A Taste of Gullah

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  • Опубликовано: 6 май 2015
  • A Taste of Gullah, featuring Dr. Janice Collins, is a documentary focusing on stories of some of the Gullah "folks" who decided to stay on their land. The Gullah people...descendants of enslaved Africans who live in the Low Country region of South Carolina and Georgia...have always been, and in many ways, still are marginalized. their way of life is being threatened as well as their land-making the production of this documentary even more important to the issue of surviving.

Комментарии • 622

  • @rlkemp
    @rlkemp 3 года назад +16

    I am from The Bahamas and I see a whole lot of similarities, very touching. Thank you!

  • @larrychapman6890
    @larrychapman6890 6 лет назад +139

    I am a white retired US History teacher who lives in Ohio. My father was from South Carolina and I was born in Charleston in 1942. I have both lived in and traveled much of SC. I've long had an interest in black history, especially the roots of blues music. Through that I came to learn of the sea island communities and the Gullah culture. Your video has expanded my knowledge and understanding tremendously and I want to thank you.

    • @carlsanchious8192
      @carlsanchious8192 3 года назад +6

      Amazing interest you have Larry in what appears to be an exposition of a group of black Americans whose roots are far closer to the West African family connection than any other group els where....a grammatical index formally set in place....blending various related Creoles from island regions to West African Krio in Sierre Leone..so ingenious...not to mention cuisine profiles, and self sustainable farming and animal raising....music, arts and folkloric traditions

    • @carlsanchious8192
      @carlsanchious8192 3 года назад +4

      The american blues as I looked deeper is largely of a region of Guinea West Africa.... WASSOULU.....

    • @chocolatesugar4434
      @chocolatesugar4434 Год назад +4

      I hope you support as much as you research

    • @KennethHolloway-fk1xk
      @KennethHolloway-fk1xk 7 месяцев назад +1

      I'm from Florence South Carolina, my roots from Senegal to us Gullah geechie is our heritage.

  • @briggsmaleakah
    @briggsmaleakah 6 лет назад +78

    I’m so blessed to have been able to return back to South Carolina and Ghana last year to trace my roots! I love my Gullah Geechie Roots!

    • @ActiveCentralizedEmpowerment
      @ActiveCentralizedEmpowerment  4 года назад +2

      So awesome!!!

    • @ActiveCentralizedEmpowerment
      @ActiveCentralizedEmpowerment  4 года назад +2

      Check out Janicemcollinsphd.com in the Discovery tab when I visited Ghana! Such happy people!

    • @_estecate_
      @_estecate_ 3 месяца назад

      Gullah from Guale (yamasee Indians) and geechee from “Ogeechee” as in the Ogeechee River in GA ? We aren’t Africans love 🤦🏾‍♂️

  • @cantrockthis
    @cantrockthis 3 года назад +12

    Loving my Gullah roots and culture. Seeing all the beautiful people embracing the dance and music shows that the colonists failed when they tried to strip us of our rich African traditions because they are still in existence today. We are winning!

  • @Tonysarfo123
    @Tonysarfo123 6 лет назад +133

    As an Ashanti man from modern day Ghana, who have been living in America for the last 23 years, i feel ashamed to have not known anything about the Gullah till right this day. I really enjoyed this. I hope more African American brothers and sisters learn more about the real history of us. As the Ashanti proverb says, Sankofa, which loosely translates in English as "Go back and get it". Knowing our history or sankofa is surely is a way to awaken the race worldwide.

    • @sano1062
      @sano1062 5 лет назад +12

      That`s because these Gullah are real African Americans and have the culture to prove it. The majority of us are indigenous to America that`s why we don`t have African customs or features. The establishment has marginalized these people because it raises questions that they cannot answer! Like I thought you said all traces of African culture was wiped out by the Trans Atlantic Trade? The truth is you cannot deleted a people culture in several generations because it is passed from the elders to the youth. Most of us were taught that we are the aboriginals or Indians of North America. The term African American came out of the dominate culture.

    • @brianwilliams983
      @brianwilliams983 5 лет назад +8

      Not all black America are Gullah That's another reason why they don't brace it. back in the days people may fun of you because you was Geechee..

    • @riyyahd7754
      @riyyahd7754 5 лет назад +3

      Tony Sarfo, this is YOUR "real" roots along with the Gullah ppl. Check out the following info in a "timely" fashion: THE CONSPIRACY AND HIDDEN IDENTITY OF BLACKS IN THE BIBLE {Full Documentary}
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    • @m0renachula704
      @m0renachula704 4 года назад +3

      Love this!

    • @m0renachula704
      @m0renachula704 4 года назад +7

      @@sano1062 would you dummies stop spreading those lies!? You are African, you are not indigenous to the Americas. That's offensive to real native Americans. You people are so ashamed to be african you'll claim anyone and everyone else's culture.

  • @Renould2010
    @Renould2010 5 лет назад +50

    Very informative, I’m Haitian-American, from Florida, it’s amazing 😉 to learn of the Gulla Geeche Tradition, Love ❤️ our People wow, The Carolina, and GA, Serre Leona and Ghana 🇬🇭, and Haiti 🇭🇹 all very much similar, please Let’s keep this very Historical Tradition Thriving and May the History Last for Generations. Gorgeous Love it.

  • @elevatedspirit8
    @elevatedspirit8 7 лет назад +61

    My family is definitely Gullah/Geechee. We are from the low-country/coast of SC, specifically Charleston, Beaufort, James Island, Georgetown, and Myrtle Beach. I love being from SC. I don't have the thick Geechee accent as I live inland and have for almost 20 years, but I know the language, culture, and dialect. I also speak Gullah when around my people. :) It is a huge part of my history, as is Cherokee ancestry. My great aunt, great-grandmother, grandfather, cousins, and many friends are Gullah/Geechee.
    Am in the process of learning Algonquin because I am Cherokee and Gullah on my mom's side and Piscataway-Conoy on my father's side. I enjoyed this documentary! Yes the threat is real, just like in Jamaica the elite are taking away all the public beaches and buying up land. We still own land in Myrtle Beach 2 miles from the Grand Strand, and won't be selling it.

    • @handsumaf
      @handsumaf 3 года назад +3

      My family are Gullah as well we’ve always been here in America I don’t know why they keep mentioning Africa

    • @tonir99
      @tonir99 3 года назад +2

      @@handsumaf I guess comprehension wasn't your strongest subject. This is about african immigrants, not by choice, they were slaves 😔 but kept their culture. I bet you think you white cos you amerikkan.

