Hundreds of thousands are expected to participate in a month of festivities starting February. 1 dubbed “Africa Unite” in tribute to one of Marley’s many famous songs. The highlight is Ethiopia’s largest ever concert on Marley’s birthday, February 6, in the capital, Addis Ababa.

Rita Marley will sing with Marcia Griffiths and Judy Mowatt as the I-Threes, Bob Marley’s former backing group, on February 6. Joining them on stage will be Senegal’s Baaba Maal and Youssou N’Dour, Benin’s Kidjo, Reggae rapper Shaggy, soul singer India.arie and Marley’s children.

Other events include a film festival, an exhibition of African art, the Ethiopian launch of Rita Marley’s autobiography “No Woman No Cry – My Life with Bob Marley,” and conferences on the themes of African unity, women and youth.

More celebrations are planned in Shashemene, 155 miles (250 kilometers) south of Addis Ababa, where several hundred Rastafarians have lived since they were given land by Ethiopia’s last emperor, Haile Selassie.

Marley’s wife, Rita, together with the African Union and U.N. Children’s Fund, is organizing the US$1 million (euro770,000) celebrations expected to be broadcast in Africa and beyond.

Ethiopia was chosen as the venue because of the country’s holy place in Marley’s Rastafarian faith. It is also home to the 53-nation African Union.

“Africa is Bob’s spiritual home, and so solidarity among other cultural activists across the continent is important to his family,” Rita Marley said in Addis Ababa. “We want to negate the impoverished, dependent and hopeless images of Africa that are beamed around the world every day.”

Rita Marley caused a storm of controversy when she announced recently that she was working on taking her late husband’s remains from Jamaica to his “spiritual resting place” in Ethiopia after the birthday celebrations here and in Jamaica. Jamaicans protested the proposed reburial would rob the Caribbean island of its national heritage.

The Bob Marley Foundation later issued a statement saying it was a private family matter, but there were no immediate plans to exhume the body of the singer, who died of cancer in 1981 at age 36.

Rastafarians worshipped Selassie as their living god, a belief based on the prophecy by Jamaican civil rights leader Marcus Garvey that a black man would be crowned king in Africa.

A devout Rastafarian, Marley’s lyrics were laden with references to the faith.