Before now, it was being speculated that top Nigerian music star, D'Banj
 has joined the illuminati group. This perception may have been imagined
 as a result of D'Banj being signed to Kanye West's G.O.O.D Music label.
During
 the Mohits' troubled time, it was insinuated that both Don Jazzy and 
D'Banj fell apart due to illuminati issues. With the Kokomaster's (as 
D'Banj is also known as) romance with Kanye West and the Jay Z's clique 
got stronger, more people believed that D'Banj was already into the 
world's renowned cult group.
Last week Thursday, July 12, 2012, 
D'Banj was in Lagos for a special prayer service organised for Nigerian 
celebrities to avert sudden death among them. 
The call was made by Pastor Wole Oladiyun, the Senior Pastor of Christ Living Spring Apostolic Ministry (CLAM), Ogba, Lagos. 
A source close to the senior pastor reliably told CREATIVTY EMPIRE
 that D'Banj was warned by Pastor Oladiyun not to join or be associated 
with illuminati. We were told that the pastor gave D'Banj this stern 
warning when he had a chat with him.
He was quoted to have told 
the 'Oliver Twist' singer, "don't join illuminati if you don't want to 
go to hell fire", . 
We also reliably gathered that D'Banj had a short performance at the service, where he sang his 'Olorun Maje' song. 
The
 Illuminati cult was founded on May 1, 1776, in Ingolstadt (Upper 
Bavaria) as the Order of the Illuminati, with an initial membership of 
five, by Adam Weishaupt. He was the first lay professor of canon law at 
the University of Ingolstadt.
The cult was made up of free-thinkers as an offshoot of the Enlightenment and seems to have been modeled on the Freemasons.
The
 Illuminati's members took a vow of secrecy and pledged obedience to 
their superiors. Members were divided into three main classes, each with
 several degrees, and many Illuminati chapters drew membership from 
existing Masonic lodges.

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