    • @handsumaf
      @handsumaf 3 года назад +2

      @@tonir99 no your stupid and ignorant ! How you keep culture from a place you’ve never been!!!! Tell me where they came from Africa in any text that isn’t American “black” people of America have always been here in America aka turtle island do some research slaves were from America captured and tortured in our own land read up on your history before typing a simple ass reply

    • @handsumaf
      @handsumaf 3 года назад

      @siksika bitch are you stupid or jus looking for an argument! My family is Geeche and we still have our land in South Carolina smh 🤦🏿‍♂️ we’ve never been in Africa or traveled from Africa dummy and that’s coming from years and years of traditions that been passed down stories and I’m not the only geechee man that knows this! Why you think they’re saying it’s a fading community??? Because majority of the geechee people that still know the truth and won’t sell out so they had to go to specific people claiming that they can be the head of our people smh tell false narratives! Think about it genius if our people come from Africa then why is a native tongue a form of broke English rather than French or any of the other many African spoken languages which mind you none of them are English! No you do some REAL research and get the fuck out my mentions. Yeah I fuck with Dane Calloway as of recent because he’s telling the truth my family has been knowing for years!!! Tf I look like listening to a book with authors who taught by someone who isn’t a credible source over listening to my grandfather who is 90 and my mother and father had me young I know my great and great great grandparents they’ve told me what I need to know now beat it!

    • @cinnamonsunshine6331
      @cinnamonsunshine6331 Год назад +3

      I am Gullah/ Geechee and native as well. This was a wonderful peice of work.

  • @mosthatedny2243
    @mosthatedny2243 4 года назад +8

    Sierra Leone those is my people too 💪🏿💪🏿💪🏿

  • @nathanpiazza9644
    @nathanpiazza9644 6 лет назад +38

    This should be required viewing for all Americans.

    • @ActiveCentralizedEmpowerment
      @ActiveCentralizedEmpowerment  3 года назад +3

      Hey! Great Idea! And it may be a good idea to hit up Netflix with it along with my documentary series Journey to My Mother's Land!!! Thanks!!!

  • @arthurwashington3811
    @arthurwashington3811 3 года назад +9

    I am a native of Charleston, whose roots run through St. Helena Island. Thank you for this video, I now live in Maryland and love to share our history with my children.

  • @bonitaweekes4366
    @bonitaweekes4366 6 лет назад +14

    We in Barbados also did basket making, a few people still do it, in fact one lady specialises in basket weaving. As a child it did some of what we call plaiting. We would take 11 strands, when one gets to the end you join in another one, we plaited 14 yds for which when sold we got $1. 40, that at that time was a lot of money for a 13 yr old. We use what we call ping - wing or cane lily, it's a plant with long leaves, some get dry on the plant but when picked green, we'd lay them out in the sun to dry. You'd then cut the spines out and take off the thorny ends, it's then striped into quarter inch strands and used as needed. We make all kinds of baskets, ladies carried then to put their groceries in, they sold produce from them. There were smaller ones for when going to town to do your shopping, smaller ones for little girls, waste paper baskets, place mats, moses baskets, and dung baskets. Dung baskets were used in the fields to carry cow dung to put to plants, another material was called bull rush and some times bamboo.
    So not only people from S Carolina did or do it, I am from Barbados and we did and still do some of it too.

    • @ActiveCentralizedEmpowerment
      @ActiveCentralizedEmpowerment  6 лет назад +1

      Bonita Weekes This is so awesome to know! Yes, we are all connected! Thank you for adding to the knowledge base! Perhaps I could do a documentary on that side! Peace! And thanks for watching!

    • @char08fal
      @char08fal 4 года назад +3

      Some people in S. Carolina are originally from Barbados......actually quite a few of them, which is why the cultures are so similar.

    • @chuckbrooks2271
      @chuckbrooks2271 3 года назад +1

      Just to reiterated Barbados, settled there. 🤣

  • @seanwright5287
    @seanwright5287 5 лет назад +31

    Beautiful people, beautiful culture and a fabulous documentary!

  • @hcassells66
    @hcassells66 7 лет назад +128

    wow the gullah dialect is almost exactly the same as Jamaican patois, i could understand it clearly. the African connections between islanders and African Americans was never lost ✊✊

    • @jackneal3951
      @jackneal3951 6 лет назад +9

      THEN YOU FORGOT ABOUT THE SALVES FROM BARBADOS FIRST GULLAH COMPARE DNA FROM BARBADOS AND SC NC GA VA ECT SEE YA

    • @ActiveCentralizedEmpowerment
      @ActiveCentralizedEmpowerment  5 лет назад +6

      Very nice! We are One! We are Family! Thanks for watching!

    • @raytonnebanks3517
      @raytonnebanks3517 5 лет назад +2

      +Active Centralized Empowerment i read that what makes these people a people is that they were able to survive in the bush with american indians and they hide in swamps but thats not what i got out of this it more explained how the gullah people were brought here to cultivate rice and etc

    • @dancemusikk
      @dancemusikk 5 лет назад +6

      Connected by West Africa!

    • @RaMahUganda
      @RaMahUganda 4 года назад +3

      @@raytonnebanks3517 dude thats the surface! we got you have to read about read about Gullah Wars and John Horse, that will tell you about the ppl we know as Black Seminoles in fact there should be a clip here on y.t. telling that story....and there was a group taken back to Africa afrter slavery they live in Sierra Lionne Afrika and they speak almost exactly like we do here.... they call it W,African Kriol.

  • @ritter1016
    @ritter1016 7 лет назад +31

    My oh my! I stumbled upon this page while searching "Gullah readings." Born and raised in Ritter, SC, I am well versed in the ways of Gullah, or so I thought. These episodes are fantastic!! What a treasure! Keep 'em coming!

  • @shunnaize
    @shunnaize 7 лет назад +59

    Whattttt?! I'm of Haitian descent (my mother is Bahamian and my father is Haitian) and we were also taught not to leave our purse on the ground and never let a women be the first person to enter your home on New Years Day. Now my mom picked this up from my grandmother who was born & raised in Haiti. Wowwww

    • @shunnaize
      @shunnaize 7 лет назад +13

      ***** So very true. The more I get to know about other cultures the more I realize how similar we all are

    • @elevatedgoddess3917
      @elevatedgoddess3917 5 лет назад +5

      It's the same for my family in Mississippi.

    • @macdonaldnathan
      @macdonaldnathan 5 лет назад +4

      shunnaize Scots have this same New Year tradition. It’s called “first footing”. Does your family have a name for it?

