That comment about being at home ..is such a unique feeling... felt when i went to kenya and Tanzania ..even though I'm Jamaican there was a feeling i could not describe. My melanin felt at ease.❤
Eres único Lewis dios te bendiga y te de la sabiduría pará seguir adelante con muchos éxitos..no permitas que nadies nunca menosprecie lo que tu eres te amo mi campeón ❤❤❤❤❤
There’s Michael Jordan, Tiger Woods and Lewis Hamilton…those are the 3 goats of sport to me. Those are the only guys who took their sport to a next level for a long period and connected with the fans like no one before. They all have a glow about them…almost more than man. When they talk…it’s impossible to not listen
8:18 Lewis could have easily hidden in Monaco and really just enjoyed his life. The fact that he expresses this deep feeling of Gratitude first for being able to do what he gets to do and even then with all the accolades and profile . He’s always grateful , is so humbling.
I love him so much. We need more people like him with the head on the shoulders, not out of touch. People who - at their level - always want to educate themselves about other's realities. Love you Lewis you'll be forever blessed 🖤
This Man! He is amazing and should never feel like he has to battle negatives. They are in the past. Far too many positive vibes in his life now and we are along for his journey. Thank you Lewis. You are my hero 🥰
While I'll be so sad the day he does finally retire from Formula 1, I also can't wait to see all the ways he will continue to impact our world for the good.
Yes Lewis, there are so many things that we all take for granted. My granddaughter often says that she is bored, i am like how? You have so much stuff around you.
We are blessed to see him on track action and most importantly his off track work is so great his 8th title is just formality to be greatest like Senna is in F1 circuit ... Lewis is GOAT beyond F1 Grid!!
And this, ladies and gentlemen is why we say that Sir Lewis Hamilton is so much bigger than the sport! Regardless of what F1 does to destroy his legacy; he will always be the GOAT! Much love from South Africa SLH! We hope you come back!
I aspire to be as humble as Lewis. I will always appreciate that he keeps going out and doing what his heart calls for him to do ❤ there is no barrier he could not break down. I will be forever grateful and I'll always appreciate you. Thank you, we can all be better than we were yesterday 💜🖤 It's a journey I would very much like to get on board with, unity for all 🙏
Minha família amamos Leão Hamilton e maravilhoso bom coração fora e dentro do mundo 🥰😍😘❤️♥️e nós aqui 🇧🇷 🌎em litoral e interior sp e eu sou deficiência surda e aí sofri muito aqui só povos faz punições comigo aí dificl minha vida , eu te amo muito Leão Hamilton guerreiro fé paz amém 🙏🏻🙏🏻
This is why you have to keep racing for as long as possible,the sacrifice in some respects that you take by carrying on at the wheel will be outweighed by the positives that your continued platform will deliver. You never asked to be famous,bleed it dry in the pursuit of helping those kids
As a South African no longer living there, I can tell you Africa is a special place and African people are lovely. They were largely colonised and that brought both good and bad. Good was things like medicine, roads, farming, transport and education. Bad was things like taking resources, hard labour, segregation in some places, left in poverty in some cases, and also being left a vacuum of power in some cases giving rise to warlords and dictators to take the place of the colonisers. To name a few. For example in South Africa the apartheid system was made by the British. It was carried on and given a name by the Afrikaners who took over the country after independence (which by the way was opposed by many normal Afrikaners who did not agree with apartheid) from the British. My mother was German. She emigrated to SA when she was about 20 I think. For a better life. Apartheid was already in place and the currency was the British Pound. She never liked it but apartheid was already there. I took was born into it, like the majority of white South Africans you'll meet. I'm proud to say that eventually we were given a referendum whether to end apartheid or not, and the vast majority of white people voted to END apartheid because honestly none of us liked it. It was something we were born into. That led to the release of Mandela and to the New South Africa. Just to show you that most white South Africans you'll meet are likely not racist, and voted against the apartheid system they were born into. But even in the darkest days of apartheid I don't believe that the state treated black people anywhere close to the evil that the Israeli government has been doing to the Palestinians. That situation is FAR worse than the South African apartheid, far, far worse. Because there was no oppression in South Africa, just segregation. Africans still had their own homes in their homeland and were free to travel, buy and sell, reside families, access health care etc. Whereas the Palestinians have been locked behind a wall and been oppressed and now genocided. This is a whole other level of evil.
