They are far from the last Cajuns. I am 25, I still hold fast to my Cajun heritage and I am proud to be Cajun. Am I still in Louisiana? No, but I do intend to return there once my abusive father is gone. I am a true Cajun and I'll never let go of that, just as my mother never let go of it. It hurts me to see my culture dieing so much but, ya know, so long as I draw breath at least a part of our grand culture will survive. It hurts me to think of a day when there are no more Cajuns.
I am here as a Cajun to appreciate this, and my heart gets all warm and fuzzy with this portrayal. Aside from the exile stuff, that really is basically the Cajun's boogie-man story, so to speak. One thing, though. We weren't called Arcadians, it was Acadians. No r. We called the area we settled (which was around Nova Scotia) L'Acadie. We called ourselves L'Acadien (or L'Acadienne), which would eventually get shortened to Cajun. The dien in Acadien, when pronounced quickly through our accent makes a djun sound, hence the Cajun. Also, for the nitpicky.. New Orleans was more of a French city. There was a colonial equivalent of high French society there. The country areas were settled by the Acadian exiles, hence why New Orleans isn't Cajun. From where I was (I lived around Lake Charles and later around Lafayette) we always referred to the New Orleans people as Creole, but that is also somewhat incorrect, really. You can use Creole and Cajun to describe either, for the most part. No one really gets to upset about either of those labels, though both do get used incorrectly from time to time. Either way, Cajuns (and Creoles, for that matter) can be a really inward looking group, but we are always welcoming of people who are interested in who we are and what we do. I have always referred to my friends as Cajun, even though some of them were really Americans. If you live among us and eat with us, it's only a short matter of time before we roll you into our family. Laissez le bon temps roulez, as we say.
Cajuns were the acadians deported by British and that go to Louisiana that in those times belong to the king of France because they did not recognise the King of England as their King. Creole is the name give to them of french that were born in the colonies (louisiana).
A lot of people do, especially the country people. I am glad to say that a lot of younger musicians are playing Cajun music, including nieces of mine, the Babineaux Sisters. We are very proud of these young girls. Change is inevitable but I think Cajun music will be around for some time to come in this area.
Thanks for the compliment RC,That could happen for you just come on down & marry a Cajun women,I was a tour guide for many years & have met & interacted with many Australians I would have to say some of the coolest visitors we've ever had here.
R.C Jones Thank you so much for such a sweet compliment to my people. I work and live in Slidell now, but often visit my bayou home where the older generations still live. Each area has different dialects and accents differ a little from different also. But, we all have a basis influence from our French language that has created our accents in our English speech.
Thank you so much for posting this. By posting this it means a lot to me. Unfortunately our culture is rapidly dying because schools refuse to teach teach French and Cajun due to political nonsense. I am 18 and I wish to see my culture saved.
Attos Social media baby! Get in contact with all those Cajuns of like minds and form communities and events to keep your culture alive. Someone has to take the step, might as well be you!
I am taking French 101 at a college and was inquiring how often and how much French was spoken in their daily life. This video is a great introduction to the Cajun culture! I love and respect the culture. However, the only time the video showed French being spoken was less than 10 seconds. I suspect that the language is more commonly practiced than that based on what I have seen in other documentary/personal-interviewing videos on RUclips. I hope the Cajun culture and the knowledge of their history will not be forgotten and pass down to the next generations. Cheers!
"The French Quarter is for tourists, if you want to see the real thing you must head...to Cajun Country." The French Quarter is indeed for tourists nowadays, but it has never purported to be Cajun. The Cajuns have always been poor (French Canadian immigrants), the French Quarter was in a much wealthier old neighborhood.
Using the term 'French Canadian" to describe the ancestors of the Cajuns is incorrect. In the mid-eighteenth century a reference to 'Canada' meant the area we generally consider Quebec today. In other words, Acadia was not part of Canada and therefore Acadians of the eighteenth-century cannot be considered French Canadian.
Tyler Pape The USA should be like Switzerland: a multilingual confederation. In Switzerland, cantons have much more powers than the American states. they have their own laws and their own languages. I wish South Louisiana were officially French-speaking.
I first heard of Cajun culture funny enough in 1994's X-Men the Animated Series I loved the Gambit character and thought it was awesome he was an American with a thick accent :D
Great video.. It is good to see someone help spell out that New Orleans is not "real Cajun" country. But, on the other hand, this video gives the impression "real Cajun" country is only accessible by boat thru the swamp. This of course is not true.