    • @cinder4832
      @cinder4832 5 лет назад +3

      never let a women be the first person to enter your home on New Years Day

    • @jaxsonpierre2363
      @jaxsonpierre2363 5 лет назад +3

      @@elevatedgoddess3917 did you know enslave people from Mississippi came from South Carolina

  • @Tonysarfo123
    @Tonysarfo123 6 лет назад +53

    I have recently also read about the Garifuna , the Maroons, the Chinchas , the Yorubas in Brazil and other countries to name a few. This all points to African influences worldwide. We truly are a blessed people, but for lack of knowledge our people perish.

    • @tundebakare6887
      @tundebakare6887 10 месяцев назад

      You're right, most black American's have been brainwashed by their history

    • @SAPHYTYRA
      @SAPHYTYRA 10 месяцев назад

      I've been looking into them too. Have you gotten to the part about them living here before colonization?

  • @gregglevin5612
    @gregglevin5612 7 лет назад +22

    I grew with Gullah culture an the Geechee language.. as a little Jewish boy in the south.. love. Respecting Gullah culture for ever.

  • @johnnywoodard1593
    @johnnywoodard1593 8 лет назад +155

    This is how you can save millions people of African decent from being lost in ratchet ness and ignorance . A people that know and respect their true ancestors. Will not follow the foot steps of the slaveholder's culture.The love of God himself begins with appreciation of his creation of you.

    • @m0renachula704
      @m0renachula704 4 года назад +1

      Yes

    • @vleevision7787
      @vleevision7787 4 года назад +2

      YES!!! A'SE!!!

    • @13579hee
      @13579hee 4 года назад

      @@m0renachula704 this comment doesnt make sense.
      This people's culture was STILL HEAVILY affected by the history of Enslavement
      Deal with it. Good god

    • @handsumaf
      @handsumaf 3 года назад +1

      We have to first identify the lies that they’ve told us we were never brought here from Africa true Gullah need to know that America is our native land not Africa they’ve tricked us so we wouldn’t have any rights to the land we are still currently in

    • @WorthlessDeadEnd
      @WorthlessDeadEnd 3 года назад

      @@handsumaf wat? So you're denying your African roots?

  • @nancybarrie1864
    @nancybarrie1864 4 года назад +26

    Gullah / Geechee (Gissy) is one of our tribes in Sierra Leone 🇸🇱. They are mostly fishermen and farmers . You can find them in Bonthe Island in Sierra Leone. They are my people.

    • @ActiveCentralizedEmpowerment
      @ActiveCentralizedEmpowerment  4 года назад +1

      Awesome! Thank you for sharing and watching! I bisited there dec 2018! Loved it! I produced some articles on my trip! www.janicemcollinsphd.com/salone

    • @ladydignity
      @ladydignity 3 года назад

      Wow...

    • @LilliLamour
      @LilliLamour Год назад +2

      @@hannibal6265 Stop trolling us African Americans who don't think like you. Go on RUclips accounts that pertains to your thinking and leave us alone.

    • @copperamerindian3373
      @copperamerindian3373 Год назад

      @@hannibal6265The Ogeechee River

    • @tundebakare6887
      @tundebakare6887 10 месяцев назад +1

      And also there are also found in Liberia in robertsport by the sea side along capemount county,am a Nigerian and I've got friends from there

  • @CheyCheyLove
    @CheyCheyLove 8 лет назад +22

    Thank you for this video. I live in Chicago & my family has lost touch with our family from this south. I now see where some of our culture comes from. This video made me cry because I know a lot of people are trying to buy up that land and take away a piece of culture.

  • @RaMahUganda
    @RaMahUganda 6 лет назад +29

    My uncle RIP at every family dinner he would remind us that we are Geechee !!!

    • @RaMahUganda
      @RaMahUganda 6 лет назад +1

      Tenki Tenki!!! oonah fuh deh hep!! ~ Gullah Criole // Thank you very much for your help!

    • @SAPHYTYRA
      @SAPHYTYRA 10 месяцев назад +1

      Thats whats up. I wonder why he never told yall you were African...hint hint. Lol peace brother.

    • @RaMahUganda
      @RaMahUganda 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@SAPHYTYRA it took our generation to do the research to find out about the connection wit the Wheatgrass Baskets and deh rice.... and i even counted with words that sounded non american... and then Alonzo dow Turner explaind that we were actually countimg with Fulani # and i still remenber those...

  • @UmmLaycious
    @UmmLaycious 8 лет назад +33

    So I haven't completed watching the video...but my heart is breaking as I'm listening to how the culture is dwindling. I am from Kansas. I have spent my entire life wondering about who I am and where I come....I am STILL on that journey and I am 39yrs old. I crave for something like this; to watch how we no longer listen to our elders and have forgotten our ancestors.....is so devastating.... How I long to part of community such as this ....and now I'm learning that it may not exist for much longer....sigh.....heartbreaking....let me continue watching....

    • @TheFYoung
      @TheFYoung 8 лет назад +8

      +UmmLaycious ....Yes! I feel so lost because I feel like I don't know who I am! I have seen some pictures of great grandparents, but they stop after that. My family is so diverse. It makes me sad when I hear people say know for a fact that their family is Irish, Asian, French, etc....I have no clue where my ancestors are from.....All I know is that I have family in Mississippi, Oklahoma, Louisiana, Tennessee, etc.

    • @omggiiirl2077
      @omggiiirl2077 8 лет назад +8

      Hey now! I see we have some common ground! I live in Seattle but my kin folk all come from Oklahoma and Kansas, particularly from the Okmulgee area! But so much of this is stuff I thought was normal because I grew up with this at Grammas house. The cooking style, the way folks spoke, it was all normal, I just thought it was a part of being.

    • @ActiveCentralizedEmpowerment
      @ActiveCentralizedEmpowerment  5 лет назад +5

      UmmLaycious travel, visit and record as I did. We can keep the history alive.

    • @abdullkhanifa3366
      @abdullkhanifa3366 5 лет назад +6

      That's right. Iam high land geech born in1949 in green pond s.couple now here iamat 70year years old and ilove my geech family in the South my Allah bless ally you cullah in the Charleston love one another for every

    • @SAPHYTYRA
      @SAPHYTYRA 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@TheFYoungwhat if your family is from America?

  • @9175rock
    @9175rock 5 лет назад +23

    The young lady is talking about Gentrification and it's happening anywhere where they are Black presence and especially if the presence is in areas with resources and where Black ppl participate in the Voting process as Democrats.
    Shes right my family has given away hundreds of acres because the older generation sadly didn't care or understand the importance of land. And the laws are so dishonest it's hard to hold on to land also.