I hear you, and I get where you're coming from. But I have to disagree with the idea that colonization brought good things to Africa. Sure, there were things like medicine, roads, and education that came with it, but those 'benefits' came at a massive cost. Colonization wasn't about helping African people; it was about exploiting the continent for its resources and labor. The pain, suffering, and lasting damage it caused far outweigh any of the so-called 'good' it might have brought. Africans had their own systems of medicine, trade, and governance before colonizers arrived, and colonization disrupted and destroyed those systems. The hardships, loss of life, and destruction of cultures left deep scars that are still felt today. So while I respect your perspective, I believe colonization was overwhelmingly a force of pain and oppression in Africa.
@@Trashbxat-f2eHe’s also dishonest about the brutality of apartheid, he conveniently left out the massacres in Soweto and other townships, as well as the assassinations of several anti-apartheid leaders during those times.
@@pao_2031 Absolutely, so many lives were lost, and South Africans were treated as second-class citizens in their own land. The brutality of apartheid is something we can’t just gloss over
He reminds me of Michael Jackson. The way he genuinely cares about those people he meets regardless of their circumstances. He being as privileged as he is he doesn't forget that there is a world out there who needs to have a voice.
Thank you Hamilton for highlighting the negativity colonisation has brought upon Africa. Lots of European think they did us a favour no they didn’t it was an abomination worst than the holocaust. We African hate it and resent the perpetrators we just go about our business with dignity
@@chevrolet-poitiers9507 No, you don't get to say that for this context. The impact of colonialism is immeasurable; the scale of devastation across the continent is far greater, and yet European nations have done little to acknowledge this. The holocaust was undeniably horrific, but there are gross double standards when it comes to addressing the victims of European imperialism in black/brown countries. The British operated concentration camps in Kenya in the 1950's, years after rightfully condemning the same of the Germans. The Germans have done little to ensure the genocides against the people of Namibia are as well remembered; they apologised only recently, more than a century after it happened and did not even involve the descendants of the affected people in discussions for compensation.
@@pao_2031 The impact of colonialism is measurable, as all things are. The scale of devastation in Africa is marginal when compared to the concentrated onslaught that was the Holocaust. The British Concentration Camps weren’t forcing people to become Sonderkommandos and didn’t have trains that dropped you off in a furnace. The genocide of the Nama and Herero, whilst horrific, is still only a seventh of a percent of the Holocaust. The reason why there is such a ‘double standard’ is because European Colonialism and subjugation just simply wasn’t that bad compared to the Holocaust, the Bengal famine, or the Holodomor or it simply was so long ago or so inconsequential that focusing on it just isn’t simply isn’t worth it. So instead of asking for reparation, memorandum or guilt tripping the West be grateful of what was progressed - because sitting back and sulking about it isn’t going to get Africa, or the world, anywhere.
@@chevrolet-poitiers9507See, it is now you diminishing the death and destruction of millions of lives because the holocaust must implicitly occupy some top pedestal as the ultimate evil to which nothing else is comparable. Your arguments on impact and scale basically amount to denialism, which is rather ironic considering you accuse the previous poster of belittling another horrific campaign of extermination. You use such shallow arguments as events having happened a long time ago, as if the impacts of such events are not consequential to the future. You mock demands for reparations for Africans, Asians and South Americans, even when this is exactly what the Germans did for their crimes, and even when the horrors of colonialism continued long after WW2 ended. It’s such a typical reaction of some white people, unwittingly placing racial hierarchies over whose suffering matters more and deserves to be commemorated. I’ve seen so many comments like this from people pretending to be nice liberals and allies yet harbouring a deep resentment of the “other.” When people like you chant “Never Again” in remembrance, what you actually mean is never again, excluding the coloureds of course.
