I DIDN’T KNOW I’M A GHANAIAN 🇬🇭 AS A CHILD + MY TRANSITION STORY FROM NIGERIA 🇳🇬 TO GHANA

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  • Опубликовано: 7 сен 2024
  • Hello friends,
    Apologies for me missing in action. In today’s video, we have a Nigerian-Ghanaian friend of mine, who left Nigeria some years ago to settle in Ghana. Do well to stay tuned to hear his story.
    I hope you enjoy.
    ❣️Stay Lifted
    ❣️Stay Blessed
    SPONSORSHIPS AND ADVERTS
    thejumzb@gmail.com
    ---------------------
    #GhanaLiving
    #NigeriaAndGhana
    #GhanaianUniversity
    #UniversityInGhana
    #NigerianInGhana
    #NigerianBornGhanaian
    #TheJumzTV

Комментарии • 177

  • @alexacquah4228
    @alexacquah4228 Год назад +16

    I try sha 😊❤

  • @samuelowusu4755
    @samuelowusu4755 Год назад +33

    What Acquah said about the advantage of his identity in Ghana is true . I am a Ghanaian American . Anytime I reach Ghana with Ghana name and American passport , I just walk through without questions at the airport . That is how Ghanaians respect their last names in the country .

  • @anthonytobi9773
    @anthonytobi9773 6 месяцев назад +3

    We Ijaws in Nigeria bear a lot of Ghanaians names like Koffi, Kojo, Kumasi, Ajua, Yaw, Ghana. The reason being that there were a lot of Ghanaians in our communities and also Ijaws do travel to Ghana for business and even work. Up till date I have uncles that speaks Ghanaian languages.

  • @kwabenanuhu6853
    @kwabenanuhu6853 Год назад +8

    BOTH COUNTRIES ARE PROUD OF THEIR NATIONALITIES

  • @nanakwame8214
    @nanakwame8214 Год назад +14

    I can't wait to visit Nigeria my second home...Am half Ivorian by father side and my mom is half Ghanaian and half Nigerian,She was born and raised in Ghana until she moved to ivory coast where i was born and moved to Ghana at age 10 till now at 37yrs...My younger sister made it to Nigeria close to 4yrs has a baby girl now and she has totally changed and that gives me the courage to see for myself...I always sees Nigeria as my home and will definitely come after my trip in Switzerland

    • @markntiri8251
      @markntiri8251 Год назад +1

      Can you speak french?

    • @nanakwame8214
      @nanakwame8214 Год назад

      @@markntiri8251 Even though it my first language but I totally forgot all since I came...I had no one to speak with me

    • @zigibeat3689
      @zigibeat3689 Год назад

      Bad blood

    • @nanakwame8214
      @nanakwame8214 Год назад +1

      @@zigibeat3689 Actually for me am fully African and I feel proud and blessed

    • @TheJumzTV
      @TheJumzTV  Год назад

      Wow! You are a full- blooded west African! You should try visiting sometime.
      Nice to have you here.

  • @sicklion2354
    @sicklion2354 Год назад +4

    Your content always reminds me of my late uncle. He stayed in Nigerian over 30 years and brought four kids to Ghana with her Ghanaian wife he met in Nigeria

    • @TheJumzTV
      @TheJumzTV  Год назад

      Awwwwn.
      Glad you have nice memories of him.

  • @samuelkobby5723
    @samuelkobby5723 Год назад +5

    😅😅😅 "asem aba" trouble don't come oo😅😅😅. Very funny. ✊🏿🇬🇭✊🏿

  • @africanchild2541
    @africanchild2541 Год назад +3

    Nigerians are bothered by our twi language, but it is what it is. We can't lose our identity. English is still foreign to most people.

