Please, note that the name Yemo is also associated with the people of D.R.Congo.The family of former President Mobutu of D.R.Congo ( formally Zaire), has YEMO in their family and they even have a hospital called YEMO HOSPITAL ln the 1930's, many people from the Gold Coast went to the Congo as carpenters , masons an other professions.They mostly include people from the town of LABADI( now LA ) in Accra, Ghana. Our old men who went to Congo told us that they left many children in the then D.R. Congo. Ask anybody from D.R. Congo and he will tell you about about the YEMO'S in their country. Check it out .
They're from the present day Benin city in Nigeria once called Iduland in Igodomigodo they ran away from the Oba who came from Ile Ife and started killings of the indigenous people so many ran away from their ancestral land to where they're today
Nii Yemoh The Ga Boy, I enjoy your Ga series even though I am not a Ga. I stayed in Accra when I was young and can understand the language but cannot speak. Watching you from Houston, Texas. Your subtitles are on point. Keep it up Ga yo bi. love you and Aj.
1. Ga's migrated from Israel. During our journey, some settled in various places because they couldn't continue the journey. So some settled in Nigeria, Mali and Togo. So in some part of this countries, Ga names can be seen there as well as a very close tradition and language. 2. The people of the Volta Region have a part of their history from Ga's also. During the migration, there was one of our father's by name AYI, when he got to the now Ewe land, he said he is tired and cannot continue the journey so he stayed there. So he was like, "Ayi mɛ gbe", meaning, I Ayi will stop here, can't continue. So in the Ewe language, "mɛ gbe" means, I can't continue or stop. With so doing we the Ga's call the Ewe's Ayi mɛ gbe which with time has evolved to what we say Ayigbe. 3. Also most of our tradition like the kpokpoi, homowo etc is celebrated in a part Egypt. 4. Now concerning what the Priest said about Ga's not having Kings but we have Priests. Like I said earlier that Ga's originally are from Egypt. We can all recall that in the early times before Christ, the Israelites didn't have Kings, all they had were Priests like Moses that led them to the promise land. So same as Ga's, we're not Kingship oriented but ours is the Priest, but now due to evolution, Kings have evolved. 5. Another interesting thing about why Akans call Ga's "Nkraŋ fuo" is because, when we were coming, we were many, so when they saw us that plenty, they were like, look at how they're coming plenty like "kra (which is one of the species of ants)". So from that we got the name nkraŋ from the Akans. I've just summarised it because of plenty typing😂😂😂. DISCLAIMER: I have summarised most of the history I have made mention and the others I have talked about in this comment. There is more to it. Surely as Nii proceeds unvealing and much details will be given in the videos to come up. Thanks
@@berniceayi6776 great great great Bernice Ayi. I'm happy you have made us know your name and origin to confirm this. You're our sister Bernice. My name is Edmund Nii Ayi Armah and my kid sis is Naa Dedei. Send me a mail via edmundarmah3@gmail.com let's get connected
Me too . I'm a beginner to learning Ga. It's challenging & difficult for me So far. I don't have a teacher / instructor and am trying to learn on my own. I appreciate videos like this. I'm from USA and will go to Accra in December so I'm hoping to learn enough Ga to at least be able to comprehend basic greetings and phrases.
Oh interesting, so my forefather run away from La 😂😂😂🙆🏾♀️🙆🏾♀️🙆🏾♀️. Lantey Ja we lol. He is so fluent with Ga and speaks English as well. Nowadays it's really difficult to find people who can speak pure Ga.
You're an Igodomigodo meaning the key to the kingdom, your ancestors left their ancestral land when the Oba captured our land and was using us for sacrifices so many ran away like the GA people. And the funny thing is the Oba is still in your ancestral land doing the same evil his ancestors has done till date that is why we want the blood sucking palace down and them going back to their land in Ile Ife so we can unite back all our brothers and sisters that he sold to slavery all over the world Shalom.