7:57 We have the obligation as a human race to reflect & contribute positively to hope. As Tosh said, “Peace without Equal Rights & Justice” means continuous enslavement of humanity to the perception.
Although his 8th title was stolen from Lewis, this process has done him a world of good. He used to be very arrogant and selfish which is why I never liked him, but the last 2 years he's learned humility and it's made him a fantastic human being. Now I really like and respect him.
That is a false narrative. Lewis was already changing before the events of 2021 and had already started his advocacy on a number of issues. If you disliked him prior to this, it was probably for other reasons.
Queridão Leão Hamilton guerreiro fortes emoção sua viajando do mundo aproveitar a felicidades ama África boa positivos frentes boa viaja do te amo muito Leão Hamilton e bjsss 😘😍🥰🙏🏻🌱🦁ama naturezas etc abençoe ricamente sua vida amém 🙏🏻💯💋🌍🌎
What is your problem? He travelled to multiple countries and spoke about the challenges respective to each place without generalising or playing on stereotypes.
A supremely rose tinted view of the continent of Africa and the reasons behind the current state of affairs. As a follower of Lewis, I'm disappointed he's simplified the politics and corruption of these countries.
@@bilinguiyveganpinguiNot sure what you are saying as your statement means nothing, just word salad. I am a huge follower of Lewis for decades and think he is the GOAT, but I stand by my statement.
@@toolate9494 Did you seriously expect a doctoral-thesis level discussion on this from an 8 minute informal video from someone (a non-expert on that subject matter) who went there on holiday?
That comment about being at home ..is such a unique feeling... felt when i went to kenya and Tanzania ..even though I'm Jamaican there was a feeling i could not describe. My melanin felt at ease.❤
Me too. When I went to Ghana.
_"My melanin felt at ease"_
That's a beautiful sentiment
We love you Lewis god bless you ♥️🙏🏽
😄🥰💯👋👌👍
Eres único Lewis dios te bendiga y te de la sabiduría pará seguir adelante con muchos éxitos..no permitas que nadies nunca menosprecie lo que tu eres te amo mi campeón ❤❤❤❤❤
He is the GOAT 🐐… this is why most of the world 🌍 can easily relate to him.
There’s Michael Jordan, Tiger Woods and Lewis Hamilton…those are the 3 goats of sport to me. Those are the only guys who took their sport to a next level for a long period and connected with the fans like no one before. They all have a glow about them…almost more than man. When they talk…it’s impossible to not listen
8:18 Lewis could have easily hidden in Monaco and really just enjoyed his life. The fact that he expresses this deep feeling of Gratitude first for being able to do what he gets to do and even then with all the accolades and profile . He’s always grateful , is so humbling.
God bless you Sir Lewis Hamilton. We love you here in South Africa and hope you come back soon.
I love him so much. We need more people like him with the head on the shoulders, not out of touch. People who - at their level - always want to educate themselves about other's realities. Love you Lewis you'll be forever blessed 🖤
This Man! He is amazing and should never feel like he has to battle negatives. They are in the past. Far too many positive vibes in his life now and we are along for his journey. Thank you Lewis. You are my hero 🥰
While I'll be so sad the day he does finally retire from Formula 1, I also can't wait to see all the ways he will continue to impact our world for the good.
Lewis is such a caring person ❤ He really cares about the whole world to be a better place to live. 🎉 The Champ off the track too🫰🏾
Sending Lewis love from America 🇺🇸 (New York City)
Unluckily i was in Gorea some days before Lewis and didn’t have the opportunity meet him haha but hopefully he’ll be back in few years 🇸🇳👏
Yes Lewis, there are so many things that we all take for granted.
My granddaughter often says that she is bored, i am like how? You have so much stuff around you.
sending love from Morocco 🇲🇦
tahia mahgreb et vive l'afrique
Much Love to you Lewis
Africa is beautiful ❤ People are generous, warm hearted even though the majority have so little.
We are blessed to see him on track action and most importantly his off track work is so great his 8th title is just formality to be greatest like Senna is in F1 circuit ... Lewis is GOAT beyond F1 Grid!!
