Ja Rule raised a Witness?

by joenobody 12 Replies latest jw friends

  • joenobody
    joenobody

    Read an excerpt in my morning paper quoting rapper 50 Cent saying this:

    "That kid is a fraud. Ja Rule grew up a Jehovah's Witness. While we were selling crack, he was knocking on people's doors every Saturday."

    Never heard this mentioned before - pretty funny I think.

  • DanTheMan
    DanTheMan
    While we were selling crack

    now there's something to brag about

  • JT
    JT

    dan the man , while i agree you are correct it ain't nothing to brag about, but in the hip hop world the view of keeping it real and being a gang banger is highly praised, a few years back a white guy call Villina Ice tried to claim he grew up on the street while in fact he came from a nice white suburan family with little league and in the hip hop world he was blasted

    well Jah Rule plays gangster tough and like fiffty cent says

    HE WAS OUT ON SAT WITH HIS LITTLE BAG AND TIE SELL BOOKS FOR WT, not exactly the street thug image he tries to portray

    but your point is well taken

    he is over in NJ

  • DanTheMan
    DanTheMan

    JT,

    Words could never begin to express how confounding the popularity of hip-hop/rap is to me. I feel so bad for poor urban blacks, it makes my stomach hurt.

  • MikeMusto
    MikeMusto

    This Queens Bad Boy of linguistic longevity was rasied

    a member of the Greater Than Thou Crowd, but left

    the sanctitiy of the Kindom Hall after his mom was df'd

    Fear Not!..The JA in JA rule has nothing to do with the

    Abbreviation of the Holiest of Holy names

  • freedom96
    freedom96

    I too have heard that he was raised a witness at some point in his life.

    Don't care much for him or his music.

  • closer2fine
    closer2fine

    Ja Rule continues his conquest

    By Steve Jones, USA TODAY

    Hosting a show on MTV recently, Ja Rule looked at the teleprompter and was surprised to see his name was actually spelled right. It was just another sign that after two hit albums, the star of the 23-year-old Queens-born rapper is rising.

    "I'm still kind of shocked when they get it right in articles and like that," says Ja Rule (Jeffrey Atkins). "They used to put an 'h' on the end of Ja because they didn't know me like that. I am a double-platinum artist, and they should get it right, but it still bugs me out."

    Just two years after being introduced to the mainstream via a song-stealing appearance on Jay-Z's smash Can I Get a ..., Ja Rule has lived up to the ambitious title of his 1999 debut album, Venni Vetti Vecci (his version of the Latin "I came, I saw, I conquered"). He has sold millions of records, become a pitchman for such companies as Calvin Klein and Coca-Cola, and is enjoying a budding movie career.
    With his second album, Rule 3:36, he managed to shrug off comparisons to other rappers, banish the one-hit-wonder label and avoid the sophomore jinx that plagues the vast majority of hip-hop artists. And in the process, he has taken a place with longtime friends Jay-Z and DMX at the top of rap's current pantheon of stars. The second album has succeeded largely because raspy-voiced Ja Rule offered more, rather than more of the same.
    After being propelled to stardom by the gritty street anthem Holla Holla, with its ominous "It's murder" chant, expectations were that he'd follow up with other songs in a similar vein. Ja Rule says he was having none of that.

    While Rule 3:36 has its share of hard-core jams, its first single, the lilting Between Me and You (an ode to illicit love), and the sexy follow-up Put It on Me go in a different direction.

    "People were saying I got lucky with Holla Holla, and I just had to prove myself again," says Ja Rule, who spent four months in California working on the album. The change in venue was "a different vibe. It was hot, and there were palm trees. It was a great environment for me to be around and reflect. It made the album brighter."

    He also had tired of critics saying he was trying to sound like DMX or look like the late Tupac Shakur. So he took steps to establish his own identity.

    "I really try to be very different from everybody else," he says. "It's not my fault that X and I have similar voices, and it's not my fault that me and 'pac have similar builds. So to get away from these things, I had to do the opposite. DMX and Tupac never had hair, so I grew my hair and now I have braids. I don't feel that DMX would ever make a record like Between You and Me or Put It on Me, and I wouldn't make his type of record. I never saw the similarities anyway, but since I was hearing that, I had to really go out in left field."