  • @nitarobinson9511
    @nitarobinson9511 4 года назад +6

    My family is from South Carolina ...I will make it high on my travel list to visit the area ...as for the high property tax we all know thats a way to force people out ...blacks need to organize and help preserve our culture .. I truly recieved what the young sister was saying without saying what she really wanted to say

  • @ShannieLove100
    @ShannieLove100 7 лет назад +21

    My mother's side of the family has always said to keep your pocket books off of the floor or else you'll be broke all the time I just learned something new which is an old saying I am very happy about what I just learned a Gullah Geechee saying I never would have thought it :-).

    • @MsKismetNoRegrets
      @MsKismetNoRegrets 3 года назад +2

      My granny too! Big fuss if anyone did! We are Guyanese and I love all these connections being made ❤️

  • @butterflylove2642
    @butterflylove2642 10 месяцев назад +3

    👏👏👏🕊🌱💚🙏Respect, respect, respect. God made all of us unique, extraordinary, and with many gifts. I enjoyed this video very much. We should all learn from each other as much as we can. When we do this, we truly have rich & peaceful living.

  • @trebonejones410
    @trebonejones410 4 года назад +5

    I am a country boy from Alabama. I lived in Charleston for a couple months. I couldn't understand anything they were saying and they couldn't understand me. They were talking too fast and they said I talked too slow😁

  • @jameshines9330
    @jameshines9330 10 месяцев назад +1

    I’m 55 was born in defuniak spirings, Florida I spent most of my childhood with my grandparents some this stuff he mentions I’ve experienced. The pee can , slop jar because in the woods most people have outhouses and at night it was pitch black and you wasn’t going outside with no lights. We had karosene lamps. First went to the Carolina’s in the late 80’s. Some of the same words Gullah folks use my grandparents used and my grandmother was the best storyteller she kept us captivated with her stories. She used to tell us a story about a galliniper. And her and her friend used to make quilts no pattern they would sit on the porch and stretch out the 4 corners. This just reminds me all that. Great video

  • @windstorm1000
    @windstorm1000 8 лет назад +15

    love the souths different traditions---imagine for many people who moved to the north that a return to Gullah country might feel like a home coming. thank you Dr. Collins!

  • @pyramidcinematics5401
    @pyramidcinematics5401 6 лет назад +18

    Much love from Bahamas

  • @vickiejohnson2451
    @vickiejohnson2451 7 лет назад +18

    Wow! This is amazing! I needed to do some research on South Carolina. I was trying to get a sense of the language and sounds of the culture in the area. My ancestry is in South Carolina and this blew my mind. Such amazing people and the dancing looked like a lot of fun. I've never seen anything so exciting. I loved it. Thank you for creating this video. I really enjoyed it. :)

  • @missqtmimi
    @missqtmimi 7 лет назад +29

    Gumbo sounds similar to okra soup eaten in many countries in west Africa and the don't put your purse or bag on the floor is found in Africa too. My mum always tells me that lol 🙈

    • @missqtmimi
      @missqtmimi 6 лет назад +1

      Janice Collins wow watched the trailer it's really powerful will deffo check out the full video. It's great that you went back to Salone more Americans should visit Africa to learn and reconnect. Hopefully maybe you can go back again and perhaps create a charity or pass on your expertise or skills to the people 🙂

    • @adangbe
      @adangbe 4 года назад +5

      Well gumbo is a angolan/kongolese word for okra. West African okra soup appears a little different from gumbo. Then again there are variations.

    • @Dantor1990
      @Dantor1990 4 года назад +1

      Miranda of course gumbo is okra.

    • @taino20
      @taino20 4 года назад +1

      "Gumbo" is an African word meaning "okra.". In Puerto Rico, "Gumbo" is called "Quimbombó".

    • @SAPHYTYRA
      @SAPHYTYRA 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@adangbe based on research that went beyond google, I found that gumbo actually means "soup" and it is an American word...kombo....it can either be thickened with okra (during okra season) or with sassafras leaves when okra is out of season. This is an American food that was cooked in Africa after colonization.

  • @danielcaskey
    @danielcaskey Год назад +4

    This is beautiful. From the narration, to the people and the culture. These people are living the true American dream. The freedom to be self determined was all it ever was about. As this dream rapidly fades away, I sure hope their history and traditions are documented through literature.

  • @AbeJacoby
    @AbeJacoby 4 года назад +3

    I was born in Charleston and have loving memories of my native city.
    Left at age 15 after my dad died. These images are so bittersweet, brings back many childhood memories.
    Al Miller the tour guide operator is a nice guy.

    • @ActiveCentralizedEmpowerment
      @ActiveCentralizedEmpowerment  4 года назад

      Hi! Thank you for watching. I am so happy that there is some sweet with the bitter. Smiling. Al is awesome! Please give him my best when you see him. Blessings

  • @GeminiSensei
    @GeminiSensei 8 лет назад +13

    Thank you. Watching this keeps me connected to my mother (R.I.P.) who comes from Kingstree SC. Listening to the language reminds me of the conversations my mother used to have with me while teaching me the Gullah language.

    • @prettyassnique3989
      @prettyassnique3989 4 года назад +1

      Mr.W Cleveland same here we are from kings tree but migrated to Atlanta

  • @snitaw8996
    @snitaw8996 11 месяцев назад +1

    I had the honor of meeting Ms. Jery the basket weaver and own a few of her pieces. This woman is amazing to talk to. ❤

  • @augustusbrown5320
    @augustusbrown5320 4 месяца назад

    As a black 10 year old kid being able to meet and stay at the Nance Family Rentals when my mother was a traveling nurse. All I could say was mind blowing ❤️💯. As Years go by and life hits I visit again as a 18 year old and I was shocked by the small changes and Clemson University…. Now 40 and understanding more of what’s important in life……. A Must Visit!!!!

  • @ChanelleNovosey
    @ChanelleNovosey 7 лет назад +51

    I thoroughly enjoyed this! Thank you so much I really appreciate it! My mother is Geechee and I just did my DNA ancestry test and I am learning more about my Geechee/Gullah roots... its so ironic also because my last name is Collins like yours and My aunts full name is Janice Marie Collins just like you lol I'm excited to take another closer trip to Charleston soon and learn more about my beautiful people 😊😊😊😊

    • @ChanelleNovosey
      @ChanelleNovosey 7 лет назад +4

      Janice Collins I know i was like omg we're probably related!!! thank you again this is great content!!!

