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Zimbabwe News and Internet Radio

Ammara speaks on Illuminati allegations

Zimbabwean singer Ammara Brown has denied that the controversial artwork of a woman on the crucifix, she used as a cover sleeve for her new single “Crucify Me” has anything to do with the shadowy group Illuminati. 

The controversial artwork of ‘Crucify Me’
The controversial artwork of ‘Crucify Me’

The original Illuminati was a secret society within the Roman Catholic priesthood and in recent times it has grown on the radar of Satanist conspiracy buffs who credit the mythical network with responsibility for everything from celebrity fame and fortune to war and famine across the globe.

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Explaining the cover Ammara said “This is really about the song and that picture is not even the official artwork for my song. There are no religious connotations attached to it. It’s a picture I just downloaded on the internet,” she said.

“This is a song about a broken relationship that needs mending when a woman cheats on her man.  I chose this particular artwork because when a woman cheats on a man she is dubbed as some kind of distorted animal.

“In the song the man is crucifying the woman for a mistake he, himself, has made before.  Crucifixion was a form of punishment for crimes committed, so it was not my intention to insult anyone,” she said.

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