Laugh Like a Jamaican: O
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Humor to Jamaicans is like the sun; it covers the whole island. Audiences always welcome a good joke. Like the spicy peppers to Jerk Pork, so is humor to every conversation or speech. The politicians to the clergymen and those in between know that. The bar is the epicenter of Jamaican jokes. This is a place of absolute equality where every stratum comfortably interacts. This is made easier by the fact that White Rum and its allies have the capacity, when consumed or even inhaled by some, to make the shy, brazen, the silly wise and the dumb, orators. Like liquor products, there are Jamaican jokes light, and the majority unadulterated.
My collection straddles both disciplines as I need to cover the whole spectrum. I intermingle the Jamaican language (Patois) with English in ways that are understandable and apply euphemism and subtleties that Jamaicans and associates can decipher. The bracketed letters are open to interpretation. Mi noh cuss noh bad wud (I have not used profanity). Challenge any version of my jokes and I dare you to give yours and the source. If it was the bar, extract the spirit and your watered-down version will be all thats left.
Lenworth Henry
Lenworth Henry is a 1972 graduate of Mico Teachers’ College in Kingston Jamaica. He taught at several institutions before becoming principal of an all-age-school. He migrated to the United States in 1990, and operated an automotive business. He resides in Maryland and has previously published two books: Gilbert the Mighty Hurricane and Laugh like a Jamaican.
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Laugh Like a Jamaican - Lenworth Henry
Contents
Yes Father
Me Sheg
The Very Puss
We Shall Gather By The River
Praise The Lord
The Worm Remedy
Righteous Screams
When the Roll Is Called Up Yonder
Judgment Day
The One Up Above
The Famous Water Jar
Jesus Died
Gift of the Spirit
Love Thine Enemy
I’m Pregnant
Deadology
Light One Fimmi
Jah Portrait
You or You
The Coffin Ride
Midnight Date
Cough Out That Lass
Pajama Sleep Over
Not My Home
An Enigma
Boot Prints in the Sand
Suicide Backup Plan
Hold The Light Officer
Narwaji, the Great
I Am Holding A Battery
Banana Stalk
The Mechanic
The Shoe Deal
Tall Tales
Narrow Roads + Impatience = Drama
Look Out For Cars
Move the Accident Please
Such an Insult
The Junction Road in St. Mary
People of the Cloth
No Joking Matter
Perspective on Life (1)
And on Hell
(2)
And On Governance and Politics
The Vegetarian
By: Lenworth Henry
Yes Doctor
Mourning Wives
Number Two
Doctor SehYu Dead
Bury The Bottle
Big Boy
Pennaria
Holy Loan
White Wash Pig
Patrons
By Lenworth Henry
One Arm Bandit
Dumb and Deaf
The Tail Was Not Pork Iah
Dumb Things Suffer
Swallow No Dog
Anybody See Miss Ada
Only Safe Place
Love Letter
Discretion
Cat-O-Nine
That’s Not What We Call It Maam
Ambushed By a Bouncer
Cullush Puttush
The Gates of Hell
Set up Goat
Caymanas Park
Mini Ha Ha
Nine Months
Be Quiet Goat
Dentures for a Nag
Grazing in Shades
Who Lick John?
A Who Push Mi?
Overweight My Car
Pepper in the Pot
More Silly Girls
Another Silly Girl
Dignity Personified
Too Dark to Hear
Funeral in Rock
The Unrighteous Dread
Now I Know Dad
Tell No Man
Foreign Travel
Visa Woes
Move That Thing
Species of Butterfly
Scammer Extraordinaire
This is Kingston Harbor
Apporkiation
Same John Chewy
Skip Sir B
I Am Not Stupid
Hide and Seek Belleview Style
Geography 101
Nowhere Near
The Big Catch
Cricket Match in Heaven
Camouflage
Fight the Good Fight
Judge Dread
Guns
By Lenworth Henry
What Car Would Jesus Drive?
Yes Father
As a young kid growing up, I was a guest at many denominational gatherings, and I was always intrigued by the uniqueness of each congregation’s order of doing things. But as a Baptist, both the Anglican and the Catholic churches held the most mystery to me. The simple reason was that I loved to hear the chants, which I never was able to recite, let alone understand. Finally, I found a friend who was a master interpreter of all things Catholic and he led me through the process. In no time I could chant from here to eternity, but out of respect to the holy order and the protection of the innocence of my life educated friend, I will just give you an example of one of my favorites.
During communion, the father would go into this long monotone and the congregants would give the appropriate responses. I think it was done in Latin, as every strange word was thought to be. Father would hold the full cup of wine in his right hand and the plate of bread in the left. He would then proceed to raise both hands towards the, by now, drooling lips of his famished congregants, and he would recite the following, Thou shall see it, smell it, and shall not taste of it.
and the angry, impatient, but subdued response would be Yes Father, wee know.