    • @sharonnewsome3368
      @sharonnewsome3368 7 лет назад +3

      Chanelle Novoséy

    • @adangbe
      @adangbe 4 года назад

      What did the results say?

  • @katiemae517
    @katiemae517 8 лет назад +16

    Awesome documentary! I was in that area of SC last year to help my Step-daughter move to the Base on Parrish island. I didn't have a chance to really site see, but I do plan on going back. I probably will try to attend the festival. It's so amazing how some of the African traditions transcend into today's culture sub consciously .

  • @qtkeyah
    @qtkeyah 5 лет назад +7

    Some of drumming and chanting sounds like soca and dancehall. I was whining up myself 😁 I'm Jamaican myself and I can hear the similarities 💓

    • @ActiveCentralizedEmpowerment
      @ActiveCentralizedEmpowerment  5 лет назад +1

      Awesome information! Thanks for sharing and for watching! We are family! Blessings

    • @arawakan5546
      @arawakan5546 4 года назад +2

      Because we are the same people. We are all Arawaks/ maroons of America. We are not Africans. You will not find evidence of any Gullah culture in Africa. The Gullah culture is all over the mainland USA, central and South America and the Caribbean. Not in Africa. We are the indigenous people of America.

  • @indiansage9295
    @indiansage9295 8 лет назад +10

    Omg this so beautiful,evetything the baskets,the delicious food,the language,the dancing,the drums,the black people,the culture everything was amazing god bless them I wish I could go to one African American Gullah/Geechee heritage is so beautiful,I'm speechless and this my mothers people.she should be proud and thankful she cane from a rich strong heritage no wonder she,my sisters,my grandmother and great grandmother and female cousin can sing and cook like hell.

  • @pacefainter
    @pacefainter 7 лет назад +11

    What a gem of a video! I had NO idea about the Gullah culture. I had, of course heard of the Creole people, but didn't know about this part of American history. I was reading and came across a reference to the Gullah culture, so thank you internet, I went on a little discovery journey. I loved the sentiment of Aunt Pearlie Sue that at some point we all came from Africa and are related. I have always lived in the Southwest and haven't had much opportunity yet to explore the Southeast. I can't wait to see more in person!

  • @blackwolfsaint3500
    @blackwolfsaint3500 5 лет назад +11

    I was born and raised in savannah ga and theirs alot of gullah history their i love my hometown yes indeed

    • @bwill46
      @bwill46 4 года назад +1

      That coast is Lowcountry all the way to Fla. Brunswick and all.

  • @timothyhudson8874
    @timothyhudson8874 8 лет назад +9

    Dr Collins, thanks so very much for your documentary. My family left Columbia, SC in the 1800s for Pine Bluff, AK by way of wagon train. My uncle tried to tell me about our families' tie to Gullah- Geechee culture when I was quite a bit younger but I did not have the presence of mind to really focus in and pay more attention. My hunger for reconnecting with our history has deepened with age. I have felt myself being drawn to know more. Thanks for giving me a glimpse into the wonders of my families long lost cultural ties to SC low country. I enjoyed your documentary a great deal.

    • @SAPHYTYRA
      @SAPHYTYRA 10 месяцев назад

      May I ask if your family was ever on the Dawes roll or ever lived in Indian territory? Since they moved from that area in the 1800s to AK it may be likely depending on when in the 1800s.

    • @gwensmith6
      @gwensmith6 10 месяцев назад

      We have so many talents. We are a rich and blessed culture.

  • @redeemedliving2342
    @redeemedliving2342 4 года назад +5

    Our culture is so Rich and Beautiful. I'M proud to be a Gullah Geechee, ya hemme?

  • @lynnharr3911
    @lynnharr3911 4 года назад +11

    My maternal grandmother's family was from further inland in SC. If I listen carefully, I can understand quite a bit of the
    Gullah language. We had the same cuisine of seafood, okra, tomatoes, yams, collards and rice. The same superstitions, too! Her family would always talk about how they were like the "Geechee rice eaters." I grew up on grits with fish and toatoes.

  • @ToniA5555
    @ToniA5555 8 лет назад +7

    When I lived in Beaufort, SC in the late 1970s, I visited an African village, but I didn't know about any Gullah festival. I guess I missed out on a real treat!

    • @ToniA5555
      @ToniA5555 8 лет назад

      ***** I may never go to South Carolina again in my lifetime. But thank you for the information and invitation. 😊

  • @marknorman5038
    @marknorman5038 7 лет назад +16

    I have absolutely no connection to the US or Afro ancestry and found this fascinating. Very informative, thanks a lot - From England

  • @tommuscatello9594
    @tommuscatello9594 7 лет назад +8

    Fascinating. I am moving to SC from NYC. I am now more excited because of your rich American Gullah history. Thank you for posting. I hope to learn more while I am a resident of SC in June 2017. God bless.

  • @ishamiah1619
    @ishamiah1619 11 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you for publishing this piece of living but not widely known history ! This most definitely has helped expand my own understanding of the legacy and more importantly the current gentrification they are facing by developers, builders and wealthy folks invading

  • @mikedixon4598
    @mikedixon4598 7 лет назад +12

    Loved the video! Just one correction. The old City Market was identified as the place where slaves were bought and sold. The Old city market was actually where meat, fish, produce, etc. was sold. There were only 2 places where slaves were bought and sold. The U.S. Custom House and the Slave Mart (I know,... kind of like Walmart) over on Chalmers St. (It's still there).

  • @TherealMrsScottmovingon
    @TherealMrsScottmovingon 5 лет назад +5

    I really enjoyed and appreciated you doing the documentary professor 🙏🏾💞love our people 💪🏿 and the whole human race BUT IT'S SOMETHING VERY UNIQUE & BLESSED ABOUT " BLACK GOLD" # NAMASTE 🙏🏾💖🏺

  • @cuppatea4466
    @cuppatea4466 6 лет назад +8

    Wow! Those baskets are GORGEOUS!

  • @b.j.h.1706
    @b.j.h.1706 5 лет назад +5

    Wonderful. Thank you. Although I am very African identified, I have always retained the surname, Heyward, because it keeps me connected to the Geechies of Charleston.

  • @grumblekin
    @grumblekin 3 года назад +3

    I grew up in SC and can understand Geechee just fine. I loved hearing the songs and speech and miss it greatly.
    Lovely people, excellent food and a pillar of Carolina culture. Getting to know that history is a critical part of America.
    This is awesome

  • @Smisstah1
    @Smisstah1 8 лет назад +28

    It's so mind boggling how the Gullah history has been renamed though-out the history books, giving so much credit to the Indians ( people from the continent of India) and not our native Gullah brethren.