  • @kofiamoakosiawkasmow8889
    @kofiamoakosiawkasmow8889 Год назад +12

    This guy is more Nigerian than Ghanaian 😂😂😂 we can’t share secrets with him

    • @edigeorge548
      @edigeorge548 Год назад +1

      Guy is Nigeria

    • @markntiri8251
      @markntiri8251 Год назад +2

      The Nigeria Igbo, Yoruba, Hausa etc culture is very strong. I don't blame him. Even the Nigeria pidgin is almost a complete language.

  • @mohammedanane92
    @mohammedanane92 5 месяцев назад +1

    Commot for there , Ghanaians sometimes also say Go/ way

  • @maau605
    @maau605 Год назад +7

    He is from my hometown Akim Oda. Diamond city

    • @TheJumzTV
      @TheJumzTV  Год назад +1

      Is it an actual Diamond city or it’s just a name?
      Let me know so I can go and get some Diamonds 😜.

    • @markntiri8251
      @markntiri8251 Год назад

      @@TheJumzTV they mine diamonds there hence the name, though like other mineral-rich towns in Ghana, the riches doesn't reflect in the economy of the town

  • @KekeliGbagbo
    @KekeliGbagbo Год назад +6

    When u go to Agege bus stop u will get some Ghanian food to buy and even alaba

    • @TheJumzTV
      @TheJumzTV  Год назад +1

      Is that so? Thank you for the update, one day I’d try it.

  • @user-ug1sl3xy9r
    @user-ug1sl3xy9r Год назад +2

    GCE O'level and A'Level originates from England. WaEC made is available all over West Africa in English speaking countries. That was the exams before the current SHS or SSS exams.

  • @broaikings9527
    @broaikings9527 Год назад +1

    Akwaaba Me Nua, nice video Anyway i disagree with those who says the interjection were too many,to me was great interview,nice one,i enjoyed watching

  • @okohannette4400
    @okohannette4400 Год назад +3

    I attended Bluecrest too, the fees were crazy as he said. We foreigners paid through our nose but the school was worth it. First class in Bluecrest no be beans o eii well done Alex

    • @TheJumzTV
      @TheJumzTV  Год назад +1

      I can imagine. From what he said and you confirming it, it means your school e no be easy o both financially and academically.

    • @okohannette4400
      @okohannette4400 Год назад +1

      @@TheJumzTV at all o you have to be on your toes all the time else resit paaaaaa

    • @alexacquah4228
      @alexacquah4228 Год назад

      Thanks very much 🙏🏾…Exactly… Very true @Okoh 👍🏾

  • @heniettawood7561
    @heniettawood7561 5 месяцев назад +1

    Welcome home

  • @shaibujibril3799
    @shaibujibril3799 Год назад +2

    It's just a matter of time you will even forget you ever lived in Nigeria unless you travel out of Ghana. You will blend very well and your accent will change with time. Honestly I think your way of speaking is already changing because you are sounding more Ghanaian now. It's evident in your choice of words. Ghanaians don't eat. Ghanaians don't normally eat Jollof with Beans. What you saw was just an isolated case. I can choose to eat Jollof with anything not because that is the norm in Ghana but because I wanted to try something new.

  • @georgekwakuntigroup
    @georgekwakuntigroup Год назад +1

    I like you Aquah. Kudos.

  • @benjnracheampong7007
    @benjnracheampong7007 Год назад +3

    Alex you force ….Jumz big upx

  • @kwameagyeman7290
    @kwameagyeman7290 Год назад +4

    I am enjoying ur conversation..ooo

  • @olufemixender9530
    @olufemixender9530 Год назад +1

    BLUE CREST COLLEGE at KOKOMLEMLE CIRCLE beside ACCRA TECHNICAL TRAINING CENTER my former school and it's a SENIOR HIGH SCHOOL but a TECHNICAL school which is a hand skill training school 🏫 .

  • @kissphamous5451
    @kissphamous5451 Год назад +3

    Grt vid ❤️ 😍

  • @priceelesslove8846
    @priceelesslove8846 Год назад +1

    For the pidgin, Ghanaian are now speaking Nigeria pidgin, especially the their artist like kidi, promise.