Nii we really need to do a part 2 of learning ga and ga kusumii The Ga you speaking is not clear You don’t say mimami m3i k3 mipapam3i You say ts3m3i k3 ny3m3i, Bii k3 ny3mim3i
thank you so much for making this video. I myself have been trying to research our traditional practices. Please if you can continue to make these videos. I am so glad you are keeping our culture alive.
Ohh wowww am really a Muslim and only today I have got to know the truth about what he narrates I never believed the wulormor can even mentioned the name of God ,but thanks bro for ur good work and I have learned from today about the kpokpoi and all their traditional aspects and I was very amazed when the wulormor quote from the Bible that seek seek first the kingdom of God ,thanks and for soo many years I have stayed at labadi only today I have known the truth about the customs and tradition ,,thanks brother and big thanks to yemo obronii for the truth
I see that you don't upload as much anymore, but I hope this comment reaches you! Thank you so much for this video! I'm an African American from the West Coast whose father is of the Ga tribe and I have many family members in Accra! Unfortunately, they practice Christianity like my American counterparts, which makes me assume that they may not practice this religion. I'm more interested in this traditional and spiritual part of the Ga tribe and would love to visit my father's hometown someday (his family lives near the designer coffin people if that helps). I'm not sure if I'm destined for the priesthood or anything but this is all so interesting! I've subscribed and am looking forward to more videos!
I am Jamaican watching your content. Wow, when I look at the Ga people of Ghana all I see is my own relatives!!! You guys look ALOT like us! Please show me more video but please add the subtitles.
Nii do something about Adupono, if someone is from there. Also how about those homes with special room with huge Stone in ground where the kpokpoi is first sprinkle before anybody eats what does this man has to say about that. My father who led one of Osu powerful priestess to the Lord gethered all things together and burnt them all lived to be 83yrs, was never sick a day in his life.
Ga traditional religion is not the same as Christianity. The white man merely brought Christianity to us, it is not their religion. Before the bible came to us, we believed that all these spirits Wulomo has mentioned, are from God. We now know that God has chosen ONE way by which ALL must come to him. If we look in the same bible which Nii Wulomo quoted from, it says in 2 corinthians 5 vs.19 that God through Christ is reconciling the world to himself ......including we Ga-Adangbes. It's no joke. I am grateful we came out of this to freedom through Christ Jesus our Saviour. Awo
It is not our way to write down our ways. We have our culture handed down from the elders to the generation. A respectable child sits at the foot of the elders. Thats how they learn wisdom and tradition and the responsibility of the culture is handed down. Then you have pride and confidence in who you are as a child of the community. Our ways and language are not lost. It is just that those children who strayed away to learn the ways and traditions of the foreigner never learn from the elders. We communicate by symbols, thats why they have not been able to corrupt the tradition. If you will notice every problem and conflict we have as Ga's, is because we challenge the way of the old by what is written by the foreigner about us and our ways and we the children now do the forbidden of pointing a finger against the ways of the ancient. Come back home.
I am not a black American,I am black from LA but I don't own a plot of land in LA, my children are from ( Ofrosro We) since my late husband is from there,I am in the diaspora and how do I acquire a plot of land in LA please????
It’s clear the Ga respect their ancestors and still honor them. I’m curious then why there aren’t Ga customs to honor the thousands that were sold away into slavery. Were they not also ancestors of this Priest? As an AA I want to hear how the Ga reconciled with the losses of so many of its people? What traditions mark losses and give thanks and honor for our shared ancestors who survived chattel slavery in America, what libations does he pour out to those ancestors? My problem is that Ghanaians don’t really seem to view AAs ancestors as their own true blood relatives but as other. He says AAs want to know where we’re from, true but as a priest does he not want to know what happened to his people? Healing AAs would be healing himself as well, we’re connected but I don’t sense he feels that he himself is incomplete with the children of his stolen ancestors.