No, he's wearing a shirt with the emblem of a local business. It's called Acadian Ambulance Service. It's the largest ambulance service in south Louisiana.
America is much richer for it, there are so many cultures there that should be celebrated. You children are richer for speaking two languages, even if it doesn't put money in the bank. Everyone should be in touch with their origins. Sadly I'm too old and disabled to ever visit such a wonderfull place. Be proud.
I was born in Louisiana, but I'm only half cajun (my mum is English) We left when I was about 2 or 3 to live in England, but I'm still cajun at heart xD Maybe I can try and get the queen to apologise xD I also may bring this up in my religious studies class (we're learning about the holocaust, but also other discriminations and genocide) I'm proud to be cajun, and British, although I wish my family would have decided to stay in Louisiana xD
JUST A QUESTION : ARE THE CAJUN CAME FROM THE FRENCH ACCADIANS OR ARE THEY MIXT WITH OTHER POPULATIONS OF USA ... because their families names is french ... and they are not CREOLE, french native of North America (Louisiane) ...
I am aware of the Galiza region being autonomous of Spain but I am unfamiliar with the series you are asking about. All I can say is Dixon is not a "Cajun" name, per se. We are of French ancestry, although there is a lot of Spanish blood mixed in here along with American Indian, German, Irish, a little Scottish. I'll even hazard that we'll admit to a little English blood here and there....
yall listen to Mark at 13:00, for non -louisianians, listen to the way he speaks, listen to how much French emphasis he has in his accent.
4 года назад
@ Katelyn Sunshine - I’m responding 7 years after your post and have to say, listen to all of them! How about the two old sisters? Don’t they sound like your great aunts or something? This sounds like a family reunion or a wedding when family gets together. Do you know that some people think that YOU are fabricating your accent on your videos? You sound like all my friends from high school in Lafayette. I should have known it would be you to analyze the accent so specifically.
I am happy to be Cajun but I think it is time to let go of the derangement thing, bud, and enjoy everything we have today and the people we have become in spite of all our hardships. I agree with Savoy, the music is the glue.
The Spanish were only in control for forty years, but it was the Spanish governer, Galvez who allowed the Cajun exiles to settle in LA. Mostly because Spain wanted people blocking the American colonists from their mines in Mexico. Also bc all 3 cultures (Spanish, French, and Cajun) were catholic. I think that was also a factor in addition to blocking American expansion into Mexico.
My father was born Cajun in '44 and Americanized through the public school system in Louisiana, where it was forbidden to speak French on school grounds even though French was the primary language spoken at home for him ans well as his classmates in the small Cajun town town of Gueydon LA. Now Louisiana has French immersion programs in the Elementary schools but i fear it is too little too late...in 20 years no one here will really know what it means to be Cajun....
Anyone that can walk past the saxophone player and NOT LOOK at him or even acknowledge him says sooooooooo much about ppl. in America today! Yikes! Peace & Love to Louisiana
@SuperSayjinElite "Bad accent"? What's wrong with our accent? Our people's language over some 300 years has been influenced by English, West African, Spanish, and Native American languages such as Chitimacha and Coushatta. There are other influences as well. These are just a few. Please don't call it a "bad accent".
@nInAg1 i am from galiza in europe and i saw the serial '' the walking dead'' so i like the character of´´ Daryl Dixon ´´ can you tell if is he a cajun please? because somedy told me he is
@SuperSayjinElite I beg to differ with you. Our Cajun WW2 veterans who went to France were initially looked down upon by those in the Army because of their "bad" accents. It turns out that these Cajuns, speaking their native dialect of Cajun French, were indeed understood by the French people and provided an invaluable service as unofficial interpreters for their units. Soon enough, the Army realized their potential. It's not standard French, but to say it's a "bad" accent is derogatory.
Thanks so much for this video. So many people think New Orleans is the place to go in La. but Acadiana is really where all the beautiful culture and people are.
