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Several dozen men greet students with music, cheering, and high fives during the first week of school at Annie Fisher Montessori Magnet School in Hartford on Aug. 27, 2025. The men are volunteers with Calling All Brothers, which has organized the annual greeting tour for 10 years. The group’s founder, AJ Johnson, announced on the microphone. Credit: Dana Edwards / CT Mirror

This story has been updated.

The group of men formed a circle and held each other’s hands for a prayer led by pastor AJ Johnson, before lining up with drums and tambourines to greet students on their first week of school at Annie Fisher Montessori Magnet School in Hartford.

“It’s all about the Hartford youth,” said Johnson on Wednesday to the nearly 20 volunteers of different professional backgrounds, ages and from different parts of the city and state.

Once the school doors opened, the ‘brothers’ as they called each other, formed a tunnel for high fives, to start a party for the kids. Some students ran through the tunnel with an ear to ear grin, others were a bit confused and instead walked through and observed with an amazed gaze the suited men shaking tambourines for them.

The Back 2 School greeting tours started after Johnson in 2015 saw a social media post of men in Atlanta lined up to greet the kids there on their first day of school. He, with help from Correction Ombudsman DeVaughn Ward and other friends, figured Hartford should have a yearly event like that. So they recruited on social media and by word of mouth, and got over 50 men to greet Martin Luther King Jr. Middle School students that year.

Several dozen men greet students with music, cheering, and high fives during the first week of school at Annie Fisher Montessori Magnet School in Hartford on Aug. 27, 2025. The men are volunteers with the Calling All Brothers group, which has organized the annual greeting tour for 10 years. Credit: Dana Edwards / CT Mirror

The tour began at the middle school on Tuesday and will continue at a different school each day this week.

The celebration of students became the grassroots movement Calling All Brothers, which provides mentorship, positive role models and educational support. The movement serves as a way to change the narrative, and redefine masculinity of male models for Hartford, in a country where Black men are underrepresented in positive social roles in the media, according to research.

Within the Hartford school district, the majority of the enrolled students are people of color, with 57% identifying as Hispanic or Latino, 29% Black or African American, 6% as white and 5% as Asian.

“There’s often a lot of misconceptions about the men in urban communities, that either they’re absent or not involved,” said Ward.

Ten years later, the community effort is constant and the brotherhood built through the years persists. Whether it’s someone’s first time attending these events, or their 10th year, the commitment to motivate children’s educational journey sets a common ground for all.

“I think it’s a beautiful thing, it’s like motivational for the kids and encouragement,” said Shay Hughes, mother of a Fisher middle schooler, who was meeting the Calling All Brothers volunteers for the second time.

The Calling All Brothers volunteers pray before students arrive at Annie Fisher Montessori Magnet School in Hartford on Aug. 27, 2025. Credit: Dana Edwards / CT Mirror

While some parents do show excitement or support towards the line of high fives to the kids, other parents do not. In one of the greeting tours, a conflict arose because the drums and tambourine noise disturbed a parent and his child, but was resolved after the brothers learned the middle schooler had sensory issues, according to Johnson.

“When we think of Hartford all we think is crime and violence, and all we need is a conversation,” Johnson said in his starting speech of the greeting tour before the kids arrived.

The men who participate in the greeting tour come from different backgrounds, neighborhoods and states. Some met in high school, others are alumni from the middle schools they do the greeting tours at and a few even drive from nearby towns to join the community.

One of those is Scott Kemp, a volunteer activist, who drives from Ridgefield to join the brothers early in the morning for the first week of school greeting tours in Hartford schools.

“For folks to see people that look like themselves in those lines, welcoming them, I think is just so important,” Kemp said.

A Calling All Brothers volunteer high fives a student at Annie Fisher Montessori Magnet School in Hartford on Aug. 27, 2025. Credit: Dana Edwards / CT Mirror

For Kemp as well as Johnson and Ward, the greetings are an opportunity to showcase Black men’s success and transmit joy to the students.

“A lot of the kids that have come out weren’t even born when we started this initiative,” said Fred Phillips, founder of Men Standing Up Against Violence, who has been at the greetings since 2015. “We will continue to do whatever we can to enhance our community.”

Besides lining up at the entrance of middle schools on their first days of school the organization is fundraising money to provide uniforms for Hartford Public School students.

The Back 2 School greeting tours are the kickstart of a series of Calling All Brothers’s events in Hartford with a trunk or treat lined up for October.

“It’s the community saying we value you, we love you and we support you as you go on your educational journey,” Dr. Andraé Townsel, superintendent and CEO of Hartford Public Schools, who high fived some students before the doors closed.

Correction: A previous version of this story reported the greeting tour began on Monday. The tour started on Tuesday.

Mariana Navarrete Villegas is a Community Engagement Reporter for The Connecticut Mirror, covering Hartford. She recently graduated from the Craig Newmark Graduate School of Journalism with a master’s degree in Bilingual Journalism. Previously, she was the Community Engagement and Video Assistant at Epicenter-NYC and a Podcast Intern at The Take, Al Jazeera English’s daily news podcast. As a reporter, she has covered stories from New York to Florida, California, Panama, and Mexico, focusing on labor rights, immigration, and community care. She also hosts 'La Chismesita,' a community radio show in New York that archives oral histories through conversations with women community leaders. Originally from Mexico, Mariana spent her teenage years in Panama. She holds a B.A. in Global Studies with a minor in Psychology from Saint Leo University, where she interned at the International Rescue Committee.