Our history was never taught in school...boz of social media now we the Gas are demanding to know our history and how we can link with AA and preserve it for future generations. Its painful 💔 u are denied where you come from that is evil. Love AA bro & sis.
@@ednaclottey Somewhere in the Americas you have buried ancestors and living relatives. There are great men and women, Black Americans & Caribbeans who are your people but you can't celebrate and honor them among your Chiefs, Priests and Queen Mothers because that knowledge is as lost to you as much as it is to us. What would it mean to Ga children to know that some Black Americans scientists and inventors whose genuis improved the lives of humanity are their tribesmen? I want Ga kids and all Africans to be fiercely proud knowing a Black man, an African descendant in America designed the light bulb, the 1st person in ALL of human history to do a successful surgery to repair a human heart was Black doctor and he was born a slave. The lost is tremendous to both of us, Black Americans and continental Africans, and that is the ultimate evil of what was done. Ga should learn African American history, it is the history of your people in a new world, you owe it to yourselves and to our shared ancestors.
@@Erica-ls7bp in other words, you want your history to dominate, your achievements to be the achievements that everyone thinks about. How self centred. As usual the Westerners think their history is Supreme and only their stories matter. We have our own Pioneer doctors, surgeons, philosophers etc. The first African to get a degree in the areas of mining, philosophy etc were Ghanaians - Kwasi Boakye, the first black mining engineer in the world, graduated from the Royal Academy in Holland as a mining engineer in 1847 despite being beaten up on the street and bullied at school. After graduating he was discriminated against by his superior Cornelius de Groot van Embden but fought it and was awarded compensation of 500 guilders and 710 hectares of land. Anton Wilhelm Amo born in present-day Ghana circa 1700 was the first African or black person in the world to earn a philosophy degree. He defended his philosophy dissertation and received his doctorate from Wittenberg in 1734. Arthur Wharton was born in Jamestown, Gold Coast today know as Ghana on 28 October 1865 (died 12 December 1930) is widely considered to be the first black professional footballer in the world and was part of the team that reached FA Cup semi-finals in 1886-87. He was also an all-round sportsman - in 1886, he equalled the amateur world record of 10 seconds for the 100-yard sprint in the AAA championship- a keen cyclist and cricketer. Not everything has to be about you, you, you!
Gas werent really affected by slavery. Most were middlemen between European slave traders and the in land natives. They willingly accepted to be under British rule with no resistance.
@@niiyemohthegaboy Thank you for posting this video and for the subtitles. We here in the the diaspora are waking up to our identity and are searching for truth. I have discovered some surprising things about the Ga. Do you have an email address or website? I would like to share what I have discovered and I have some questions also. Thanks.
He really knows the history. GOD bless him
Very well
He knows because he is a TRUE Hebrew Israelite.
Ga mei wo yè biè💕💕💕
Welcome 🙏
his ga is so good wow. this is how fluent i want to be in ga sigh. i love this content ❤️keep them coming please
We will definitely bring you more
But I must say you took a bold step
You have really educated your audience
Kudos 👏👏👏👏👏
Please, note that the name Yemo is also associated with the people of D.R.Congo.The family of former President Mobutu of D.R.Congo ( formally Zaire), has YEMO in their family and they even have a hospital called YEMO HOSPITAL ln the 1930's, many people from the Gold Coast went to the Congo as carpenters , masons an other professions.They mostly include people from the town of LABADI( now LA ) in Accra, Ghana. Our old men who went to Congo told us that they left many children in the then D.R. Congo. Ask anybody from D.R. Congo and he will tell you about about the YEMO'S in their country. Check it out .
The Ga people have an amazing history! May God expand your territory.
They're from the present day Benin city in Nigeria once called Iduland in Igodomigodo they ran away from the Oba who came from Ile Ife and started killings of the indigenous people so many ran away from their ancestral land to where they're today
In Jamaica we are also taught to take off your shoes before you enter the house. I understand that part.