Hold up... The only ethnic cleansing in North America? What about slavery and forced relocation of Native Americans. I think Cajun history is interesting, but I don't think that man is very aware of American history. That my 2 cents. Peace
im from Eunice,La and why do people keep worrying bout if we cajun or creole or coonass for the matter....we all the same down here...when we do somehting stupid we coonass
The Cajuns already received an apology from the British Crown, shortly after this video aired (in 2003). The guy explains it in this video which is in French : watch?v=n2ot-CyD7Bk
Cajun is the Acadian parishes ONLY, pointe Coupee, lafayette, vermillion, west baton, ville platte, opelousas, lake charles, houma, calcasieu abbeville, lafourche, iberia, st. martin, thibodaux, st landry, assumption, franklin. terrebonne, acadia, evangeline. It is called CAJUN BROKEN ENGLISH. Cajuns are all colors (ethnicity).
atikinm gnuoy Cajun is the people and their culture, language and heritage. There are Cajuns that live in other parishes besides than the ones you listed and are completely Cajun. There are Cajuns that settled outside of Acadiana too, especially in the parishes surrounding New Orleans such as Jefferson, Plaquemines, St. Bernard and St. Charles parishes. And Cajuns are not all colors, they are only whites. Acadians that arrived in Louisiana were whites. Some mixed people could be mixed with Cajun ancestry, but as a people, they are white, not all colors. Not trying to be mean, just getting the truth out there. I'm from Louisiana.
You know nothing about our culture. 99% of Cajun lives in the southern half of Louisiana. They mixed in with the Creole and that's how they became different races
So the British pretty much did the same thing to black folks in expulsions in the US and sundown towns, that Americans did in the south and northern cities
@fusilier45 Nice language. However, I think it accurately reflects what Cajuns can expect from the British "crown". Since no remuneration is being requested, it would be a purely symbolic gesture and a conciliatory action, at least for those who feel strongly about this. But who are we kidding here, they won't waste their breath or the paper to write anything on. Stating all that, I think we have done very well for ourselves, thank you very much.
Queen Liz has been writing apology letters probably for the 90 years she was on the planet.....Well not really...It's as if they did nothing wrong...or it's someone elses fault....The Great British copout...I'm Scottish, we're still waiting...
Keep the cajun culture alive? Why did you sell your recipes to the Asian people they are opening restaurants all over America saying Cajun Louisiana food you think you’re going in side of a real authentication restaurant and it’s Asian people who only hire their own they do not hire anybody else
This is why New Yorkers live in New York the north state, that's not isn't country like them Southern states like Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Florida, Atlanta, South Carolina, North Carolina, and Virginia, and West Virginia. This is why New Yorkers always thinks about New Orleans city country or really country people.
If English language is the language of the GODS, you, that are norway, you prefered speack the language of gods that your own language : norway.What else, 40% of the english came from the french : the normands use the french language when they invaded England ; sorry but this is the true!
They are far from the last Cajuns. I am 25, I still hold fast to my Cajun heritage and I am proud to be Cajun. Am I still in Louisiana? No, but I do intend to return there once my abusive father is gone. I am a true Cajun and I'll never let go of that, just as my mother never let go of it. It hurts me to see my culture dieing so much but, ya know, so long as I draw breath at least a part of our grand culture will survive. It hurts me to think of a day when there are no more Cajuns.
I am here as a Cajun to appreciate this, and my heart gets all warm and fuzzy with this portrayal. Aside from the exile stuff, that really is basically the Cajun's boogie-man story, so to speak.
One thing, though. We weren't called Arcadians, it was Acadians. No r. We called the area we settled (which was around Nova Scotia) L'Acadie. We called ourselves L'Acadien (or L'Acadienne), which would eventually get shortened to Cajun. The dien in Acadien, when pronounced quickly through our accent makes a djun sound, hence the Cajun.
Also, for the nitpicky.. New Orleans was more of a French city. There was a colonial equivalent of high French society there. The country areas were settled by the Acadian exiles, hence why New Orleans isn't Cajun. From where I was (I lived around Lake Charles and later around Lafayette) we always referred to the New Orleans people as Creole, but that is also somewhat incorrect, really. You can use Creole and Cajun to describe either, for the most part. No one really gets to upset about either of those labels, though both do get used incorrectly from time to time.
Either way, Cajuns (and Creoles, for that matter) can be a really inward looking group, but we are always welcoming of people who are interested in who we are and what we do. I have always referred to my friends as Cajun, even though some of them were really Americans. If you live among us and eat with us, it's only a short matter of time before we roll you into our family.
Laissez le bon temps roulez, as we say.
Cajuns = Happy they came to the USA, beautiful people and music, Glad they are Americans..from California
We didn't come to the USA, the USA came to us.
New Orleans and the French Quarter were founded, built, and settled by the FRENCH. That's why it is called the FRENCH Quarter.
Founded by the Spanish.
Cajuns were the acadians deported by British and that go to Louisiana that in those times belong to the king of France because they did not recognise the King of England as their King.