    • @elevatedspirit8
      @elevatedspirit8 7 лет назад +15

      Well also they give credit to Native American Indians but they interbred with slaves in SC. I personally am Gullah and Cherokee on my mom's side. The Angolan slaves (Gullah) banded together with Natives in the area to overthrow slave owners. This is often called, "the Indian Wars or Seminole Wars," but the Stono Rebellion is one such battle where many whites were killed. It was this on-going guerilla warfare which ended slavery, not the Civil War or white Yankees.

    • @Smisstah1
      @Smisstah1 7 лет назад +4

      Thanks for being so insightful!

    • @handsumaf
      @handsumaf 3 года назад +2

      Elevated Spirit exactly but also we are native not African only 8% of the slave trade came to america majority males there literally no way that we’ve all came from there

    • @handsumaf
      @handsumaf 3 года назад

      @siksika and you know my DNA because of what 🤔🤔🤔 because my actually dna results says I’m 40% indigenous Puerto Rico and other than that I actually know all the way back to my 7x great grandparents who do you know 🤔🤔 try that on someone who don’t know who they are I’ve known for years my family made sure of it I’m sorry your family failed at raising you

    • @SAPHYTYRA
      @SAPHYTYRA 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@handsumafhey it's good that you're letting people know what we both know...but this is not the way to do it man. You're turning ppl away so it's not helping. Plant the seed and move on.

  • @rechardmitchell1443
    @rechardmitchell1443 7 лет назад +14

    This is interesting I was born and raised on edisto island sc and all my life I been called geeche when folks hear me talk they think I a Haitian and i tellum no I from sc

    • @Lucky-uz6jk
      @Lucky-uz6jk 3 года назад

      My family / ancestors are from Edisto Island, my slavemaster. Name Spieger / changed to Spingner. My grand moms name was EARTHA Spigner

  • @dee.b.2210
    @dee.b.2210 5 лет назад +7

    Thank you so much for sharing this with the world, I moved to Beaufort, SC when I was 2 years old, I love my Geechee family and culture, I miss doing all of the things with my Grandmother what you was sharing in the video, matter of fact my graduation class was the first class to graduate at the Water Front in 1980, I'm in Florida now but I can still speak the Gullah Language. I miss the Gullah Festival. I still don't put my pocket book on the flood. I can write a book about all the things my Grandmother told me not to do, some people here in Florida say those things are superstitious. Thanks again.

    • @ActiveCentralizedEmpowerment
      @ActiveCentralizedEmpowerment  4 года назад +1

      Thank you so much for commenting and writing. I would love to hear more about your stories!! Blessings

  • @LovinAutumn88
    @LovinAutumn88 7 лет назад +6

    I can't wait to watch this! I read a 9 book series when I was 12 where they spoke Gullah heavily throughout the series. I got the hang of reading it... got the rhythm of it. I'd never actually heard it in real life but I heard it in my head while I was reading and I just (17 years later) watched watched a short video where a lady was speaking it. Got the happy shivers for some reason. I will watch this when I'm in a quiet place. 🤗

    • @LovinAutumn88
      @LovinAutumn88 7 лет назад +2

      Janice Collins I'm so glad you made this... I really enjoyed it and want to learn more now!

  • @justphilly8983
    @justphilly8983 7 лет назад +6

    thank for sharing just wanted to add that this is also a huge part of Turks and Caicos....we speak like that up to now....especially in islands like North Caicos where most African slaves resided and worked at the Wade's Green Plantation

    • @justphilly8983
      @justphilly8983 7 лет назад

      No thing! we are all one..... sometimes its alittle difficult to find certain cultural info about the tci online but I always encourage a trip get a taste of the language the food the music handcraft the people! its amazing that we still speak like this

  • @kanaotysuri532
    @kanaotysuri532 8 лет назад +14

    WOW!, when Mr. Al Miller says the tale about New Years' Day (at 4:49), it shocked me because I've heard that all my life- my father is Jamaican and my mom from Detroit, and I would always hear that same saying when visiting Jamaica and I've heard it all over Detroit too. I also noticed how spoken Gullah is closely related to Jamaican Patwah (patois).

    • @kanaotysuri532
      @kanaotysuri532 8 лет назад +5

      *****
      right..... just shows how closely knit Our People will always be. They can steal us from the motherland, but they can't take the motherland out of us

    • @rouskeycarpel5097
      @rouskeycarpel5097 7 лет назад +1

      +branbak929 Gullah is closely related to Patois because the slaves that were brought to jamaica came from many of the same places that the slaves who were were brought to the south carolina low country came from and both groups of people came in contact with english speaking whites. I'm Haitian and my mother tongue of haitian creole is similar to lousiana creole and other french based creoles in the Caribbean as since the africans slaves brought to haiti and those brought to lousiana and martinique and guadloupe etc came from many of the same tribes and both us came in contact with the french.

    • @dahbajanman7044
      @dahbajanman7044 7 лет назад +5

      Rouskey Carpel Many of the slaves who went to the Carolinas were living in places like Barbados which is why they speak so similar to us. They even cook the foods such as baked macaroni pie.

    • @jackneal3951
      @jackneal3951 6 лет назад +4

      DO YOUR RESEARCH, SLAVES BREED IN BARBADOS CAME TO SC IN 1609 AND BUILT CHARLESTON, FIRST BLACKS IN VA. JOHN'S ISLAND IN NC. SETTLE AND NAME AFTER ST. JOHN'S PARISH IN BARBADOS, GA. LOL

    • @kidjustice7945
      @kidjustice7945 5 лет назад

      @ROUSKEY no jamaicans came from there sorry

  • @salimarsmith
    @salimarsmith 7 лет назад +13

    27:21 i love my people!!! we will electric slide anywhere and everywhere - this is an awesome documentary :)

  • @matts1451
    @matts1451 7 лет назад +5

    What a beautiful connected people who love their roots

  • @phyllissmith4642
    @phyllissmith4642 5 лет назад +5

    Good documentary.I also am from Yemassee, meaning i am a high land geechie not far from the Islands.We have both native and gullah roots.I travel through Champagne all the time.

    • @ppowell3022
      @ppowell3022 5 лет назад +1

      Hi,
      When I were coming up, my mom would call my sister and I little geechee gals sometime when we would talk.
      Wanting to know about my heritage....my dad and mom passed away long ago.
      Thinking about what mom had called us I started looking online for answers.
      Not knowing about the Gullah/Geechee people how interesting.
      I think it's possible that this part of my ancestors Heritage. Plan to visit soon.
      PEP - Decatur,GA.