And this is why we love this man. He's such a humanitarian..
I love this video so much he is so open and geniune ❤
Lewis. The best there ever was and likely the best there ever will be. Legend.
Love you Lewis!!!!!
I love you Lewis ❤
Truly enjoy by your travels to these amazing places, and definitely continue to support you always Lewis Hamilton 👊🏻💜💛🙏🏻
Lots of Love Lewis. Giving back is so satisfying. Keep doing what you're doing. ❤
Absolutely fascinating interview. Very impressive young man. Also, brilliant Interviewer - nice one Scott x
We love U here GOAT 🐐…
From Mozambique 🇲🇿💜…
Qué todo lo que recibas siempre sea amor, querido Lewis 💜🙏
🙏🏽 Bless Lewis, its not easy to see suffering and feel small in your ability to help ... But speaking from the heart on his platform does help
Love from Ghana 🇬🇭🇬🇭
Lewis, you're a WORLD Champion HUMAN BEING. ❤
Love from Maroccoooo 🇲🇦🇲🇦
Love you Lewis n God bless you more hope you will visit Kenya 🇰🇪 again
This was beautiful. Thank you.
6:06 🥺 Pure
And this, ladies and gentlemen is why we say that Sir Lewis Hamilton is so much bigger than the sport! Regardless of what F1 does to destroy his legacy; he will always be the GOAT! Much love from South Africa SLH! We hope you come back!
I aspire to be as humble as Lewis. I will always appreciate that he keeps going out and doing what his heart calls for him to do ❤ there is no barrier he could not break down. I will be forever grateful and I'll always appreciate you.
Thank you, we can all be better than we were yesterday 💜🖤
It's a journey I would very much like to get on board with, unity for all 🙏
this was fun to watch
All the way from Mozambique thank you so much🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾
What an amazing human.
Can't wait for you to explore Mauritius. You would love it!
love from egypt ❤
Morocco 🇲🇦 is waiting for you and for F1 comeback (last gp was in 1958, the first ever F1 African GP)
Lewis Hamilton Is Awesome Incredible Cool Person
Lewis vc é uma pessoa do bem...Vc merece muita saúde paz e felicidades sempre pra sua vida parabéns...? 3:52
Sending love and support from Kenya
All done to visit Africa Lewis.
Página q sigo ase tiempo ❤ Mercedes Benz 🎉 ídolo Emilton
Sending 😍 ❤from Kigali - Rwanda 🇷🇼
Thank you 🙏 Champ💪
Need to come to Zimbabwe 🇿🇼
Minha família amamos Leão Hamilton e maravilhoso bom coração fora e dentro do mundo 🥰😍😘❤️♥️e nós aqui 🇧🇷 🌎em litoral e interior sp e eu sou deficiência surda e aí sofri muito aqui só povos faz punições comigo aí dificl minha vida , eu te amo muito Leão Hamilton guerreiro fé paz amém 🙏🏻🙏🏻
This is why you have to keep racing for as long as possible,the sacrifice in some respects that you take by carrying on at the wheel will be outweighed by the positives that your continued platform will deliver.
You never asked to be famous,bleed it dry in the pursuit of helping those kids
Welcome to The Gambia 🇬🇲 next time sir Lewis ❤
As a South African no longer living there, I can tell you Africa is a special place and African people are lovely.
They were largely colonised and that brought both good and bad. Good was things like medicine, roads, farming, transport and education.
Bad was things like taking resources, hard labour, segregation in some places, left in poverty in some cases, and also being left a vacuum of power in some cases giving rise to warlords and dictators to take the place of the colonisers. To name a few.
For example in South Africa the apartheid system was made by the British. It was carried on and given a name by the Afrikaners who took over the country after independence (which by the way was opposed by many normal Afrikaners who did not agree with apartheid) from the British.
My mother was German. She emigrated to SA when she was about 20 I think. For a better life. Apartheid was already in place and the currency was the British Pound.
She never liked it but apartheid was already there. I took was born into it, like the majority of white South Africans you'll meet.
