AncestryDNA Results (Garifuna Edition)

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  • Опубликовано: 5 сен 2024
  • AncestryDNA Results (Belizean Garifuna Edition) 90%African 10%Native American 100%Garifuna
    Facebook Garifuna Carib Arawak Taino Studies Page / garinaguhistoricalstudies
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Комментарии • 121

  • @janicejupiter84
    @janicejupiter84 2 года назад +2

    Buiti guyoung Namulen. Seremein for sharing this knowledge. Garinagu must continue preserving, protecting, preaching and teaching Our language, roots and culture. Our Garifuna way of life is:
    'Au Bun, Amuru Nu Hagaburibei Garinagu; Awanse Wama Lau' means
    "I for you, you for Me' Is the Garifuna Way; Let Us Move Forward. Aba Iseini 🥰😷🙏🏿

  • @p5c6s7
    @p5c6s7 6 лет назад +3

    Excellent video! Very informative. Thanks for sharing!

  • @creex7118
    @creex7118 7 лет назад +16

    Great video brother! I've never seen such results as yours with 90% African, and 10% Native American. The research explains a lot.

    • @sapointi
      @sapointi 7 лет назад +6

      Cree X my sisters dad is Garifuna too. he's 92% African, 7% native American.

    • @moniquel6273
      @moniquel6273 6 лет назад +2

      Sapa Inti That's interesting that he got -1% Pacific Islander. I'm Jamaican and most of my ancestry was West and Central African and European, but was curious about this -1% Pacific Islander result. I dismissed it as nothing but I wonder if it is some Arawakan DNA showing up.

    • @westindianmalkah8570
      @westindianmalkah8570 5 лет назад +1

      @@moniquel6273 me too im jamaican female and ive pacific islander and small trace of amerindian i wonder the same thing. My dad refuses to test i would know more if he did but maternally it seems as if they did not mix much my moms african is 96.7 on 23 and me. Mine is 95. My maternal ancestors were kept secured it looks i am also a maroon descendant.

  • @bantuqueen1000
    @bantuqueen1000 5 лет назад +6

    Daaaam 90% African 😍 I’m a 100% African I’m bantu Congo

  • @itoroots7291
    @itoroots7291 7 лет назад +4

    Amazing results! Thanks for sharing..

  • @karenmason8080
    @karenmason8080 7 лет назад +8

    I loved the way you paired you DNA results with both research and oral history. My family is Vincentian (pronounced Vin-sen-shin), with Yellow Carib ancestry on my paternal side. I have always wondered why the Central American Garifunas appear to more closely resemble non-carib people on the island than those who identify as Carib. The historical data explains a lot. I too was shocked that your results didn't point to Nigeria. Doesn't the Garifuna language find its roots in Yoruba? So much to learn. Thanks for sharing!

    • @juanacastillo1772
      @juanacastillo1772 7 лет назад +6

      Hi no garifuna language is carib or arawak indigenous to the Caribbean but of course after they intermingle with west Africans it probably has alot of barrowed words from that area. The language also has alot of barrowed words from French and English.

    • @JosephFlores
      @JosephFlores  7 лет назад +7

      Karen Mason Garifuna Language is mostly Arawak indian & Carib Indian. It's spoken through an African dialect. Meaning the pronunciation of the Indian words themselves. Similar to how Caribbean people speak British English through an African dialect or black people from the southern U.S. speak American English through an African dialect. There are only about 3-5 African loan words. Spanish or French are used for most modern items. Not the language but portions of the spiritual system and culture can be traced back to the Igbo and related groups.

    • @geoffrey2292
      @geoffrey2292 6 лет назад +2

      I think Garifuna language find some of its roots to Bantu language. His high Cameroon/Congo and African southeastern bantu percentage confirm that. He must have ancestry from the current Angola and Congo because that's where most bantu slaves came from

    • @HOPROPHETA
      @HOPROPHETA 6 лет назад +6

      @@geoffrey2292 Garifuna is the exact same (now extinct) language of the Kalinago of Dominica. The pronunciation is accurate. Check out the Garifuna Wayuu comparison. They both use Biama as word for the number two. Garifuna are living historians who YET retain their Awarakan language.

