Brown-brown
Brown-brown is a purported form of cocaine or amphetamine insufflation mixed with smokeless gunpowder.
Reports indicate that the composition of brown-brown varied, sometimes including cocaine, heroin, or other stimulants, often adulterated or of low purity. In some cases, smokeless gunpowder was added, which appears to have served a symbolic or psychological purpose rather than having a pharmacological effect.
The term may also refer to heroin.
Brown-brown is reportedly given to child soldiers before West African armed conflicts. One former child soldier, Michel Chikwanine, has written a graphic novel with Jessica Dee Humphreys called Child Soldier, about the experience of being captured at the age of 5 by rebel fighters in the Democratic Republic of Congo, including being given brown-brown. "The rebel soldier who had hit me used a long, jagged knife to cut my wrist and rubbed powder into the wound. They called it Brown Brown – a mixture of gunpowder and a drug called cocaine. Right away, I began to feel like my brain was trying to jump out of my head."
In media and culture
Films
- The fictional character Yuri Orlov uses the drug in Liberia in the film Lord of War.
- It is also portrayed being used by Liberian Civil War|Liberian] child soldiers during their preparations for a combat/assault mission in the French/Liberian film Johnny Mad Dog.
- Several characters in the film Beasts of No Nation are seen snorting a substance, possibly cocaine, possibly heroin, that is mixed with gunpowder and burned.
- It is referenced in The White Chamber as a drug used to enhance war efforts.
Literature
- In the novel Beasts of No Nation and its 2015 film adaptation, brown-brown is used by many of the child soldiers and the Commandant.
- Ishmael Beah describes using brown-brown, cocaine, and other drugs while he was a child soldier in Sierra Leone, in his memoir A Long Way Gone: Memoirs [of a Boy Soldier].
- In the mystery novel The Madness of Crowds, 17th book of the Chief Inspector Armand Gamache series, one of the characters, Haniya Daoud, from Sudan, describes how brown-brown was used on child soldiers.
Television
- In 1000 Ways to Die episode 4.5, titled "Killing Them Softly", Tomo, a Sierra Leonean warlord, dies after snorting brown-brown with diamond dust in it, which cut through the lining of his lungs, breaching arteries and blood vessels.
- In the Funimation dub for the anime series Crayon Shin-Chan, the character Musae Koyama is renamed Bitzi Nohara and is presented as a photographer who is recovering from a brown-brown addiction after traveling to Africa and becoming romantically involved with a gun runner who trained child soldiers.
- Appears in The Great TV series.
Video games
- In the video game Metal Gear Solid 2: Sons of Liberty, Raiden divulges his experience as a child soldier and references the use of brown-brown.