    Ja Rule's seemingly overnight rise is actually the result of seven years of struggle. He says he can laugh now about the popular perception that he's a protégé of Jay-Z or DMX. Back in 1994, when none of them had yet made a dent in the public consciousness, Ja was part of the New York collective Cash Money Click (no relation to New Orleans' Cash Money Records), which also included DJ Irv Gotti. The unknown Jay-Z and DMX made guest appearances on a Click album that was never released.

    But what did come out was a black-and-white video, which caught the eye of Def Jam president Lyor Cohen, who eventually hired the energetic Gotti as a Def Jam executive (he now heads the label's Murder Inc. Records, Ja's recording home). It took some time for Gotti to get Ja Rule signed, because he was still under contract with the Click's label, Blunt Records. In the meantime, Gotti brought DMX and his Ruff Ryders management team to Def Jam and helped smooth the way for Jay-Z and Roc-a-fella Records to join the company.

    "It's a funny story," says Ja Rule, "and Lyor likes to say that if he hadn't discovered me, he may not have (had) some of these other beautiful things that he has got going on here."

    Ja Rule's music is rife with religious imagery and symbolism. On the cover on his first album, he takes a prayerful stance, while the title of his newest album is the first of 13 rules ("He who believes in Ja shall have everlasting love/He who does not shall not see life but the wrath of my vengeance") that embody his life philosophy. On the song One of Us, he postulates a God who has to face daily struggles (in similar fashion as the unrelated Joan Osborne hit of the same name).

    "I'm real spiritual, but I can't say that I'm religious," says Ja Rule, who was raised a Jehovah's Witness but also worshiped for a time under the banners of Catholicism and later Islam. "I think that people really don't need religion, but should just cut out the middleman and serve God themselves."

    He says he "jacked" Rule 3:36 from the Bible's John 3:16 and made up the rest of his rules. He intended to keep the rules private, but he posted them on his Web site at the suggestion of his record company. The site allows fans to respond to the rules, something that has proved eye-opening to the rapper.
    "That's why the computer is kind of dangerous," says Ja Rule, the married father of two young children. "I was reading some of the messages, and they were like, 'Ja, you're the greatest,' and it's different from being into your music. They are into me.

    "That's the scary thing about the Internet, because you can have somebody so into you that they will follow you, and that can be a problem. That's why I get so much flak about the 'murder' thing, because kids are looking and listening, and you become this role model even if you don't want to be. There's nothing you can do about it; you just have to learn to be more careful with what you say. But I do try to let everybody know that I do make adult music."

    The same can be said for the gritty urban films he has made so far — Turn It Up, with rapper Pras; Crime Partners, which is based on a Donald Goines novel and also stars Snoop Dogg and Ice-T; and The Fast and the Furious, which is due March 28. His next project, the cop drama Training Day, stars Denzel Washington and will come out in the fall.

    By that time, he hopes to release his third album, Pain Is Love, a double CD. He believes his increasing stature will allow him to take even more risks and get even more personal. He says it will be a summary of everything he has gone through, and it will allow him to "pour out my heart and soul, joy and pain. All of me."

  • StinkyPantz
    StinkyPantz

    Hehe, I'd like to comment on this:

    Words could never begin to express how confounding the popularity of hip-hop/rap is to me. I feel so bad for poor urban blacks, it makes my stomach hurt.

    Whites account for most of the rap music sales in the country. . . feel bad for them.

  • happyout
    happyout

    First - StinkyPantz, it's great to see you again!! How are you?

    Now, back to JA Rule. I found this article on a website www.yubm.org (Young Urban Black Male) and it was very interesting:

    Two crosses bang together around Ja Rule’s neck as he jumps to his feet. Shouting cheerfully to the group of interviewers scheduled before me, he charms them with profanity-laced bravado about an upcoming concert he is headlining and a TV show he will be playing. As the door closes, he calms down considerably. He knows I am from someplace called Beliefnet. For a moment, his demeanor reminds me of a kid in Sunday school. But while he stares out the window, not looking at me, he is obviously intensely interested in my questions and his answers (or admitted lack of them) about God, religion, and the reality of violence and desperation of life on earth.