I'm proud to say that eventually we were given a referendum whether to end apartheid or not, and the vast majority of white people voted to END apartheid because honestly none of us liked it. It was something we were born into.
That led to the release of Mandela and to the New South Africa.
Just to show you that most white South Africans you'll meet are likely not racist, and voted against the apartheid system they were born into.
But even in the darkest days of apartheid I don't believe that the state treated black people anywhere close to the evil that the Israeli government has been doing to the Palestinians.
That situation is FAR worse than the South African apartheid, far, far worse. Because there was no oppression in South Africa, just segregation. Africans still had their own homes in their homeland and were free to travel, buy and sell, reside families, access health care etc.
Whereas the Palestinians have been locked behind a wall and been oppressed and now genocided. This is a whole other level of evil.
I hear you, and I get where you're coming from. But I have to disagree with the idea that colonization brought good things to Africa. Sure, there were things like medicine, roads, and education that came with it, but those 'benefits' came at a massive cost. Colonization wasn't about helping African people; it was about exploiting the continent for its resources and labor. The pain, suffering, and lasting damage it caused far outweigh any of the so-called 'good' it might have brought.
Africans had their own systems of medicine, trade, and governance before colonizers arrived, and colonization disrupted and destroyed those systems. The hardships, loss of life, and destruction of cultures left deep scars that are still felt today. So while I respect your perspective, I believe colonization was overwhelmingly a force of pain and oppression in Africa.
@@Trashbxat-f2eHe’s also dishonest about the brutality of apartheid, he conveniently left out the massacres in Soweto and other townships, as well as the assassinations of several anti-apartheid leaders during those times.
@@pao_2031 Absolutely, so many lives were lost, and South Africans were treated as second-class citizens in their own land. The brutality of apartheid is something we can’t just gloss over
He reminds me of Michael Jackson. The way he genuinely cares about those people he meets regardless of their circumstances.
He being as privileged as he is he doesn't forget that there is a world out there who needs to have a voice.
Greetings from Mozambique
E legal ver que vcs gostam de F1
Lewis is a great ambassador thanks for what he's doing for diversity and equality !
Have the best race possible 🤞💜💛🐞🍀
❤❤❤❤
i want more
Thank you Hamilton for highlighting the negativity colonisation has brought upon Africa. Lots of European think they did us a favour no they didn’t it was an abomination worst than the holocaust. We African hate it and resent the perpetrators we just go about our business with dignity
So true 👏👏👏👏
@@Viper-sg2ok Belittling the Holocaust is an absolutely shameful thing. You won’t garner any favours by doing so.
@@chevrolet-poitiers9507 No, you don't get to say that for this context. The impact of colonialism is immeasurable; the scale of devastation across the continent is far greater, and yet European nations have done little to acknowledge this. The holocaust was undeniably horrific, but there are gross double standards when it comes to addressing the victims of European imperialism in black/brown countries. The British operated concentration camps in Kenya in the 1950's, years after rightfully condemning the same of the Germans. The Germans have done little to ensure the genocides against the people of Namibia are as well remembered; they apologised only recently, more than a century after it happened and did not even involve the descendants of the affected people in discussions for compensation.
@@pao_2031 The impact of colonialism is measurable, as all things are. The scale of devastation in Africa is marginal when compared to the concentrated onslaught that was the Holocaust. The British Concentration Camps weren’t forcing people to become Sonderkommandos and didn’t have trains that dropped you off in a furnace. The genocide of the Nama and Herero, whilst horrific, is still only a seventh of a percent of the Holocaust.
The reason why there is such a ‘double standard’ is because European Colonialism and subjugation just simply wasn’t that bad compared to the Holocaust, the Bengal famine, or the Holodomor or it simply was so long ago or so inconsequential that focusing on it just isn’t simply isn’t worth it.
So instead of asking for reparation, memorandum or guilt tripping the West be grateful of what was progressed - because sitting back and sulking about it isn’t going to get Africa, or the world, anywhere.
@@chevrolet-poitiers9507See, it is now you diminishing the death and destruction of millions of lives because the holocaust must implicitly occupy some top pedestal as the ultimate evil to which nothing else is comparable.