    • @TheJumzTV
      @TheJumzTV  Год назад

      Oh! Interesting!

    • @roynique5218
      @roynique5218 Год назад +2

      actually we have ghanaian pigin . tf are talking.

  • @maau605
    @maau605 Год назад +2

    You are very good with both languages. Good job 👏

  • @victorquagraine9155
    @victorquagraine9155 Год назад +2

    When he said " swallow " this guy is Nigerian la. Lol. Great interview

  • @Kelvinkojoa
    @Kelvinkojoa Год назад +1

    There are a lot of Ghanaians like him in Nigeria due to the migration back in the day

  • @okohannette4400
    @okohannette4400 Год назад +4

    Awwwww BLUECREST all the way!!!!!!!! 😁😁😁😁😁

    • @alexacquah4228
      @alexacquah4228 Год назад

      Yh that’s right. When did you graduate?

    • @okohannette4400
      @okohannette4400 Год назад

      @@alexacquah4228 2021 COVID graduants 😩😩

    • @markntiri8251
      @markntiri8251 Год назад

      They and other Ghanaian universities should reduce the high dollar fees international students, especially west Africans pay.

    • @okohannette4400
      @okohannette4400 Год назад

      @@markntiri8251 that fees in dollars is crazy, you know what's more crazy, when you convert that dollar fee to Ghana cedis and realize that foreigners are paying a little more than double of what a local student is paying. Nigerian education system is the cause of all this. If our education system was ohk, no strike and all, most of us won't have any reason to travel out to school

    • @alexacquah4228
      @alexacquah4228 Год назад

      @@okohannette4400Ohkk … It’s well 😊

  • @lukemanosman778
    @lukemanosman778 Год назад +1

    Nice and interesting story

  • @paakwakutenkorang5773
    @paakwakutenkorang5773 Год назад +3

    Lovely lovely interview that morphed into a conversation. Love you Jumz❤

  • @playerpod3621
    @playerpod3621 Год назад +2

    Beautiful conversation

  • @asaasare220
    @asaasare220 Год назад +3

    Origin of Waakye is wanke … the Hausa who migrated to ghana are those who introduced it to ghana … in short it was created in ghana but by Hausas

    • @TheJumzTV
      @TheJumzTV  Год назад

      You mean Wanke is the original name? Interesting but where did the Hausas migrate from?

    • @asaasare220
      @asaasare220 Год назад

      @@TheJumzTV Hausa's originally from Northern Nigeria as far i know

    • @asaasare220
      @asaasare220 Год назад

      U see the thing about ghana is it is not a really rigid culture anything can come in and be integrated into the national culture which includes food.. unlike nigeria where people don't tend to be "flexible" ghanaians for good or bad tend to want to "negotiate" and want to make everybody feel "good" even when they are doing you "bad". You are young but in the old days every ghana blackstars team had about 4/5 nigerian boys born in ghana on the team.. they were fully integrated and no one really checked where they came from... in nigeria if a ghanaian played somehow ibo boy or the yuroba boy who didn't get a chance will complain... so again the mostly hausa traders who came primarily for cola nuts and other things brought wanke/waakye ..it was modified in ghana ... since it was not even in northern nigeria when i was there in the 70's

    • @j.susubisa5996
      @j.susubisa5996 Год назад

      Yes u are absolutely write the waakye is an Hausa food brought in to the Gold Cost by the Hausas.

  • @qwasioffoeli-230
    @qwasioffoeli-230 Год назад +5

    Too much interruptions sound from you jumz please allow him to flow when you ask question

  • @cyrilekowmochia5679
    @cyrilekowmochia5679 Год назад +5

    Acquah is a Fanti..

