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It’s Sad That Jimmy Cliff Has Finally Crossed The Rivers” -By Isaac Asabor

Jimmy Cliff was a two-time Grammy winner, but the awards barely scratch the surface of what he meant. His importance rests not in trophies but in cultural footprint, a footprint so deep it spans multiple continents. Africa embraced him fiercely. Nigeria played his songs in buses and bars for decades. Kenya, Ghana, South Africa, you name it, his music had roots everywhere. The Americas revered him. Europe studied him. The Caribbean birthed and celebrated him. His appeal transcended race, culture, language, and class.

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Jimmy Cliff

The news of Jimmy Cliff’s passing lands like a punch to the gut. Not because death is unexpected at 81, but because Cliff is one of those rare cultural figures who felt eternal, a man whose voice, work, and influence existed far above the normal life cycle of celebrity. Some artists age; others fade; a few retire quietly. Jimmy Cliff belonged to the even smaller group whose legacy felt so deeply woven into global music consciousness that the thought of a world without him felt almost unthinkable. Yet here we are, confronted with the painful truth that the man who sang “Many Rivers to Cross” has now crossed his last. And it’s sad. Deeply, unavoidably sad.

His wife’s statement announcing his passing, describing a seizure followed by pneumonia, carries the rawness of personal grief, but it also mirrors a collective heartbreak shared by millions across continents. “We see you, Legend,” her message concluded, and she is right. We do. However, it does not make the loss easier to swallow.

Jimmy Cliff lived the kind of artistic life that carried enormous cultural weight. Not just because he was talented, not because he wrote anthems, not because he was a two-time Grammy winner, but because his music helped open the world to reggae long before it was fashionable, commercially, or globally understood. Before Bob Marley was Bob Marley, before reggae was a mainstream sound on international airwaves, Cliff was already pushing the limits of what Caribbean music could do.

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He was the bridge. The international door opener. The cultural emissary. Now the bridge is gone.

Without any scintilla of hyperbole, he had a voice that made struggle Singable

If you grew up anywhere in the developing world, Africa, the Caribbean, Latin America, Cliff’s music was not just entertainment. It was therapy, philosophy, and guidance. His lyrics captured the emotional architecture of ordinary people’s struggles: heartbreak, poverty, resilience, and stubborn hope. “You Can Get It If You Really Want” is not merely a motivational line; it is a generational anthem. It has played in political rallies, classrooms, marketplaces, football stadiums, and quiet nights when people needed reassurance that life’s battles were worth fighting.

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Then there is “Many Rivers to Cross”, an immortal piece of music that speaks to the weary traveler in everyone. It has been covered endlessly, used in films, echoing in churches, funerals, breakups, and lonely nights all over the world. Cliff did not write songs to entertain; he wrote songs to console, confront, and challenge. That is precisely why news of his passing cuts so deep: he gave the world emotional honesty in musical form, and we are suddenly reminded that even the strongest voices are mortal.

Without a doubt, Jimmy Cliff made every reggae lover understand the fact that the international face of reggae before reggae had a “Face”.

Many people today, especially younger generations, naively and erroneously assume Bob Marley carried reggae to the world. Marley absolutely globalized the sound, yes. However, Cliff internationalized it first.

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His role in “The Harder They Come”, the groundbreaking 1972 film, cannot be overstated. It was arguably the first serious cinematic representation of Jamaican ghetto reality, tied inseparably to the sound of reggae. Cliff did not just star in the movie; he supplied the soundtrack that became a cult classic and carved out reggae’s space in Western consciousness. Before global brands, international record labels, and endless documentaries turned reggae into a global commodity, Cliff was already out there performing, pushing boundaries, and exposing audiences unfamiliar with the Caribbean to a new sonic language.

Losing him means losing the first ambassador of a movement that reshaped world music.