    Jeff Atkins, a.k.a. Ja Rule, grew up the only child in one of the toughest neighborhoods in Queens, N.Y. After years of learning the difficulties of the music industry (and a few arrests for small weapons and drug charges) with the New York-based rhyme crew Cash Money Click, things finally fell into place for him. In 1998, he wrote the hook for fellow rapper Jay-Z’s club hit "Can I Get A," which was the breakthrough that led to his debut last year, "Venni, Vetti, Vecci." The album went platinum nearly immediately, carried by the single “Holla Holla.”

    On the cover of "Venni, Vetti, Vecci," Ja Rule stands before the gigantic Christ in Rio de Janiero, his head back, hands folded in prayer. The album starts with a call and response prayer:

    Lord, can we get a break? (Lord, can we get a break?)
    We ain't really happy here (We ain't really happy here)
    Take a look into our eyes! (Take a look into our eyes!)
    And see pain without fear (And see pain without fear)

    But those looking for Ja Rule in Christian hip-hop are in the wrong section. Part of a group of rappers called Murder Inc, along with Jay-Z and DMX, Ja Rule articulates the harshness of street life, using the strong religious imagery instilled in his youth. Despite his signature cry, "Murder!" on his back is tattooed the name of his sister who died as an infant, complete with a halo and angel’s wings.

    Ja Rule's second album, “Rule 3:36” (360/Def Jam), is a clear reference to John 3:36: “He who believes in the Son has eternal life; he who does not obey the Son shall not see life, but the wrath of God rests upon him.”
    Ja Rule has changed this to read: “He who believes in Ja shall have everlasting love. He who does not shall not see life, but the wrath of my vengeance...Pain is love.” As I waited for the interview, Ja Rule sent an assistant out to make sure I had listened to the last track, “What If God Was One Of Us,” which is inspired by, but does not sample, the Joan Osborne song of the same name.

    "One of Us" is the best and cleanest track on an excellent album, though full of profanity and violence. Ja Rule asks the question differently from Osborne. As one who has struggled with the strictures and perceived hypocrisy of organized religion, he wonders if God himself would be able to live up to the heavy yoke that religion places upon people.
    PR: So you were raised Jehovah’s Witness?JR: Yeah, that’s a tough religion. You don’t have birthdays, no Thanksgiving, no Christmas, you know, because that’s not the day Christ was born. So there’s no need to celebrate. I would get like a gift a week after Christmas or a week before Christmas, because all the other kids would have stuff and then it would be like, "Why don’t I have nothing?" So my mom and grandma would get me stuff.With Jehovah's Witnesses, you kind of go out and knock on doors, right?Yeah, yeah, yeah.Did you do that?It's called field service.What age did you start that?I used to do field service when I was young — 8. I used to do it younger than that, but I remember the years when I was 8, 9, I really — we use to always try to skip field service, because sometimes you had to knock on your friends’ doors. That was embarrassing, to be in your suit and to knock on the door. You’re cool in school, and now you’re knocking on a door in a suit. Everybody in my family was Jehovah's Witness. My father was, too. I was never baptized, but my mom was, and she got disfellowshiped.Why?My mom had friends from work; they would hang out with her girlfriends and co-workers and they would have drinks and stuff, you know regular stuff, you know what people do, normal stuff.Yeah, right.And she got caught doing that stuff and then they disfellowship you. My mom, she was kind of tired of living like a double life, because she felt these things she was doing weren’t wrong like in regular society. She says she called them and she told them, and they disfellowshiped her. Now when you get disfellowshiped, nobody is allowed to talk to you — not even your family. My mom, she was real hurt by that. That’s how I kind of got like a cold feeling towards the religion and religions in general. Because I said I don’t think that is something God would want. I don’t think God would want to separate families.Obviously there’s a lot negative there. What was positive in being Jehovah's Witness while you were in that?What happened was, when I got into junior high school, I had this friend. His mom was heavy into religion. She was Christian, and I used to go spend the night at his house a lot. This was when Mom was already disfellowshiped, so I had outside worldly friends. I used to spend the night and weekends and stuff, and his mom used to always make us go to Sunday school. Now, you know I did not tell my mom at first.She might be upset if she thought you were going to a different Sunday school?Yeah, so I didn’t tell my mom at first because I was kind of scared. But I was curious. My religion was so crazy and strange and weird, I thought, well, maybe let me explore religions. So I started going to church with my friend. It was basically the same, not too much different.You are about 11 now or — About 11 or 12. But when I got older, I start hearing lots of this about Jehovah's Witness, the people I used to go to the Hall with. Such and such son just went to jail, she was selling drugs and not this regular-family [ mess ] going on. You know, regular human problems, brother such and such hit his wife and he’s getting demoted from being an elder now. I’m seeing all these things happening in the Christian churches too. So now I’m looking at it as, you know, it's not just the Christian religion. The Jehovah's Witness used to make it seem that all the outside religion is [ messed ] up and they’re the best religion. But it's not everyone else, it's you too. I mean, everybody has their problems, because we are all human.