  • @politicallyafrican6317
    @politicallyafrican6317 Год назад +3

    GCE's are accepted in Ghana too

    • @TheJumzTV
      @TheJumzTV  Год назад

      Is that right?
      That’s a discovery, thank you
      for telling us.

    • @TheJumzTV
      @TheJumzTV  Год назад

      Is that right?
      That’s a discovery, thank you
      for telling us.

    • @TheJumzTV
      @TheJumzTV  Год назад

      Is that right?
      That’s a discovery, thank you
      for telling us.

  • @ericlaryea5610
    @ericlaryea5610 Год назад

    It's a beans meal we call it 'yor k3 gari' or Gari and Beans(Gorb3 for short)

  • @j.susubisa5996
    @j.susubisa5996 Год назад

    I enjoyed the interview

  • @Ayimwaa
    @Ayimwaa Год назад +7

    This boy has a thick Ghanaian accent tho

    • @oluronbimichael4097
      @oluronbimichael4097 Год назад +1

      Girl you lied. This is a very deep Nigerian Accent.

    • @markntiri8251
      @markntiri8251 Год назад +2

      True. Of the ghanja(ghana, Nigeria) people interviews i've seen, his Ghanaianness shines through and is not overshadowed by Nigeria. His accent is Ghanaian, his looks Ghanaian etc

    • @markntiri8251
      @markntiri8251 Год назад +2

      @@oluronbimichael4097 accent is very Ghanaian

  • @josephquaye9756
    @josephquaye9756 Год назад +7

    Jollof and beans stew together? We don't do that combination.

  • @offurumizuchukwu6377
    @offurumizuchukwu6377 Год назад +3

    You just have to like alexyawacquah 😂 surviving ajegunle is only by the grace of God 😂😂 and mothers are really sweet 😊 if not for my mum am sure I won’t understand anything in Igbo language and the environment we just force pidgin and Yoruba into my whole system 😅

    • @TheJumzTV
      @TheJumzTV  Год назад

      Yes o, you have to like him o. 😂.
      Yeah, that’s why we need to keep encouraging mothers (and fathers too) to keep speaking their native languages to their children especially if you aren’t in a place where it’s spoken often.
      God bless our mothers o.

  • @idongisaac8258
    @idongisaac8258 Год назад +2

    No foreign black person is seen as a foreigner on the streets of Nigeria. Nigerians would not even know you are a foreigner. The Nigerian equivalent of "Aquah" would be "Akwa", from Akwa Ibom State: meaning "big" or "Mighty."

    • @TheJumzTV
      @TheJumzTV  Год назад

      You are 100% correct.
      True, seems Akwa Ibom sounds closest.

  • @ebowmensah7419
    @ebowmensah7419 Год назад

    Nice conversation

  • @shaibujibril3799
    @shaibujibril3799 Год назад

    He's still a newbie wait till he blends very well.

    • @TheJumzTV
      @TheJumzTV  Год назад

      Eiii, after over a decade? 😂 That’s an oldie already.

    • @elvishhudson2402
      @elvishhudson2402 Год назад +1

      ​@@TheJumzTVA decade is not in enough.😂😂 He doesn't appeal to Ghana for me 😂

  • @MrOsdart
    @MrOsdart Год назад +1

    I wrote GCE through Weac in the 80s so I am confused when you say you wrote GCE and not waec

    • @TheJumzTV
      @TheJumzTV  Год назад

      Oh! He said he wrote both + 80s is a while ago, things have changed since then. They are 2 different exams now.

  • @wisdomtv8063
    @wisdomtv8063 Год назад +2

    Ooooh this yoghurt seller's

  • @ladyjuiceykitchen8096
    @ladyjuiceykitchen8096 Год назад +4

    Ghanaians like to shorten names

    • @TheJumzTV
      @TheJumzTV  Год назад

      You think so?
      Are you Ghanaian too?

  • @kwamehagan529
    @kwamehagan529 4 месяца назад

    You can find waakye wherever you can find Ghanaians are.

