Premium Only Content
Jamaica's traditional healers
Reggae, marijuana and dreadlocks. When it comes to Jamaica's Rastafari movement, that’s the cliché,. But in fact, the Jamaican Rasta live a nature-loving and mindful life. Many have profound knowledge of plants and their healing properties.
Rastafari originated almost 100 years ago in Jamaica as a Black liberation movement. Today, the nature-loving life of the Rastas makes the group attractive once again for a young, global generation.
In eastern Jamaica, at the foot of the Blue Mountains, Gracie and her friends dream of a better life. Gracie is a Rasta woman who lives with her 10-year-old daughter Anna in a small village of 400 people. And Gracie loves to rap. Gracie‘s older daughter lives with her mother-in-law in Kingston, as Gracie does not have enough money to support both children - something that is often the case in Jamaica. Gracie dreams of opening a vegetable store that meets Rastafarian sustainability standards in her small village. She works as a trader and drives a truck to the market in Kingston every week - packed with bananas, coconuts and whatever’s in season. She buys her goods from farmers on credit. Her profits cover only the bare necessities. But Gracie lives by her grandmother's motto: "Help yourself and help will come."
Gracie's friends Quaco and Robert also call themselves "grandma's sons." Even as children, they searched for medicinal plants in the rainforest's pharmacy with their grandmothers. Rasta Quaco is one of the best healers, Robert says. When he's not traveling with Quaco, Robert drives a shared cab and also helps Gracie, who’s looking for cheap building materials.
Gracie's big dream includes adding her small store onto her house. She hopes to use the proceeds to bring her older daughter Selassia home.
Quaco and Robert chase their dream in the deepest thicket of the rainforest. They are determined to find a special root. "Four Man Strength", with its four heart-shaped veins, is known for strengthening the immune system and is used as an aphrodisiac. The root is highly valued around the world. Quaco needs it to prepare his special ‘elixir of life.‘
The documentary gives deeper insight into the life-affirming and nature-loving lifestyle of a community whose reggae music made it famous around the world.
-
LIVE
Graham Allen
1 hour agoDid NEWSOM Just Admit He’s Running?? Did Trump Just Endorse Vance 2028?! + Zohran Is Going To DESTROY NYC!!
21,906 watching -
LIVE
Matt Kohrs
12 hours agoUS China Trade Deal, Records Highs & The Week Ahead || Live Day Trading
569 watching -
LIVE
Wendy Bell Radio
5 hours agoTaking Out The Trash
7,618 watching -
7:07
SpartakusLIVE
32 minutes agoHacker BANNED LIVE in streamer match
-
1:07:00
Chad Prather
22 hours agoFinding Peace, Purpose, and Power in a Hostile Age
59.2K20 -
LIVE
LFA TV
13 hours agoLIVE & BREAKING NEWS! | MONDAY 10/27/25
2,701 watching -
1:24:46
Game On!
17 hours ago $1.74 earned2025 Sports Equinox Betting Preview!
20K2 -
32:51
The Why Files
3 days agoCIA Time Travel Secret | The Grays Are Future Humans
32.1K43 -
30:13
Athlete & Artist Show
21 hours ago $5.08 earnedNew Single Game Shots Record!
33.6K2 -
13:29
Demons Row
14 hours ago $1.68 earnedThings I Wish I Knew Before Joining a 1% Outlaw Motorcycle Club
17.8K9