    • @beauty4717
      @beauty4717 4 года назад +1

      Joseph Flores & NUMBERS ARE IN FRENCH

  • @laxel01
    @laxel01 Год назад +1

    Very well put together video! Very educational!! We just did our ancestory DNA, my mom's side is Honduran! And it was so cool that we also have the same genetic makeup on a smaller scale of the garífuna! 🙏💗🇭🇳🇭🇳

  • @juwe9516
    @juwe9516 6 лет назад +4

    Brilliant .... Your journey of self discovery just begun... Spirit of your fires in Cameroon is calling.Go and take your heritage, shape and consolidate with the locals and like minded brothers and sisters... To direction the Cameroon of the future.Welcome home. Your ancestors would guide you home...Joseph Flores, Come home.

  • @earphbound720
    @earphbound720 7 лет назад +9

    You should upload to DNA.Land. I'm interested to see how they classify your Native American. Mine was classified as Amazonian just wondering if yours would be too. Thanks for posting!

    • @JosephFlores
      @JosephFlores  7 лет назад +4

      eArPh BoUnD Have heard that suggestion a few times. Think ill do it and keep you guys informed. From the Carib/Arawak side im sure mine will also come back Amazonian. Where are you from?

    • @earphbound720
      @earphbound720 7 лет назад +3

      I'm from the US. The Amazonian dna is a mystery to me. I've discovered that my mom has Cuban ancestry and my father has some Haitian ancestry but we all identify as African American. Weird thing is, my mom had no NA. Which means I got the NA from my dad but it's from South America so it has me confused because he doesn't have any South American ancestry that I'm aware of...or maybe he does and I just haven't pieced it together. In any event my father is deceased now so I guess I'll never really know. =/ I'm just curious if a person from South America or the Caribbean has NA what type of NA will it show up as, ya know. It'll help me get an idea.

    • @JosephFlores
      @JosephFlores  7 лет назад +7

      The Caribs and Arawaks (Kalinagu &Taino) both migated to the Caribbean from South America. From the mouth of the Amazon and Orinoco rivers.

    • @earphbound720
      @earphbound720 7 лет назад +2

      ***** Thank you for that. I need to look more into it. I look forward to your next vid on this if you do one.

    • @rudybay
      @rudybay 7 лет назад +6

      waiting on that 3rd part Joseph! just a mestizo honduran with no Garifuna heritage but very grateful that we share honduran land with the Garinagu!

  • @juanacastillo1772
    @juanacastillo1772 7 лет назад +6

    Great result bro. I am also garifuna from triunfo de la cruz tela. I can't wait to do mine and share with our community

    • @garinagu7
      @garinagu7 7 лет назад +3

      yes..... Im so happy to know that you are still adding on and building creating informational videos.... im going to do my Garifuna Ancestral dna result as well...... glad to see your work again.......awesome job.....aba insieni abuti

    • @JosephFlores
      @JosephFlores  5 лет назад +1

      @@garinagu7 Thanks cuz!

  • @blackvortex2011
    @blackvortex2011 7 лет назад +4

    Mr. Flores, you clearly know what you're talking about. I would like to talk to you outside this forum. We discovered that my maternal cousin - obviously on her father's side - is Garifuna connected (we know next to nothing about him). The VAST majority of her top matches (and there are MANY) are individuals who either identify as Garifuna or who are closely related to that population. I conjecture, based on the shared cM/segments with these particular matches, that both her father's parents gene pools are rooted in said population. I've attempted to reach out on many occasions but mostly received the "cold shoulder." We've tested with AncestryDNA, 23andMe, and FTDNA. Her results reflect the same pattern across the board. We really could use just a little assistance, at least, to help point us in the right direction. Thanks!

    • @juanacastillo1772
      @juanacastillo1772 7 лет назад +1

      Karr sorry u got the cold shoulder from them but tell you're cousin to keep searching there is a lot of information online and hopefully Mr. Flores can help too.

  • @cayecayo4648
    @cayecayo4648 2 года назад +2

    Go back to 1311 and you will learn the Royal origins of the Garinagu. The African connection with the Kalinago predated Europeans by 181 years.