  • @mohammedanane92
    @mohammedanane92 5 месяцев назад

    Alexander =Alex Joseph = Joe

  • @juliangrant1269
    @juliangrant1269 Год назад +5

    This guy's story doesn't add up at all. How can one grow up in the same house with his parents and not know that both of his parents are Ghanaian? If the parents are both born in Ghana, that automatically qualifies him as a Ghanaian regardless if he was born in Nigeria. Sounds as if the parents abandoned their culture and family all together. This is just for thought.

    • @normal_side
      @normal_side Год назад +3

      How do you expect him to know that he's from Ghana if he was not told by his parents as he was growing up, moreover his parents are not visiting Ghana regularly not to talk of bringing him to Ghana as a child or as a youth?

    • @markntiri8251
      @markntiri8251 Год назад

      The Nigeria igbo, yoruba, Hausa etc cultures are very strong and can easily 'displace' one's original culture. Even the Nigeria pidgin is more or less a complete language, to tell you how immersive it can be. Can't blame him

    • @afiogem
      @afiogem Год назад

      Hmmmm

  • @henryagyepong_kotvtakearid3054

    Ghana have GCE /WAEC O level and A level I don’t know if it’s changed now . Bcos i wrote this exams in 1989 for O level and 1991 for A level😊

    • @TheJumzTV
      @TheJumzTV  Год назад

      Oh! There’s GCE in Ghana too?

    • @frankbediako1372
      @frankbediako1372 Год назад

      ​@TheJumzTV GCE O and A levels are more popular at Ghana International Sch, the school I attended because the high population of children of diplomats and expatriates and tend to attend universities abroad. We even write International baccalaureate exams.

  • @governmentnwankwo9906
    @governmentnwankwo9906 Год назад +2

    Eboyi state has similar name

    • @TheJumzTV
      @TheJumzTV  Год назад +1

      Oh! I seeee.
      Interesting!

  • @africansaint4986
    @africansaint4986 Год назад +2

    Truth is you cant pay the same school fees like a Ghanaian,when you visit someones home you dont sleep on the same bed

    • @TheJumzTV
      @TheJumzTV  Год назад

      That’s also true.

    • @markntiri8251
      @markntiri8251 Год назад +1

      We should reduce the high dollar charges for international students, especially west Africans/Africans. Ghanaian universities go to Nigeria to woo their students to come study here. We should charge them reasonable amounts so they're not overburdened.
      Kenyans, southern africans are beginning to school in our schools. Universities. Let's charge reasonable amounts so more international students come here. Universities the world love to have international students to show their diversity etc

  • @eve954
    @eve954 Год назад +5

    Acquah - AKWA IBOM 😂

  • @anthonytobi9773
    @anthonytobi9773 6 месяцев назад

    Madam get your facts right, please. GCE is owned by WAEC. It is recognize all over West Africa. General Certificate Examination (GCE) is for private candidates, the one you write in your secondary school school is called Senior Secondary school Certificate (SSCE). All are conducted by WAEC.

  • @KekeliGbagbo
    @KekeliGbagbo Год назад +4

    Pounded yem in Ghana is for the northern part .

  • @jym20
    @jym20 Год назад +3

    Why do most, if not all Nigerians, call their country NANGERIA??? I get sort of confuse many times hearing NANGERIA. Again, l thought the interjections were too many. Hope you allow your guest(s) to talk more, it would allow your listeners to follow your interviews well. Aside these few observations, I think its a nice video. Positive criticisms are good for growth. Thank you.

    • @TheJumzTV
      @TheJumzTV  Год назад

      It’s funny how this is actually my first time hearing/reading this. 😂 It could be because we pronounce it fast and remember we have a variety of tribes, people have their accents as well.
      So, I doubt that’s what you are hearing.

    • @idongisaac8258
      @idongisaac8258 Год назад

      It is in the Igbo accent.