Jimmy Cliff was a two-time Grammy winner, but the awards barely scratch the surface of what he meant. His importance rests not in trophies but in cultural footprint, a footprint so deep it spans multiple continents. Africa embraced him fiercely. Nigeria played his songs in buses and bars for decades. Kenya, Ghana, South Africa, you name it, his music had roots everywhere. The Americas revered him. Europe studied him. The Caribbean birthed and celebrated him. His appeal transcended race, culture, language, and class.

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In an era where artists chase trends, Cliff created them. In a world where musicians focus on visibility, Cliff focused on message.

In addition, in a time when longevity in music is rare, Cliff sustained relevance across six decades.

That is why his death stings. We have lost not just a musician but also a cultural pillar. Death comes for us all, but some losses leave a bigger silence.

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There is something profoundly unsettling about the death of someone whose work has accompanied billions through his or her most intimate moments. Songs like “The Harder They Come” are not aging relics; they remain socially and politically relevant even today. Cliff understood injustice, oppression, and inequality at a level that made his music timeless. He was not performing activism because it was trendy. He lived it, felt it, and sang it long before such themes became fashionable hashtags.

He sang of toughness without arrogance, even as he sang of hope without naivety. He also sang of pain without melodrama, and that honesty is rare in any generation. The world is filled with artists. However, it is short on truth-tellers. And Cliff was one of the most important truth-tellers of our time.

Sadly put, Jimmy Cliff’s crossing the rivers, is no doubt a symbol too heavy for today.

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The irony is painful: the man who gave us “Many Rivers to Cross”, perhaps the most metaphorically potent song about lives struggles, has now crossed his final river. In addition, it feels too symbolic, too poetic, and too heavy. Artists rarely get such painfully on-the-nose exits. However, life, in its cruel wisdom, sometimes writes endings that hit harder than fiction.

Saying “It’s sad that Jimmy Cliff had concluded crossing the rivers” is not poetic exaggeration. It is the plain truth. Because Cliff’s songs built bridges, and now the bridge-builder is gone. The rivers he helped us cross, through music, through meaning, through comfort, feel wider today. That is the real grief.

Without any iota of exaggeration, the world owes him more than tributes. Tributes will pour in. Celebrities, governments, musicians, historians, and fans across the globe will write glowing messages. In addition, and rightfully so. However, beyond that, the world owes Cliff something deeper an acknowledgment that he shaped global music culture in a way that too many have forgotten.

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He deserved to be mentioned in the same breath as Marley, Fela, Dylan, Lennon, or any other musical titan whose work shifted consciousness. History has not always given him his full due, but death has a way of forcing the world to stop and correct its oversight. This moment should be one of recognition, gratitude, and humility.

Because legends do not die often, and when they do, the world should pause.

What his passing should remind us is a few sobering truths: The truths are that cultural icons are not immortal; their works outlive them, but they do not escape mortality. His death reminds us of us of music that speaks to the soul will always matter more than fame.

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In fact, we must learn to honor artists while they are alive, not only after they are gone. This is as Caribbean and African voices that shaped global culture should never be sidelined in global memory.

Without a doubt, Jimmy Cliff will in history remain a legend, and though he is gone but he would never be diminished.

Jimmy Cliff may have crossed his last river, but he did not disappear. Legends do not vanish; they change form. They move from flesh to memory, from stage to archive, from voice to echo. His music will continue to guide, heal, and inspire long after this generation has passed.

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However, today, right now, we are allowed to feel the sadness without apology. This is because the world just lost a man who mattered. Jimmy Cliff did not just sing songs. He carried people across their own rivers. In addition, it is painfully sad that he has now crossed his.

May his journey onward be as powerful as the journey he helped millions navigate while he was here.

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Opinion Nigeria is a practical online community where both local and international authors through their opinion pieces, address today’s topical issues. In Opinion Nigeria, we believe in the right to freedom of opinion and expression. We believe that people should be free to express their opinion without interference from anyone especially the government.

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