Download Back To My Root By Lucky Dube ((better)) ★ Original
The lyrics of “Back to My Roots” are deceptively simple but carry immense weight. The chorus— “I’m going back, back to my roots / Oh, yes, I’m going back, to the place of my birth” —is an affirmation. The “place of my birth” is not merely a geographic location but a pre-colonial state of being: a time before shame, before cultural alienation.
To fully appreciate “Back to My Roots,” one must understand the landscape that shaped Lucky Dube. Growing up under the brutal system of apartheid, Dube—like millions of Black South Africans—was systematically stripped of his heritage. The government forcibly removed people from ancestral lands, suppressed native languages, and promoted a distorted, inferior version of African culture. By the time Dube transitioned from mbaqanga (South African pop music) to reggae in the mid-1980s, the scars of this cultural genocide were fresh. The song, released in the early 1990s during the tense transition from apartheid to democracy, captures a collective yearning. For a generation that had been told their past was savage and their traditions were obsolete, going “back to the roots” was an act of radical defiance. It was a refusal to accept the colonially imposed identity. download back to my root by lucky dube
Lucky Dube (1964-2007) was more than a reggae superstar; he was a voice for the voiceless, a storyteller for a wounded nation. While known for politically charged anthems like “The Hand That Cradles the Rock” and “Remember Madiba,” his song “Back to My Roots” stands as a profoundly personal and universal declaration of identity. More than just a plea to return to a physical homeland, the song is a spiritual and psychological journey toward cultural reclamation, a theme that resonates deeply in a globalized world where identity is often fractured. The lyrics of “Back to My Roots” are