    • @voba2558
      @voba2558 Год назад

      You are the one saying it

  • @otiskdarko6293
    @otiskdarko6293 Год назад

    Akwa Ibom.

  • @edemarex5479
    @edemarex5479 11 месяцев назад

    💯💯💯💯

    • @TheJumzTV
      @TheJumzTV  11 месяцев назад

      Rexxxxx! I see you!

  • @mxhiphopper
    @mxhiphopper Год назад

    were you feeling some way.....mehn....

  • @agyemangduah7672
    @agyemangduah7672 Год назад

    In fact the interruption is too much.

  • @shaibujibril3799
    @shaibujibril3799 Год назад +1

    Pounded yam is popular in northern Ghana. We beg stop calling that Fufu. 😂

    • @TheJumzTV
      @TheJumzTV  Год назад +1

      In Nigeria we call it pounded Yam too but I noticed quite a number of people call it Yam Fufu here so I stuck with it😂.

  • @francisconduah3366
    @francisconduah3366 Год назад +1

    Hmmmmmm

  • @frankodoom3360
    @frankodoom3360 Год назад

    But what do u expect a foreigner to pay equal fees as the indigenes. Go to the rest of the world is it not the same foreigners pay more than the people in their country. Aberg make we think

    • @arabaarthur5282
      @arabaarthur5282 Год назад

      Don't mind him, His parents pay taxes in a foreign country n he expect to pay the same fees as an indigene.

  • @nanaessoun2967
    @nanaessoun2967 Год назад +2

    Your Acquah name is purely fante ask your father well

  • @MajorrBison
    @MajorrBison Год назад

    I still wonder why Ghanaians pronounce 13, 14, 16 the way they do. No disrespect.

    • @ekinematics
      @ekinematics Год назад

      Same here. 13 to 19 is pronounced in a funny way.
      I always laugh about it with my Ghanaian classmates back then in Europe.

    • @Ayimwaa
      @Ayimwaa Год назад +6

      We also wonder how you pronounce thirty as taaaati and 100 as hondred

    • @ekinematics
      @ekinematics Год назад

      @@Ayimwaa Ye, that's what makes us different. We joke so much about it. I poke my Ghanaian friends then too to say the word Digital and Genre. We used to joke paaa.

    • @BMosay
      @BMosay Год назад +2

      ​@@Ayimwaa😂😂😂 So true I used to laugh back in the days when I started watching naija movies. Funny they think we rather pronounce some words and figures wrongly 🤔

    • @markntiri8251
      @markntiri8251 Год назад +1

      @@ekinematics ask your dictionary, Google speech engine to pronounce them and see whose is closest to the original

  • @okohannette4400
    @okohannette4400 Год назад +1

    Bluecrest was home for Nigerian students 😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @TheJumzTV
      @TheJumzTV  Год назад

      You don’t say?
      What was it about the school? Please share with us o.😂😂

    • @okohannette4400
      @okohannette4400 Год назад +2

      I guess it just felt like home, I was mistaken for a Ghanaian on my first day there. School was fun, and flexible fee payments helped to make it easy for foreigners to pay especially Nigerians. Bluecrest is actually home for all

    • @TheJumzTV
      @TheJumzTV  Год назад

      @@okohannette4400 I like that flexibility idea. Oh! Do you look Ghanaian or sound like one? 😀

    • @okohannette4400
      @okohannette4400 Год назад +2

      @@TheJumzTV I guess I look like them 😂😂😂😂 now Bluecrest made me sound like them too 😂😂😂😂🤭

    • @alexacquah4228
      @alexacquah4228 Год назад

      😂

  • @asaasare220
    @asaasare220 Год назад

    Ghanaians are generally cliquey …we did ape every english character however bad

  • @blaqLion
    @blaqLion Год назад

    Here in the States, they also don't say Alex but they use Al instead of Alexandria