musical influences on me now hated me. It was really
tough."
Things came to a head with the knife assault by Buju
Banton - a committed Rastafarian and one of the world's most popular
reggae artists. Mark Mohr declined to press charges against Banton
when the police explained that if found guilty of assault Banton would
be deported and would not be allowed to work in America again. Said
Mohr, "I really felt the Lord leaning on my heart that I could not
expect (Banton) to understand the God of forgiveness and grace if I
did not demonstrate that myself."
Christafari decided not to make their usual
trip to Jamaica this year because of the events that took place on the
tour. Said Mohr, "I'd be marked for death. They would literally kill
me on sight. Even if one person heard from Buju they'd kill me because
according to them, in their songs, it is the biggest honour to kill
somebody for disrespecting their God."
Banton has reportedly
passed along Mohr's book to the Rastafari elders in Jamaica. Commented
Mohr, "(Banton) says this is prophecy fulfilled, that someone would
stand against their god. But I see it as God distributing the truth.
Even if the 500th person who reads it has one doubt about their
(Rastafarian) faith because of one Scripture they read, then it's
worth it."