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Brothers Keepers

Brothers Keepers is a German-based transnational anti-racism project, bringing together hip-hop, reggae and soul musicians, headed primarily by Afro-Germans. The idea for the project took root in the late 1990s, and when a German of Mozambiquan origin, named Alberto Adriano, was brutally killed by neo-Nazis in Dessau (East Germany) in 2000, a group of musicians decided to organize and fight back. Brothers Keepers has local groups active in information campaigns, presenting teach-ins at schools etc. However the project primarily gained prominence in Germany through the collaborative album, [b]Lightkultur[/b]. The title is a pun on conservative politician Günther Beckstein’s term "deutsche Leitkultur" ("German leading culture"), demanding that foreigners subject themselves to the supposed standards of German culture. The album features German musicians such as [a=Torch], [a=Samy Deluxe], [a=Afrob], [a=Denyo] from the [a=Beginner] and [a=D-Flame]. The proceeds of this album went to charity. The project is not limited to Germany. It focuses on manifestations of the African diaspora throughout the world and is supported by international artists such as Jamaican reggae musician [a=Ziggy Marley] and Senegalese mbalax musician [a=Youssou N'Dour]. There is also a UK Brothers Keepers, which, while lacking the organizational superstructure of its German counterpart, contributed a track to Lightkultur. There is also a female version of this Movement/Band called the [a=Sisters Keepers].

Members: Jah Meek, Xavier Naidoo, Joachim Deutschland, Robert Zemichiel, Samy Sorge, Patrice Bart-Williams, Frank Dellé, René Swain, Chima Onyele, Tyron Ricketts, Hashim Elobied, Daniel Kretschmer, Onosizo Ngcala, Nitro (18), Ade Odukoya, Rolando McLean, Tilmann Otto, Herbert Schwamborn, Frederik Hahn, Christian Kindt, Blaise Aundu Munguba, Malik Diop, Mariama Jalloh, Denis Ndong, Ahmed Sékou Neblett, and Akanni Humphrey

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