Nii Yemoh The Ga Boy, I enjoy your Ga series even though I am not a Ga. I stayed in Accra when I was young and can understand the language but cannot speak. Watching you from Houston, Texas. Your subtitles are on point. Keep it up Ga yo bi. love you and Aj.
Kwame thank you so much for following. We will try our possible best to bring you more. Really grateful 🙏
Watching from Dallas Texas.
I am a proud Ga-Adangbe. God bless the Ga and Adangbes. Long live our Ga King
1. Ga's migrated from Israel. During our journey, some settled in various places because they couldn't continue the journey. So some settled in Nigeria, Mali and Togo. So in some part of this countries, Ga names can be seen there as well as a very close tradition and language.
2. The people of the Volta Region have a part of their history from Ga's also. During the migration, there was one of our father's by name AYI, when he got to the now Ewe land, he said he is tired and cannot continue the journey so he stayed there. So he was like, "Ayi mɛ gbe", meaning, I Ayi will stop here, can't continue. So in the Ewe language, "mɛ gbe" means, I can't continue or stop. With so doing we the Ga's call the Ewe's Ayi mɛ gbe which with time has evolved to what we say Ayigbe.
3. Also most of our tradition like the kpokpoi, homowo etc is celebrated in a part Egypt.
4. Now concerning what the Priest said about Ga's not having Kings but we have Priests. Like I said earlier that Ga's originally are from Egypt. We can all recall that in the early times before Christ, the Israelites didn't have Kings, all they had were Priests like Moses that led them to the promise land. So same as Ga's, we're not Kingship oriented but ours is the Priest, but now due to evolution, Kings have evolved.
5. Another interesting thing about why Akans call Ga's "Nkraŋ fuo" is because, when we were coming, we were many, so when they saw us that plenty, they were like, look at how they're coming plenty like "kra (which is one of the species of ants)". So from that we got the name nkraŋ from the Akans. I've just summarised it because of plenty typing😂😂😂.
DISCLAIMER: I have summarised most of the history I have made mention and the others I have talked about in this comment. There is more to it. Surely as Nii proceeds unvealing and much details will be given in the videos to come up. Thanks
👏👏
Wow well done!
My name is Bernice Dedevi Ayi from Togo
@@berniceayi6776 great great great Bernice Ayi. I'm happy you have made us know your name and origin to confirm this. You're our sister Bernice. My name is Edmund Nii Ayi Armah and my kid sis is Naa Dedei. Send me a mail via edmundarmah3@gmail.com let's get connected
we the Gas came from Israel
Thanks for bringing this onboard my husband is Ga and am trying very hard to learn the language
Me too . I'm a beginner to learning Ga. It's challenging & difficult for me So far. I don't have a teacher / instructor and am trying to learn on my own. I appreciate videos like this. I'm from USA and will go to Accra in December so I'm hoping to learn enough Ga to at least be able to comprehend basic greetings and phrases.
Oh interesting, so my forefather run away from La 😂😂😂🙆🏾♀️🙆🏾♀️🙆🏾♀️.
Lantey Ja we lol.
He is so fluent with Ga and speaks English as well.
Nowadays it's really difficult to find people who can speak pure Ga.
Very true, me sef I’m struggling
Well done Nii. keep them coming...Osu Alata representing...
Good job keep it up💪this is what i call prayers God bless y'all Ga people's
Eeeeeeeerh so proud of my uncle
The way he can preach you and the way he knows tradition
Chai 👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
He is a walking library
Nii Yemoh The Ga Boy I swear la
I love my people. Big ups Nii Yemoh
You're an Igodomigodo meaning the key to the kingdom, your ancestors left their ancestral land when the Oba captured our land and was using us for sacrifices so many ran away like the GA people.
And the funny thing is the Oba is still in your ancestral land doing the same evil his ancestors has done till date that is why we want the blood sucking palace down and them going back to their land in Ile Ife so we can unite back all our brothers and sisters that he sold to slavery all over the world Shalom.