  • @CraftingWithAprilD
    @CraftingWithAprilD 5 лет назад +3

    So proud of my roots💕

  • @katriina817
    @katriina817 5 лет назад +4

    Enjoyed this video. My mama came from the Gullah Geechee culture. I love my South Carolina culture and family 😘💜😘💜😘. So glad my momma taught me her traditional food especially peas and rice 😘 Would love to meet and know more about my people. What a beautiful piece of history on video.

  • @sano1062
    @sano1062 5 лет назад +6

    You have to admire the Gulah Geekee people!

  • @makeoutwithchaos
    @makeoutwithchaos 6 лет назад +8

    I'm just sad you guys didn't make it here to Charleston. Really enjoyed this. Thank you for sharing this.

  • @letstalkwithdeedee7091
    @letstalkwithdeedee7091 9 лет назад +9

    Thank you for your video! I love Gullah culture!

  • @janncarden2873
    @janncarden2873 9 месяцев назад

    I absolutely loved taking the small ferry from Hilton Head out to the Gulla islands. I felt upon stepping onto Daufuskie island that my ancestors were opening their arms and saying “So long you haven’t been here. Welcome home.” Touching the shell infused walls of our ancestors’ houses I thought about what their lives must have been like. It was disappointing to hear that most of these island people had sold their property and now had nothing. Celebrities had moved onto the islands, resorts were being planned, and Gulla culture and ownership were being lost. Gulla festivals are nice but Gulla is as American as bagels and tacos, Italian, Irish, or Latino culture too and is actually generations older and should be as well known. We as Africans, with our knowledge and skills at growing rice in our native countries in Africa and then cotton here and of other talents we brought with us, absolutely were Black Gold in the making of the American economy. Our history must never be erased and our relationship to America’s wealth must be realized, respected and taught to every generation as an integral part of America’s history.

  • @StoneyLingoMedia
    @StoneyLingoMedia 8 лет назад +4

    Thank You Miss Collins for your Love of Our People! Watching this made me recall my Gramma! You know up until I was a young man I thought turnips in gramma greens was that thing off Gramma feets! Any ways I have and will continue to share these on all my social media!
    Wishing you and the Gullah peoples enough In 2015 and eternally!

  • @nessa1063
    @nessa1063 5 лет назад +5

    Thank you all so much for posting this wonderfulness! This documentary really touched my heart. It was beautiful. I am Gullah Geechee and proud to be. This is wonderful and so informative and I will be watching it again. Great footage.

    • @ActiveCentralizedEmpowerment
      @ActiveCentralizedEmpowerment  5 лет назад +1

      That is awesome! Thank you for subscribing and watching! Share it with Friends! And Thanks! Oh, you might want to check out my documentary on my channel called Journey to my Mothers Land episodes...start with Episode 1 and come with me on a Journey tying the Gullah and the West African. I think you will enjoy it! Blessings!

    • @cinder4832
      @cinder4832 5 лет назад +1

      never let a women be the first person to enter your home on New Years Day

  • @nicoletteadderley3791
    @nicoletteadderley3791 10 месяцев назад +1

    I'm from the Bahamas and I speak just like Gullah some of the words and food as well

  • @MarianAkiti
    @MarianAkiti 5 лет назад +3

    Tour guide Al Miller stated some beliefs that my grandmother had. I still follow some of these today. WOW!

  • @quagliumquagnarr3853
    @quagliumquagnarr3853 6 лет назад +5

    What a beautiful exploration of roots.

  • @SacredWomensWisdom
    @SacredWomensWisdom 6 лет назад +4

    I really enjoyed watching my people. I recently learned of my parents connection to the Gullah culture and I am learning all I can before I finally make the trip home! Absolutely beautiful!

  • @tenaguin1054
    @tenaguin1054 2 месяца назад

    Just spent a few days in Charleston and went on your if Boones Plantation. A Gullah descendent was on sight to give some history.
    It was so very interesting and honestly presented.
    First time hearing of this culture and find it interesting and have much respect for the people. Hard working and true survivorlist.

  • @lifewithlex4662
    @lifewithlex4662 2 года назад +1

    It’s 2021 and The most High has brought this to me I’ve been praying about where I come from because I have a son that I want to pass culture down to him and let me tell you how so much of this connects Thank you for this My God have favor over you and generation to come

    • @ActiveCentralizedEmpowerment
      @ActiveCentralizedEmpowerment  2 года назад +1

      I hope you get to research your DNA. Thanks for watching! My piece, Journey to My Mother's Land " is getting a lot of play!

    • @lifewithlex4662
      @lifewithlex4662 2 года назад

      @@ActiveCentralizedEmpowerment I have ☺️ I just don’t know how to find out if I am Gullah Geechee

    • @ActiveCentralizedEmpowerment
      @ActiveCentralizedEmpowerment  2 года назад

      @@lifewithlex4662 you can start with AfricanAncestry.com to get your dna tested. I am Mende which is connected to the Gullah. Its like putting a puzzle together. Also Ancestry.com will tell you whete your people may have lived. And how far back which may help to answer the Gullah question.

    • @lifewithlex4662
      @lifewithlex4662 2 года назад

      @@ActiveCentralizedEmpowerment I have I half west African my ancestors are Nigeria, West Bantu, Benin & Togo, Mali, and Ivory Cost Ghana

    • @lifewithlex4662
      @lifewithlex4662 2 года назад +1

      @@ActiveCentralizedEmpowerment my ancestors where scarred right on the edge of Africa it makes me wounded if the were the one running away from Egypt

  • @allisonhill2986
    @allisonhill2986 3 года назад +2

    My parents were from NC.Now I'm researching my possible Gullah roots!

  • @michaelj.carr-el1687
    @michaelj.carr-el1687 8 лет назад +7

    loved this

  • @Gullahbae-xm6ms
    @Gullahbae-xm6ms 5 месяцев назад

    Love my Gullah folks! Proud to be Gullah Geechee! 🖤💙💚💛

  • @judahlion2067
    @judahlion2067 4 года назад +2

    I stay in Atlanta but I traveled to Savannah and s.carolinas coast I feel and home and spiritual peace when I go there

  • @FreeIndeed222
    @FreeIndeed222 2 года назад +2

    This was so well put together! Beautiful scenery I enjoyed my roots. I always did research about Gullah/Geechee since my late teens, here I am now finding out my grandfather were born and raised in Charleston SC, ended up in Georgia, it’s beautiful to know we’re still honoring our roots and ancestors!