Creole is the name give to them of french that were born in the colonies (louisiana).
A lot of people do, especially the country people. I am glad to say that a lot of younger musicians are playing Cajun music, including nieces of mine, the Babineaux Sisters. We are very proud of these young girls. Change is inevitable but I think Cajun music will be around for some time to come in this area.
If I wasn't Australian, I'd love to be Cajun. Just to speak the most amazing accent I've ever heard! And to live in that beautiful country side!
Thanks for the compliment RC,That could happen for you just come on down & marry a Cajun women,I was a tour guide for many years & have met & interacted with many Australians I would have to say some of the coolest visitors we've ever had here.
R.C Jones Thank you so much for such a sweet compliment to my people. I work and live in Slidell now, but often visit my bayou home where the older generations still live.
Each area has different dialects and accents differ a little from different also. But, we all have a basis influence from our French language that has created our accents in our English speech.
Marry you a Cajun lady and you'll have the best love of your life but don't cross them or you'll lose your life lol
Thank you thats a compliment 😊
As the child of French parents born in South Africa I have been intrigued by these people for years.
Thank you so much for posting this. By posting this it means a lot to me. Unfortunately our culture is rapidly dying because schools refuse to teach teach French and Cajun due to political nonsense. I am 18 and I wish to see my culture saved.
Attos Social media baby! Get in contact with all those Cajuns of like minds and form communities and events to keep your culture alive. Someone has to take the step, might as well be you!
Lâche pas la patate Attos !
That’s incredibly sad. I think Cajun is the coolest culture in the US
You don't need no GD schools. It's up to you
Good video. I have been teaching my daughter her heritage and she liked this.
I call my 3-5 cousins CLOSE IMMEDIATE FAMILY!! I literally grew up with them so I call them my close family!
I love the cajun culture and would love to live like that!!
I am taking French 101 at a college and was inquiring how often and how much French was spoken in their daily life. This video is a great introduction to the Cajun culture! I love and respect the culture. However, the only time the video showed French being spoken was less than 10 seconds. I suspect that the language is more commonly practiced than that based on what I have seen in other documentary/personal-interviewing videos on RUclips. I hope the Cajun culture and the knowledge of their history will not be forgotten and pass down to the next generations.
Cheers!
"The French Quarter is for tourists, if you want to see the real thing you must head...to Cajun Country." The French Quarter is indeed for tourists nowadays, but it has never purported to be Cajun. The Cajuns have always been poor (French Canadian immigrants), the French Quarter was in a much wealthier old neighborhood.
Using the term 'French Canadian" to describe the ancestors of the Cajuns is incorrect. In the mid-eighteenth century a reference to 'Canada' meant the area we generally consider Quebec today. In other words, Acadia was not part of Canada and therefore Acadians of the eighteenth-century cannot be considered French Canadian.
you said it was "briefly French"
it was actually briefly Spanish and French for longer
LOL! You gotta love how they passed the buck and called it a Canadian problem. :-\
ksb78 Yeah I know, they should contact the leader of Canada... THE FREAKIN' QUEEN OF ENGLAND!!! HAHAHAhahahaaha, and I'm Canadian by the way.
Great documentary. Thank you.
New Orleans isn't Cajun.
It used to be Créole, but the Anglo Americans destroyed everything... as usual.
+Maxime Schmitt Yeah the minor cultures all over the states are being torn apart by the Anglo American image.
Tyler Pape
The USA should be like Switzerland: a multilingual confederation. In Switzerland, cantons have much more powers than the American states. they have their own laws and their own languages. I wish South Louisiana were officially French-speaking.
Maxime Schmitt Yeah, let the people speak how they please and govern themselves, I agree completely.
Maxime Schmitt so do I
Moving here soon! Whooo hooo!
Its great that someone took out the time to show case the cajuns but yet again the creoles are forgotten
Sha mon Dieu, I’m rolling at how he said Champagne like the drink 😂
I first heard of Cajun culture funny enough in 1994's X-Men the Animated Series I loved the Gambit character and thought it was awesome he was an American with a thick accent :D
N'oubliez jamais Évangéline.....
Thanks for uploading
There alot of "Thibodeaux" here in Acadie (N-B Canada).
Great video.. It is good to see someone help spell out that New Orleans is not "real Cajun" country. But, on the other hand, this video gives the impression "real Cajun" country is only accessible by boat thru the swamp. This of course is not true.
Very informative!! Great job.
