INDIGENOUS MAYAN PEOPLE in Copan Ruinas - Honduras | Vlog
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- Опубликовано: 9 окт 2018
- The Ch'orti' people are one of the indigenous Maya peoples, who primarily reside in communities and towns of Honduras, Guatemala, and El Salvador. Their indigenous language, also known as Ch'orti', is a survival of Classic Choltian, the language of the inscriptions in Copan. It is the first language of approximately 15,000 people, although the majority of present-day Ch'orti' speakers are bilingual in Spanish as well. [Source Wikipedia]
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Gracias por darle a conocer al mundo de nuestra cultura maya ruinas de copan honduras
I love Learning g more about my family’s home country
Thank you for sharing this part of Honduras. My family is from there.
I thought this was Mexico but whatevs. It does really look a lot alike. Reminds me of some American Indian cultures.
Same 🤍
Ignorance and uneducation with our lost love for mother nature remains rampant...how sad look what happened to the dodos keep it up dum dums your next
My People. I will make it back to the Motherland someday!!#indigeniouspride#westillhere
Excelente video pastor! Nuestro país tiene una cultura única... Gracias por mostrarla en este video.
I love the educational vibes with the the lil hip 2000s producing clips must be my age but I also like How you opened up good choices...mind the run on sentence but your Killin it homie my blessings to you sir
Ja ja jaaaa yo las comía cuando era niño les decimos suncuya
My people
Yeah and like most of the time the Amerindians are treated rotting wise by the Whites And Mestizos among other Non Amerindians
Just found out that I’m Aztec Mayan and Olmec. Really instead if how they live.
Sadly, I don't think Honduras has many indigenous cultural things left. It's all colonized traditions now.
Agree with you! My family has no knowledge of our indigenous ancestry and it’s so sad 😞
@@ignaciomondragon99 Same here. More important to start with yourself. Sure I am of Salvadoran heritage. In 1932 we had a massacre thousands of mostly Indigenous people in response to some of them organizing a revolution, which was in response of the fascist government taking more land and cutting their wages. The history hurt me when I learned it but now I embrace it. Our egos don't want that side of our cultural roots to die out, but it's part of nature. everything dies eventually. Sometimes I wish I knew Nahuatl too. Best thing to do is improve yourself first and hopefully we can preserve what we can. A fellow Salvadoran said a lot of Salvadorans want to be indigenous but also don't want to be discriminated from the stockholm syndrome of the scars left behind in the collective consciousness, the echoes of a violent massacre of 1932 and civil wars after that
@@ignaciomondragon99 You're a bit mixed up, Texicoatl was the chief, the actual name of the tribe was Texiguatecs, they waged war against the Cholotecs which eventually would be won by Texiguatecs. Later on the Nicaraos would also wage war against the Cholotecs in modern-day Managua and Masaya resulting in another Cholotec loss and final migration to Costa Rica, that's where the Cholotec finally prospered in fact there're still Cholotec villages and hotspots in the Costa Rican jungle.
@@teneni03 Right there with you!
This is so true I lived in San Pedro sula for six months and that's pretty much sodomah y Gomorrah and olancho for five months and that's the wild west tried to reconnect with my ancestors and yeah failed mission guess the low budget doesn't help LMAO what can I say I was desperate st least I tried