  • @sapointi
    @sapointi 7 лет назад +6

    awesome man, my half sisters dad is Garifuna, I posted his results, he's 92% African, 7% native American,

  • @AutonyB
    @AutonyB Год назад +1

    what does griffe mean

  • @HOPROPHETA
    @HOPROPHETA 6 лет назад +4

    Good job and thank you Joseph! Were you named for Chatoyer?

    • @JosephFlores
      @JosephFlores  6 лет назад +2

      Thank you! Named after my father who in turn was named for Chatoyer!

    • @HOPROPHETA
      @HOPROPHETA 6 лет назад +2

      @@JosephFlores Ida binya!

  • @rolandmarkland6844
    @rolandmarkland6844 7 лет назад +5

    Well done...

  • @AliRoseVinifera
    @AliRoseVinifera 4 года назад +2

    Did your ancestry update to Nigeria? My own did, before it was Cameroon

  • @kweeni7551
    @kweeni7551 6 лет назад +5

    So interesting. My great grandpa is from Belize. All I know is that he was described as "blue black". He never talked about his country. He left in his early 40's to come to the states and teach. I'm still looking for any family members he left behind. Wondering if he was if garifuna heritage.

    • @miamimilk
      @miamimilk 6 лет назад +1

      what was his last name?

    • @HOPROPHETA
      @HOPROPHETA 6 лет назад +1

      Yes, the last name can tell alot.

  • @musicenthusiast9354
    @musicenthusiast9354 7 лет назад +4

    Love it

  • @mellowvision3565
    @mellowvision3565 8 месяцев назад +1

    Bro: you are almost Pure African, so why are you people trying so hard claim that you not African? You can call yourselves Black Caribs, but your DNA exposes who you really are!

    • @juanacastillo1772
      @juanacastillo1772 7 месяцев назад

      We don't call our self black carib, we call ourselves Garifuna but black carib is fine also because that's exactly what we are mixed with African and indigenous caribs arawak for the past 400 plus years now so what's your problem with our heritage

  • @blueblaze9862
    @blueblaze9862 7 лет назад +3

    Hey great results! I think I can see your native american a bit

  • @st.vincentkalinagosandybay5453
    @st.vincentkalinagosandybay5453 7 лет назад +3

    Good job

  • @kongowea9903
    @kongowea9903 3 года назад +2

    Congratulations your from The kingdom of Kongo...the thing we were told about where 'slaves' came from was a deceptive life, we all originate from the kingdom of Congo in the center a very same place where they still go to Rob, kill and plunder !

  • @miikored1095
    @miikored1095 7 лет назад +6

    NICE DNA

  • @indigenousgullah6277
    @indigenousgullah6277 7 лет назад +3

    great work Joseph my dna came back
    90% African
    2% Native American
    5% Europe
    3% west asia
    90% African as well..
    24% African Southeastern Bantu
    22% Nigerian
    17% Benin and Togo
    10% Ivory Coast
    7% Senegal
    6% Cameroon
    3% Mali

  • @KingRisiti
    @KingRisiti 4 года назад +2

    Garifuna people from belize have less indigenous blood than those from Guatemala & Honduras. There has been several studies done on this. It's believe to be because Garifuna & creoles in belize have intermingled for years hence the higher african blood percentage than the guatemalan & hondureanean garifuna.

    • @williammoreno-pp1og
      @williammoreno-pp1og Год назад +1

      This is because garífunas of Honduras and Guatemala also mingled with the first people of the costs, just look at the mosquitos!

    • @KingRisiti
      @KingRisiti Год назад +2

      @William Moreno yes that is true for the garifuna communities close to the mosquitia.

    • @williammoreno-pp1og
      @williammoreno-pp1og Год назад +1

      @@KingRisiti i 100 perece y agree this is why some garífunas also show large amount of native blood in them!

    • @KingRisiti
      @KingRisiti Год назад +2

      @William Moreno yes that can be true for many garifuna people who live in the communities in the gracias a dios department in honduras. I myself have miskito ancestry. My grandmother's mother was half miskito/half garifuna. She spoke garifuna, miskito and spanish.

    • @williammoreno-pp1og
      @williammoreno-pp1og Год назад +1

      @@KingRisiti thats really cool, for me well my tribe is one of the largest in Honduras with almost 400,000 people, people say we are descendants of the maya but idk could be wrong, only 500 people can speak lenca, our language is almost extinct which is sad reality for many lenca people, but we all have some scaring story of colonization etc!