Your arguments on impact and scale basically amount to denialism, which is rather ironic considering you accuse the previous poster of belittling another horrific campaign of extermination. You use such shallow arguments as events having happened a long time ago, as if the impacts of such events are not consequential to the future. You mock demands for reparations for Africans, Asians and South Americans, even when this is exactly what the Germans did for their crimes, and even when the horrors of colonialism continued long after WW2 ended.
It’s such a typical reaction of some white people, unwittingly placing racial hierarchies over whose suffering matters more and deserves to be commemorated. I’ve seen so many comments like this from people pretending to be nice liberals and allies yet harbouring a deep resentment of the “other.”
When people like you chant “Never Again” in remembrance, what you actually mean is never again, excluding the coloureds of course.
GOAT
3:09 certainly
7:57 We have the obligation as a human race to reflect & contribute positively to hope. As Tosh said, “Peace without Equal Rights & Justice” means continuous enslavement of humanity to the perception.
Mozambique 🇲🇿
1:05 1:24 1:45 2:05 2:18 2:35 3:36 5:17 6:27 6:45 8:08
Thanks
Lewis hamilton good Luck the race in Singapore 🏴
Go to win
❤❤
Bahamas!
🇰🇪🇰🇪🇰🇪🇰🇪🇰🇪🇰🇪🇰🇪🇰🇪🇰🇪
Although his 8th title was stolen from Lewis, this process has done him a world of good.
He used to be very arrogant and selfish which is why I never liked him, but the last 2 years he's learned humility and it's made him a fantastic human being. Now I really like and respect him.
That is a false narrative. Lewis was already changing before the events of 2021 and had already started his advocacy on a number of issues. If you disliked him prior to this, it was probably for other reasons.
🇧🇯🇧🇯🇧🇯🇧🇯🇧🇯🇧🇯🇧🇯🇧🇯🇧🇯❤️❤️
So glad he hasn't taken up the American way of saying garage 😁
❤❤🇧🇷🌻
hi
They hate him for being outspoken. He should be docile to those he trigger. Kgosi Lewis Hamilton..
🇿🇼🇿🇼
W
They made it public again
Lewis Hamilton is fundamentally a good person.
Hamilton your age same my son, I am happy if you want to travel in Africa, but the god country is Tanzania 🇹🇿 you should think about it.
Queridão Leão Hamilton guerreiro fortes emoção sua viajando do mundo aproveitar a felicidades ama África boa positivos frentes boa viaja do te amo muito Leão Hamilton e bjsss 😘😍🥰🙏🏻🌱🦁ama naturezas etc abençoe ricamente sua vida amém 🙏🏻💯💋🌍🌎
🇲🇿
Luckily he hasn't got mpox
Africa is not a country but a continent!
Africa is not a country but a continent!!
Africa is not a country but a continent!!!
What is your problem? He travelled to multiple countries and spoke about the challenges respective to each place without generalising or playing on stereotypes.
Chill out whiny buddy he knows that he is even specifying Countries he went to stop whining too much
1
First
Ant can't take them past 3rd round 100%
Yeah, difficult times: Millions in the bank, sports car, private jet, luxury villa. Oh, those times, I hope they will get better for you.
What a beautiful soul ♥
A millionaire GOAT with a humble social conscience is a priceless thing
A supremely rose tinted view of the continent of Africa and the reasons behind the current state of affairs. As a follower of Lewis, I'm disappointed he's simplified the politics and corruption of these countries.
Sure because the other F1 drivers are so vocal right?
Well it's 8mins video..to dive into thousands of years of complex interactions would be challenging
@@bilinguiyveganpinguiNot sure what you are saying as your statement means nothing, just word salad. I am a huge follower of Lewis for decades and think he is the GOAT, but I stand by my statement.
@@jastallion45 So best not to even mention the political and current situation unless its balanced and informed.
@@toolate9494 Did you seriously expect a doctoral-thesis level discussion on this from an 8 minute informal video from someone (a non-expert on that subject matter) who went there on holiday?
Neden dir bilmiyorum fakat onu takip edemiyorum