Father would then do a pirouette and disappear; the wine and bread with him. And the faithful kept going back, Sunday after Sunday.
Me Sheg
The sermon for that Sunday was from the book of Daniel, that told the story of Nebuchadnezzar, the king of Babylon, who threw Shadrock, Meshak and Abendigo into the fiery furnace after they refused to bow down to the statue he built. It ended with all three miraculously escaping unharmed, due to divine intervention. The sermon must have held everyone spellbound, but it seemed sister Mildred was struck the hardest. The frequent repetition of the trio’s rather exotic names seemed to have confused sister Mildred, who could well have been in her typical stupor and woke up only to hear what she thought she had heard. She left the service a sad and confused sister.
When she got home everyone noticed that the usually vivacious post worship disposition of Sister Millie was absent. When she was questioned, the heartbroken sister declared that the sermon was the cause of her discomfort, as in it, the parson delved into profanity and had repeatedly uttered some insulting words to the whole congregation, and he was actually quoting from the bible. When she was asked to say what it was, she reluctantly declared that the parson said and I quote, Me sheg, you sheg, under bed we go.
(Sheg is a minor curse word in Jamaica)
The Very Puss
For those who do not know, puss is the pet reference to a domestic cat in Jamaica. Hardly anyone would use any other word when referring to a cat. What is incredible though, is how the same word used with strong emphasis, is the only sure way of chasing a cat away from just about any place, thing or activity. The following anecdote attests to that fact.
The parishioners at this particular church were often puzzled as to how their beloved parson was able, Sunday after Sunday, to maintain such high energy throughout the entire service and never appeared to be hungry and drained as they all usually were. They had always noticed that he would take the occasional break from the pulpit, especially during the singing of the hymns, but never read much into that. It so happened that the pastor had a secret that only deacon knew about; he always carried a plate of food to church every Sunday, and that explained his times out. But one fateful Sunday, parson had taken a few mouthfuls and left his plate in a corner in the vestibule when, lo and behold, the aroma of the tasty morsel reached a stray cat, who decided that this Sunday, he was not going to be satisfied with only the leftovers, he wanted the full entrée. In the middle of his sermon, which had nothing to do with giving praise or thanks, parson observed that this cat had gained entry through an open door and was about to raid his plate. His quick wit came immediately into play and the irrelevant subject of praise, cut into his original theme.
Brothers and sisters.
he suddenly exclaimed, Everyone needs at times to praise the lord; The birds of the air, the fish of the seas.
and seeing the cat removing the cover from his plate, he wasted no time to shout; Even the very puss!
with the word puss, shouted out so loudly, that the poor cat made a dash for his life into the bushes. By now the congregation was so charged with praising the lord that they did not hear the dish cover fall to the ground. So parson was spared the embarrassment, and from that Sunday he made sure to secure that back door before he entered the pulpit, as he was not going to allow that stray to force him to give up his unholy semi-secret pastime.
We Shall Gather By The River
Pastor was livid on this particular Sunday as he was receiving more and more reports of his parishioners’ propensity for the bottle. His sermon was entitled, ‘Wine is a Mocker, and Strong Drink is Raging.’ Guilt seemed to have kept the parishioners fairly restrained that morning, and parson was convinced that his point had reached home. So in conclusion, he declared that if he had the power, he would have taken all the alcohol in the world and he would have dumped it in the river.
As was his custom, whenever he thought that he had preached a convincing sermon, parson would specially ask deacon to lead the congregation in song. For the first time that Sunday, the entire congregation erupted as deacon raised the hymn ‘We Shall Gather at the River.’
Praise The Lord
Deacon had a jackass that he rode around every day. This donkey was trained to respond to religious commands only, so not many people would dare to try to borrow him, as they would other neighbors’ It so happened, that one day parson was on a very important mission into the deep country and he was told that even if he drove his car, there were some parts of the road that were only accessible by foot. So he, for the first time, decided to engage the services of deacon’s holy ass for the challenging trip. Before he was given the donkey, parson was briefed on the commands. He was told that whenever he wanted the ass to move, all he had to say was, ‘praise the lord.’ Whenever he needed him to stop, just say ‘amen’. Parson thought that to be a no-brainer, him being a man of the cloth. So he thanked deacon and went on his righteous way, even testing the responses as he went by.
Parson was doing fine and felt grateful that he was smoothly negotiating some of the most inhospitable terrains with ease, and whenever he is in the trough of such blessings, he always gave praises. As he approached a fairly deep corner, parson was ending his prayer when he got into the spirit and started shouting ‘praise the lord’ repeatedly. The jackass, sighting this as a command to go to a gallop, took off as fast as it could. A very deep precipice was at the corner and the donkey could never negotiate it safely at that speed, but he was responding to commands and he forged ahead.
Parson was still shouting in the spirit when he realized the danger. Suddenly, and not a second too soon, he remembered to shout ‘amen’ and the jackass came to an abrupt stop only inches from the edge of the precipice. Seeing how closely