  • @KingRisiti
    @KingRisiti 4 года назад +1

    Btw. I would like to add that the garifuna people from st. vincent on average have higher indigenous blood than the central american garifuna. As up to 30%-40%, also you can tell in their phenotype (look) that theirs a mixture of African + indian.

    • @KingRisiti
      @KingRisiti 4 года назад +2

      @darkeagle learn how to read, i said garifuna people from st. vincent have higher indigenous blood (30-40%) than the garifuna ppl from central america.

  • @cariocabassa
    @cariocabassa 2 года назад +1

    In which area y'all be speakin' spanish in Belize...?

  • @pgbk87
    @pgbk87 7 лет назад +6

    I am Belizean as well and half Garifuna, half Kriol. You have more African ancestry than the average Garifuna. The other Garifuna Ancestry DNA and 23andMe results came back 82% AFRICAN and 18% NATIVE AMERICAN. What do you think is the reason for that? Are you mixed with Maroon Kriols from Gales Point Manatee or something?

    • @JosephFlores
      @JosephFlores  7 лет назад +3

      pgbk87 studies have shown Central American Garifuna to be anywhere from 22-16 % on average. In the video i explained the inadvertent artificial selection process that went on. Where more African looking Garifuna were separated and sent to Central America. This in effect caused a selection of certain genes due to the shortened genepool. It could also be possible if you are Belizean creole your native percents is also coming from some Mayan admixture on that side. So you may be pulling native genes from both sides.

    • @pgbk87
      @pgbk87 7 лет назад +2

      But how does that explain you coming back only 10% Native American? The Garifunas I am talking about are Belizean, Guatemalan and Honduran, and come back ~18%Native American. I have 11 of these samples and don't vary despite them being from different Central American nations.
      I think it is a valid theory that you are mixed with possibly Maroon Kriols in Gales Point (not very far from Dangriga). For example, I am also 10% Native American but 11% European and only half Garifuna.

    • @JosephFlores
      @JosephFlores  7 лет назад +4

      pgbk87 no actually i can pretty much trace both sides back to the St. Vincent crossing. Ive personally seen everything from 6 to 18%. In fact you can see some of them here on RUclips. The process of Artificial selection actual answers your question. Study science and then read the article in the discription. I can tell by your responses that you are not very familiar with the study of genetics.

    • @pgbk87
      @pgbk87 7 лет назад +1

      well I will post my results as well as a detailed breakdown of all The Belizean ethnic groups. I will show you the homogeneity of the Central American Garifuna people

    • @JosephFlores
      @JosephFlores  7 лет назад +4

      pgbk87 For instance. The St. Vincent Garifuna on average show about 50/50 native to African genes. We are the same people but the Central American Garifuna on average are about 16%. This has NOTHING to do with mixing after leaving St.Vincent. It was actually taboo until modern times for a Garifuna to leave the community let alone marry outside of it. Happened but EXTREMELY rarely. This has to do with what science describes as "artificial selection", "founder effect", and "genetic bottlenecking". Because the British were selecting for Phenotype (how someone looks) before exile, it reflects in our genotype. Meaning people with more African genes began mixing with people who had more African genes with the absence of people who had more native genes. The same goes for those left on the island. People with more pure native genes began mixing with people with more Native genes absent of those with more African genes. Before the Brits interfered we were all mixing with various degrees of variation. Today we have common genetic make ups based on which community were from Island or Central America.

  • @JosephFlores
    @JosephFlores  7 лет назад +3

    @Abraham Coakley. You keep typing a question to which the answer would be very informative and then you keep on erasing before i can respond. The question reads as followed: "Hi Joseph,
    I have questions. I am Garifuna, my family is from Honduras, Central America. Here, you state that the Garifuna were selectively deported by the British, and that this resulted in a more African genotype. I don't disagree. But you go on to say that the Garifuna do not possess more African genes as a result of intermixing with other blacks, and I would like to understand how you derived this conclusion.
    When the Garifuna arrived on the north coast of Honduras, there were already numerous..."