I'm proud Ga, am from La Abetse wee ❤💛💚😍😍😗😗👍👍👍
The profetic words about the Kpeshie is very true. Ga people should wake up
Nii we really need to do a part 2 of learning ga and ga kusumii
The Ga you speaking is not clear
You don’t say mimami m3i k3 mipapam3i
You say ts3m3i k3 ny3m3i, Bii k3 ny3mim3i
Will be rectified in the next video 🙏
This man is great. God bless you for this enlightenment
thank you so much for making this video. I myself have been trying to research our traditional practices. Please if you can continue to make these videos. I am so glad you are keeping our culture alive.
Ohh wowww am really a Muslim and only today I have got to know the truth about what he narrates I never believed the wulormor can even mentioned the name of God ,but thanks bro for ur good work and I have learned from today about the kpokpoi and all their traditional aspects and I was very amazed when the wulormor quote from the Bible that seek seek first the kingdom of God ,thanks and for soo many years I have stayed at labadi only today I have known the truth about the customs and tradition ,,thanks brother and big thanks to yemo obronii for the truth
I see that you don't upload as much anymore, but I hope this comment reaches you! Thank you so much for this video! I'm an African American from the West Coast whose father is of the Ga tribe and I have many family members in Accra! Unfortunately, they practice Christianity like my American counterparts, which makes me assume that they may not practice this religion. I'm more interested in this traditional and spiritual part of the Ga tribe and would love to visit my father's hometown someday (his family lives near the designer coffin people if that helps). I'm not sure if I'm destined for the priesthood or anything but this is all so interesting! I've subscribed and am looking forward to more videos!
Hi Evergreen, thanks for subscribing and more videos coming up soon.
I'm Nii Oblitey Commey from Sakumo We. My grandfather also ran away because he didn't want to be a priest.
Thanks Nii for the acknowledgement in the description box. Very humbled.
Wow...I have learnt some new stuff oo...Oyiwalad)n
#Ga #TeamNii #La
You are welcome
This is you guys best vlog 🙌🏾
God bless him for the history
La Ga language is different from the others. It's so clear
I am Jamaican watching your content. Wow, when I look at the Ga people of Ghana all I see is my own relatives!!! You guys look ALOT like us! Please show me more video but please add the subtitles.
I will add subtitles in the subsequent ones. 🙏
Interesting🤗 first time to comment keep it up🔥👍🏽🤝
Nii I really like it when you talk about God
dope dope dope fire!! ill be in ghana march
Thanks a lot have learnt something today😍😍
I’m happy you did
Ayeeee early gang💃💃💃💃
U doing a good job Nii👊👊👊
#NiiYemohthegaboy🔥🔥🔥
Thank you Lady B
Wow! Thank you very much for this Nii. I have learnt so much
You are welcome dear
I SEE YOU NII.GOD BLESS YOU
Amen
Yaw mo turn to Yemoh 😄😄.
Lets guess what it will turn into in the next 50 years
@@ReubenMclord love the way our people made every foreign word theirs .... they pronounced words their way and it became theirs ... splendid
Eisshh his Ga tho🔥🔥❤
Yaw Mo🤝😂
The hand shake right? 😂
learnt a lot from your channel men ...
Happy you did
thanks Nii Yemoh, keep it up
Great Video Nii🔥🤝
Thank you class prefect
TRUE Hebrew Israelite High Priest here.
True Ga priest.
No validation needed by those who came thousands of years after Ga existence.
Ooh no subtitles from the beginning and some parts. We the Ashanti we don’t understand so help us.😬🤪
Really? Subtitles from the beginning is available
Aaah wait oo you lemme watch again. Ooh okay I mean when he was introducing himself😜
very good am posting it on my facebook page .
Awesome, thank you but please reference the source of the content 🙏
@@niiyemohthegaboy yes I did
"Tradition has been hidden from literates so literates despise tradition..."