    Now I am going to high school and its cool to be Muslim, five-percenter. So we start getting into that, so they made me preach hate the white man. I start getting into Malcolm X. I learned that he started feeling different about the Muslim religion because of the foul goings-on he saw. And I’m like, Well, damn, every religion there’s something foul going on, there’s foul play going on everywhere. I’m 20 here, and I’m thinking maybe religion is the problem. Because religion is some man-made [ mess ]. It’s a man who said, "OK, you should go to this church every Sunday, you should go to the Kingdom Hall and go out to field service, you should go to the mosque. You should do all these things, this is what you should do. Who the [ heck ] told you? In the Bible God said come as you are. Who made these laws, that’s what I want to know. So that’s why I wear two crosses now. I call it double cross. I believe in God and not religion, because I believe religion is the double cross. Because I’ve been double crossed by three religions, so I think I can safely say that religion — there is maybe something wrong with religion. Every temple that’s put up may not be a holy one, so watch out.
    So, JA Rule...is JA Jehovah?No, its funny — a lot of people think that, but JA is my initials. My name is Jeff Atkins.Come on, you never considered--I mean, it all made a good, it made a parody, whatever you want to call it. I didn’t think about it first, first. I thought, JA — that’s cool, you know it means Jah Rastafari, "God."Now tell me about the title of the new album: "John 3:36." He who believes in JA rule shall have everlasting love?Yeah.Obviously, that’s on a play on John 3:16: “He who believes in the Son has eternal life; he who does not obey the Son shall not see life, but the wrath of God rests upon him.” How do you fee that people are going to react to that? What do you think Christians are going to say to that?I don’t care what Christians say.OK, that’s fine. So what do you want out of that title? What are you trying to say?It’s a message to the world: Believe in me, no fake love. I don’t need people coming up and smiling at me and being my friend for now because things are going well. You don’t got to be my friend now, you got to be my friend when I’m cold, you know, we don’t have to have a friendship if its not genuine, understand what I’m saying, and that’s basically what the statement is about.And tell me, give me some words about the “One of Us" song. It’s a great song.One of us -- it’s a thought, what if he was?How did you find the inspiration to write this song?I’m gonna be very honest with you. I was watching "Austin Powers," and it’s a song on there.Joan Osborne.Yeah...if God was one of us, and it was like, wow, that’s a powerful thought. What if he was, what would he do? Would he fall victim to his own sins that he calls sins, because its kind of rough down here to kind of follow all God’s laws and not slip. So I was just flirting with the question. If God was here, would he slip? Of course he wouldn’t: He’s God, he’s perfect, that’s what everyone’s gonna say [laughs]. But who knows?

  • joenobody
    joenobody

    Amen, Ja Rule, amen!

    I feel for him and know where he was coming from.

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