    • @JosephFlores
      @JosephFlores  7 лет назад +1

      The answer to this question lies in the history of the Garifuna people themselves. The Garifuna are a mix between a significant population of 100% Africans and a population of 100% Native Americans. Therefore, modern Garifuna can display a range between both extremes.

    • @JosephFlores
      @JosephFlores  7 лет назад +1

      To further illustrate I'll give an example. Lets say you have village A) to the north. Village A) is 100% African. You have village B) to the south. Village B) is 100% Native American. Now to the center of both of those villages you have village C). For simplicity lets say village C) is 50/50%. [Even though in reality this village would be as diverse as the modern population with anything ranging from the extremes of village A)&B) to a 75/25% split in either direction, to a 50/50% split. For simplicity lets just say village C) is 50/50].

    • @abrahamcoakley3097
      @abrahamcoakley3097 7 лет назад +2

      No, I get this. My question does not pertain to your specific DNA results, or Where a Garifuna person lies on the spectrum. I wanted to know, if the Garifuna people had not intermarried with the other blacks in Central America upon arrival, where are the descendants of the several different black groups who were already there.

    • @JosephFlores
      @JosephFlores  7 лет назад +1

      Now if i am doing as the Brits and separating all of those villages based on phenotype and ONLY removing those that appear to be African, what is going to happen is im going to end up with more people from village A) and village C). The effect is that on the islands those that are left to pass on genes are those from village B) the 100% Natives [along with those from village C) who would likely have more 75/25 leaning toward the Native side.]

    • @JosephFlores
      @JosephFlores  7 лет назад +1

      So now what happens here is you have in Central America a majority that represent the genetic structure of village A). While in the Islands you have those who are more representative of population B).

  • @afroboy-akaspanishboy3685
    @afroboy-akaspanishboy3685 4 года назад +1

    I’m 64% Native American and 19% African and 14% European. I’m Mexican... is that considered garifuna.. I know you’re not supposed to have any European lol

    • @williammoreno-pp1og
      @williammoreno-pp1og Год назад +3

      No sorry!

    • @juanacastillo1772
      @juanacastillo1772 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@williammoreno-pp1og he could be you never know 😂😂

    • @williammoreno-pp1og
      @williammoreno-pp1og 7 месяцев назад

      @@juanacastillo1772 😭 yeah but the thing is garífuna people are a tribe, someone that that he is not even close too even being in si fr he lives in Mexico, unless his family were garífuna and somehow ended up in Mexico.

  • @michaelgyan3626
    @michaelgyan3626 3 года назад +1

    does the same apply for garifunas also from Honduras.

    • @wydchristian
      @wydchristian 3 года назад +2

      I’m Garifuna from Honduras from what I’ve heard we’re Arawak & Nigerian. I’m getting a dna test soon! 🇭🇳

    • @michaelgyan3626
      @michaelgyan3626 3 года назад +2

      thanx big up

    • @djoseph5130
      @djoseph5130 9 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@wydchristianwhat did it say?

    • @djoseph5130
      @djoseph5130 9 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@wydchristianwhat did it say?

    • @wydchristian
      @wydchristian 9 месяцев назад

      @@djoseph5130 i still haven’t gotten one lol combined with moving and being busy it’s be difficult i’ll get one soon and update you

  • @andino_usa3302
    @andino_usa3302 2 года назад

    It was the English and the Dutch

  • @umarraheem7341
    @umarraheem7341 7 лет назад +2

    garinagu! original muslims. the proof is in the hudut

  • @josevasquez4080
    @josevasquez4080 6 лет назад +1

    It's also me from fb.

  • @josevasquez4080
    @josevasquez4080 6 лет назад +1

    A real African your son is real biracial

    • @JosephFlores
      @JosephFlores  6 лет назад +1

      Jose vasquez Whoever you're responding to must have me blocked

    • @josevasquez4080
      @josevasquez4080 6 лет назад

      Joseph Flores I don't

    • @josevasquez4080
      @josevasquez4080 6 лет назад

      aren't you also Rodney lopez.

    • @JosephFlores
      @JosephFlores  6 лет назад +1

      Jose vasquez Yes. Who is A real African?

    • @josevasquez4080
      @josevasquez4080 6 лет назад +1

      Joseph Flores I said your a real subsarian African 90 percent is pretty high.