Nii do something about Adupono, if someone is from there. Also how about those homes with special room with huge Stone in ground where the kpokpoi is first sprinkle before anybody eats what does this man has to say about that. My father who led one of Osu powerful priestess to the Lord gethered all things together and burnt them all lived to be 83yrs, was never sick a day in his life.
Adupono, sure
Understand 🤝 Ga/Ewe born in London ❤️🙏🏿
Glad to learn a lot bro.!
Massa we are resuming shoot on Sunday
💥more hewale 💪🏾
dope intro song💃💃💃💃
Thank you Naa
Wow good job Nii
Last time I came for Homowo festival. I am not give up on my history as a Ga.
Please How do I can in contact with you, I need some Ga books
Bravo Laa Kpa
Ga traditional religion is not the same as Christianity. The white man merely brought Christianity to us, it is not their religion. Before the bible came to us, we believed that all these spirits Wulomo has mentioned, are from God. We now know that God has chosen ONE way by which ALL must come to him. If we look in the same bible which Nii Wulomo quoted from, it says in 2 corinthians 5 vs.19 that God through Christ is reconciling the world to himself ......including we Ga-Adangbes. It's no joke. I am grateful we came out of this to freedom through Christ Jesus our Saviour.
Awo
Nii Yemoh , you need to improve your ga language to enable the presentation flow. Good work done though. Interesting.
Well noted Deborah and thanks for the feedback
NII,
DAVID AND THE GA WARRIOR IS IT NOT A SIMILAR?
It is. 😊
You won’t make it to heaven
@@naaodoley8238 because i repeated what someone said? oh my sister.. well.....
Oooh nii.......I can never hear that language...only reading the sentences down ther😭😭
Awww you will get better with time
beautiful language from isreal
It is not our way to write down our ways. We have our culture handed down from the elders to the generation. A respectable child sits at the foot of the elders. Thats how they learn wisdom and tradition and the responsibility of the culture is handed down. Then you have pride and confidence in who you are as a child of the community. Our ways and language are not lost. It is just that those children who strayed away to learn the ways and traditions of the foreigner never learn from the elders. We communicate by symbols, thats why they have not been able to corrupt the tradition. If you will notice every problem and conflict we have as Ga's, is because we challenge the way of the old by what is written by the foreigner about us and our ways and we the children now do the forbidden of pointing a finger against the ways of the ancient. Come back home.
Please can I know the media systems the Ga’s used in the olden days?
What do you mean by "media systems" pls?
I always thought that Yaw was a Akan name.
It is most gas have akan names.
Thank you
The guide it’s your ga for me 😂😂😂😂😂are you really a ga 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂sorry but I can’t help it 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Please what is this song called 😍😍
Which one?
Very interesting can you please give me his number? I really enjoyed this interview
Is this my comment?
I am not a black American,I am black from LA but I don't own a plot of land in LA, my children are from ( Ofrosro We) since my late husband is from there,I am in the diaspora and how do I acquire a plot of land in LA please????
Please email me so I can link you to the priest (wulomo) of La.
info@niiandaj.com
@@niiyemohthegaboy 🙏
Please Yemoh learn GA language well, Thanks.
He can pray more than a pastor. I have been there twice to bath
What you are doing is bigger than what you think.
We pray for strength and good health to continue 🙏
First!
Sɔbskraibimɔ
Hahahaha
😂
It’s clear the Ga respect their ancestors and still honor them. I’m curious then why there aren’t Ga customs to honor the thousands that were sold away into slavery. Were they not also ancestors of this Priest? As an AA I want to hear how the Ga reconciled with the losses of so many of its people? What traditions mark losses and give thanks and honor for our shared ancestors who survived chattel slavery in America, what libations does he pour out to those ancestors? My problem is that Ghanaians don’t really seem to view AAs ancestors as their own true blood relatives but as other. He says AAs want to know where we’re from, true but as a priest does he not want to know what happened to his people? Healing AAs would be healing himself as well, we’re connected but I don’t sense he feels that he himself is incomplete with the children of his stolen ancestors.