  • @gloriabazemore4796
    @gloriabazemore4796 3 года назад +3

    Your introduction was so well done. I stayed to watch the remaining of this video.🥰🥰🥰

  • @crystalgrose
    @crystalgrose 6 лет назад +3

    Hello Dr. Collins! As a graduate student, thank you so much for this wonderful and informative presentation. Excellent!

  • @demartorris
    @demartorris 7 лет назад +5

    Absolutely beautiful and so enriching!!! Thank you for this!

    • @demartorris
      @demartorris 7 лет назад

      I most certainly will do!!!

  • @williamsfamily3192
    @williamsfamily3192 10 месяцев назад

    I just found out my husband has Gullah blood and I’m extremely proud and interested in teaching our children about their heritage 🩷

  • @Smisstah1
    @Smisstah1 8 лет назад +6

    I really need to go visit my cousins

  • @DolceMexx
    @DolceMexx 7 лет назад +3

    Great. Learning a lot.
    The language of Suriname has a lot of simular words and phrases.

  • @scwiggie
    @scwiggie 4 года назад +1

    Yes, we are still here.

  • @CeeMaeRobeson
    @CeeMaeRobeson 5 лет назад +2

    This is the first time seeing this and these videos of the Gullah people. I am espeeially spirite by Queen Quet , makes me want to come South and make it a permanent home.. Many thanks for sharing these stories.

  • @territ.5357
    @territ.5357 5 лет назад +2

    I absolutely enjoyed watching and learning. My ancestors are from the Gullahs and last year my cousin and I vacationed in South Carolina to emerse ourselves in the Geechee culture. Loved it!! Thanky Thanky

    • @ActiveCentralizedEmpowerment
      @ActiveCentralizedEmpowerment  5 лет назад +1

      Hi! I'm glad you enjoyed it. Thank you for caring, sharing, and watching! Blessings

    • @territ.5357
      @territ.5357 5 лет назад

      @@ActiveCentralizedEmpowerment you're welcome! We need to see more from the afri can diaspora here in the U.S. like this. 💜

  • @TStretch36
    @TStretch36 4 года назад +1

    I stumbled across this video and as I watch it my heart fluttered. I am from Beaufort, SC. I was born there in 1973 and attended Penn Center for preschool. I was proud watching this video and glad to know that others are learning about the Gullah culture.

    • @ActiveCentralizedEmpowerment
      @ActiveCentralizedEmpowerment  4 года назад

      I am so glad to read that you enjoyed it!!! Thanks for watching!!

    • @ActiveCentralizedEmpowerment
      @ActiveCentralizedEmpowerment  4 года назад

      Something definitely to be proud of...smiling

    • @TStretch36
      @TStretch36 4 года назад

      @@ActiveCentralizedEmpowerment I will be sharing this video with my mother. She still lives in Beaufort. I live in GA for nearly 23 years but definitely visit Beaufort when I can. Seeing this video really made me miss home. Thank you!

    • @ActiveCentralizedEmpowerment
      @ActiveCentralizedEmpowerment  4 года назад

      Great! I hope she enjoys it! Here's something special...if you look at the same playlist, you'll notice individual episodes. At the end of each episode you will find contact information for key people ...good information if you ever want to visit. Maybe go on a tour with Al Miller, pick up a sweet grass basket from Jery Taylor or visit Aunt Pearlie Sue after you grab a bite at the Gullah Grub!!! Be well..

    • @TStretch36
      @TStretch36 4 года назад +2

      @@ActiveCentralizedEmpowerment Thanks! I've known Aunt Pearli Sue (Ms. Prather) since I was in junior high school. She and my mom are friends. Im familiar with most of the Beaufort people featured in the video. The Gullah fest was huge at one point. I even performed a couple times when I was in high school and my mom gave tours. Sorry for so many comments but I was just so excited watching it. It brought back so many memories for me: the Waterfront Park, Penn Center, Tabernacle Church, etc. When this pandemic is over and it's safe to be with others, I plan on visiting. Thank you again for the video and reminding me how blessed I still am to have been born in Beaufort. Take care and be safe as well.

  • @susettesoja1482
    @susettesoja1482 3 года назад +2

    Thank you, Dr. COLLINS. I never heard of Gullah. So your video was not only entertaining, but i learned something
    Thank you again.

  • @Reason_77
    @Reason_77 4 года назад +2

    That Gullah Language is call Creole or Broken / Pidgin English in West Africa.. The Creole commonly spoken in Sierra Leone has some Caribbean feel to it and Broken / Pidgin English is common with country such as Nigeria ,Ghana,Gambia ,Cameroon ... Also some slaves in the Caribbean retuned after abolition of slavery trade and settled in Freetown Sierra Leone .
    Some actually reunited with their family line ,like the Saro, or Creoles in Nigeria during the nineteenth century and early twentieth century, were freed slaves who migrated back to Nigeria in the beginning of the 1830s. They were known locally as Saro (elided form of Sierra Leone, from the Yoruba sàró), or Amaro, Nago : Yoruba slave returnees from Brazil and Cuba. One prominent individual of Saro descendant is Bishop Ajayi Crowther ,who translated the English King James Bible to Yoruba language .

    • @ActiveCentralizedEmpowerment
      @ActiveCentralizedEmpowerment  4 года назад

      Thank you for sharing this information and thank you for watching!

    • @Reason_77
      @Reason_77 4 года назад +1

      Active Centralized Empowerment ...You are most welcome..I appreciate your effort in telling our people their stories. Many of my Yoruba people were caught up in the transatlantic slave trade ,so i see the Gullahs in me and me in.

  • @bheadh
    @bheadh 7 лет назад +10

    'e done put 'em up 'ere like 'e sposda.

  • @sd247
    @sd247 5 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you Grandma and Daddy for my Gullah Geechee Heritage. GULLAH GEECHEE FUR OONUH OR GULLAH GEECHEE FOR YOU.❤😂🎉😅😊

  • @froggybug
    @froggybug 4 года назад +2

    Wow...Hardeeville. Looks a lot like it did when I was a little bitty girl. No Dollar store of course....veeeeeery quiet. If you drove too fast you’d miss the entire town. Awesome saaaauce! South Cakalaka!

  • @ms.pandatalktime
    @ms.pandatalktime 8 лет назад +4

    thanks for posting this week need to know some of our own beautiful culture

  • @ataurus62
    @ataurus62 6 лет назад +6

    The land is yours as long as you stay ahead of the rising property taxes. Watch dem lawmakers like the Hawk.