Tuesday, September 4, 2007
DRCongo Reps from Even the Tiniest Towns
The town of Marly-Gomont has French Congolese rapper Kamini to thank for putting it on the map. Last summer the artist uploaded his basement-budget video, "Marly-Gomont", onto the internet. By September his video had thousands of views. By mid-October he had a two-album deal with RCA. In December 2006 Time profiled Kamini as part of its Person of the Year articles on Internet-based content creators.
At a time when many hip hop stars are rapping about luxury cars, scantily-clad women, and diamond-studded everythings; Kamini took a different approach. He rhymed about what he knew -- growing up as one of a handful of blacks in a small town and dealing with its pressures, struggles, lessons and ultimately its laughs. "I couldn't rap about 'bitches' and 'hos' and do that whole gangsta thing," he says, "because it's not true. It's not my life."
Big up to Kamini for keeping it real all the way to a record deal. Check the rhyme here.
Sunday, September 2, 2007
'State of war' in eastern Congo
A dissident Congolese army officer says there is a state of war between the government and his forces in the east of the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Speaking to the BBC, General Laurent Nkunda, a Congolese Tutsi, accused the government of forming an alliance with Hutus to attack his troops.
Heavy fighting is reported in the Kivu region, with the Congolese army moving troops into the area.
The UN refugee agency says tens of thousands have fled from their homes. The UNHCR says people are afraid of being caught between government forces, former Rwandan rebels and troops of General Nkunda.
Find out more.
Friday, August 31, 2007
Le Sape: Extravagance or Fashion
These are sapeurs, acolytes of a 25-year-old movement called la SAPE—La Societé des Ambianceurs et des Personnes Élégantes (aka Kitendi, the religion of the cloth) — that revolves around the possession of the most expensive, most luxurious, most extravagant fashion in the world. Followers of SAPE wear $10,000 jackets and $500 shoes, but these mostly young Congolese men otherwise barely eke out a living in the rubble of Kinshasa and Brazzaville or the ghettos of Paris and Brussels, washing dishes or washing bodies, and sometimes selling their own.
The craze started with le Pape de la SAPE—intermediary between the gods of fashion and practicing sapeurs—the musician Papa Wemba, born Jules Shungu Wembadio Pene Kikumba in the Kasai River region of the Belgian Congo. Papa Wemba, an emerging pop star in the late 1960s, fomented a revolution in self-presentation, agitating for pizzazz over the dowdy duds prescribed by Mobutu Sese Seko's "authenticity movement." Mobutu was the first leader of Zaire after it was renamed—freshly liberated from Belgium in 1960 (Zaire is now the Democratic Republic of the Congo). His authenticity movement, which frowned on all associations with Western culture, was part of an effort to distinguish African-controlled Zaire from the Belgian-controlled Congo. Under Mobutu, anything from Christianity to neckties was in danger of being banned.
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Telema Mpo Na Congo = Stand Up for the Congo
Check this out. Revolutionary music at its finest. In a time where Africa is now a topic of discussion again and it is cool to be part of a mission to help rebuild Africa, we have ran across a group of true Congolese cats that are not about the fame or $$, but they literally carry, The DRCongo on their back. “LOPANGO YA BANKA,” which means “House of the Ancestors.”
Thursday, August 30, 2007
Mommy Balali Holds the Future of the Silverbacks in Her Hands
Nine mountain gorillas have been killed in the park since January; a tragedy for a species that is estimated to number in the hundreds. Only about 700 mountain gorillas are believed to remain in the world; with the majority (380) living in DRC.
While we strive to bring light to the plight of our people in the DRCongo, our friends at Wildlife Direct work hard to ensure that native animals like the Mountain Gorilla and the Hippopotamus don't go the way of the dinosaurs. Congo Rangers risk life and limb daily in order to protect these animals. Check out how Joseph Aloma, Elie Mundima, Atamato and other Congo Rangers endeavor to keep these endangered creatures safe. These rangers endure frequent attacks on their posts, threats to their lives, and deaths of their fellow rangers -- all to protect Central Africa's animals. Around here, that's what we call CONGO STRONG!!