Our history was never taught in school...boz of social media now we the Gas are demanding to know our history and how we can link with AA and preserve it for future generations. Its painful 💔 u are denied where you come from that is evil. Love AA bro & sis.
@@ednaclottey Somewhere in the Americas you have buried ancestors and living relatives. There are great men and women, Black Americans & Caribbeans who are your people but you can't celebrate and honor them among your Chiefs, Priests and Queen Mothers because that knowledge is as lost to you as much as it is to us. What would it mean to Ga children to know that some Black Americans scientists and inventors whose genuis improved the lives of humanity are their tribesmen? I want Ga kids and all Africans to be fiercely proud knowing a Black man, an African descendant in America designed the light bulb, the 1st person in ALL of human history to do a successful surgery to repair a human heart was Black doctor and he was born a slave. The lost is tremendous to both of us, Black Americans and continental Africans, and that is the ultimate evil of what was done. Ga should learn African American history, it is the history of your people in a new world, you owe it to yourselves and to our shared ancestors.
@@Erica-ls7bp in other words, you want your history to dominate, your achievements to be the achievements that everyone thinks about. How self centred. As usual the Westerners think their history is Supreme and only their stories matter. We have our own Pioneer doctors, surgeons, philosophers etc. The first African to get a degree in the areas of mining, philosophy etc were Ghanaians - Kwasi Boakye, the first black mining engineer in the world, graduated from the Royal Academy in Holland as a mining engineer in 1847 despite being beaten up on the street and bullied at school. After graduating he was discriminated against by his superior Cornelius de Groot van Embden but fought it and was awarded compensation of 500 guilders and 710 hectares of land.
Anton Wilhelm Amo born in present-day Ghana circa 1700 was the first African or black person in the world to earn a philosophy degree. He defended his philosophy dissertation and received his doctorate from Wittenberg in 1734.
Arthur Wharton was born in Jamestown, Gold Coast today know as Ghana on 28 October 1865 (died 12 December 1930) is widely considered to be the first black professional footballer in the world and was part of the team that reached FA Cup semi-finals in 1886-87. He was also an all-round sportsman - in 1886, he equalled the amateur world record of 10 seconds for the 100-yard sprint in the AAA championship- a keen cyclist and cricketer. Not everything has to be about you, you, you!
@@Erica-ls7bp you must didn't read what the GA sister said?
Gas werent really affected by slavery. Most were middlemen between European slave traders and the in land natives. They willingly accepted to be under British rule with no resistance.
This straight up Yoruba language mixed with a bit of Togo, Benin and Igala intonations
Why do you guys always want a connection with other languages. Gas are not yorubas. And the languauge does not even sound lose
@@mawuliahiable6178 no debates son. Knowledge don’t come cheap nor free.
@@mawuliahiable6178 don't mind them. Because the Ga people settled in Ile Ife for some time, they want to claim them as Yoruba.
Ayeeko
Yaaaay3
Blofom3i not blofobii bro
Nuumo Yemo can #ShikpaaWaaDi3nts3 …
The name is Ofro Osro we not ofonso
Your spelling is wrong
Awww thank you for the correction. Much appreciated
Make me Your P.A
Nii that place is not a shrine oooooo
There are no idols there
I will lash waaaaaa
As for the this one me too I will correct you some😁 Shrine is a place regarded as holy because of its associations with a divinity or a sacred person
La
Yes
@@niiyemohthegaboy Thank you for posting this video and for the subtitles. We here in the the diaspora are waking up to our identity and are searching for truth. I have discovered some surprising things about the Ga. Do you have an email address or website? I would like to share what I have discovered and I have some questions also. Thanks.
@@michelley9203 God bless you for the enlightenment in our culture.up up Ga-Dangme people
welcome is wonhereboatuu (literally meaning we receive you, hug hug)