Beautiful ... Video
No, he's wearing a shirt with the emblem of a local business. It's called Acadian Ambulance Service. It's the largest ambulance service in south Louisiana.
America is much richer for it, there are so many cultures there that should be celebrated. You children are richer for speaking two languages, even if it doesn't put money in the bank. Everyone should be in touch with their origins. Sadly I'm too old and disabled to ever visit such a wonderfull place. Be proud.
French Huguenots suffered horribly. Unfortunately no one acknowledges this historical truth.
I was born in Louisiana, but I'm only half cajun (my mum is English)
We left when I was about 2 or 3 to live in England, but I'm still cajun at heart xD
Maybe I can try and get the queen to apologise xD
I also may bring this up in my religious studies class (we're learning about the holocaust, but also other discriminations and genocide)
I'm proud to be cajun, and British, although I wish my family would have decided to stay in Louisiana xD
JUST A QUESTION : ARE THE CAJUN CAME FROM THE FRENCH ACCADIANS OR ARE THEY MIXT WITH OTHER POPULATIONS OF USA ... because their families names is french ... and they are not CREOLE, french native of North America (Louisiane) ...
I am aware of the Galiza region being autonomous of Spain but I am unfamiliar with the series you are asking about. All I can say is Dixon is not a "Cajun" name, per se. We are of French ancestry, although there is a lot of Spanish blood mixed in here along with American Indian, German, Irish, a little Scottish. I'll even hazard that we'll admit to a little English blood here and there....
new orleans and louisiana is the shit!so much coulture and architecture. very nice place
Long live the cajun people !!!
yall listen to Mark at 13:00, for non -louisianians, listen to the way he speaks, listen to how much French emphasis he has in his accent.
@ Katelyn Sunshine - I’m responding 7 years after your post and have to say, listen to all of them! How about the two old sisters? Don’t they sound like your great aunts or something? This sounds like a family reunion or a wedding when family gets together. Do you know that some people think that YOU are fabricating your accent on your videos? You sound like all my friends from high school in Lafayette. I should have known it would be you to analyze the accent so specifically.
I am happy to be Cajun but I think it is time to let go of the derangement thing, bud, and enjoy everything we have today and the people we have become in spite of all our hardships. I agree with Savoy, the music is the glue.
The Spanish were only in control for forty years, but it was the Spanish governer, Galvez who allowed the Cajun exiles to settle in LA. Mostly because Spain wanted people blocking the American colonists from their mines in Mexico. Also bc all 3 cultures (Spanish, French, and Cajun) were catholic. I think that was also a factor in addition to blocking American expansion into Mexico.
My father was born Cajun in '44 and Americanized through the public school system in Louisiana, where it was forbidden to speak French on school grounds even though French was the primary language spoken at home for him ans well as his classmates in the small Cajun town town of Gueydon LA. Now Louisiana has French immersion programs in the Elementary schools but i fear it is too little too late...in 20 years no one here will really know what it means to be Cajun....
Anyone that can walk past the saxophone player and NOT LOOK at him or even acknowledge him says sooooooooo much about ppl. in America today! Yikes! Peace & Love to Louisiana
"The run sir"
God bless Wolfe.
Wipping the french since 1704
A nation of collaborators.
Blenheim, Quebec. Trafalgar. Waterloo. - God save the Queen.
@SuperSayjinElite "Bad accent"? What's wrong with our accent? Our people's language over some 300 years has been influenced by English, West African, Spanish, and Native American languages such as Chitimacha and Coushatta. There are other influences as well. These are just a few. Please don't call it a "bad accent".
My country now and forever!
Et tu as bien raison....
Did the narrator say the Cajuns come from the "Arcadians" or is it just his accent making Acadian sound like Arcadian?
@nInAg1 i am from galiza in europe and i saw the serial '' the walking dead'' so i like the character of´´ Daryl Dixon ´´ can you tell if is he a cajun please? because somedy told me he is
@SuperSayjinElite I beg to differ with you. Our Cajun WW2 veterans who went to France were initially looked down upon by those in the Army because of their "bad" accents. It turns out that these Cajuns, speaking their native dialect of Cajun French, were indeed understood by the French people and provided an invaluable service as unofficial interpreters for their units. Soon enough, the Army realized their potential. It's not standard French, but to say it's a "bad" accent is derogatory.
New Orleans is not Cajun!
This is why im glad to be a Cajun born in New Iberia,Lousiana raised in New Orleans I guess it is true born a cajun always a cajun.
Very interesting.
Champagne is not pronounced sham-pane, it is actually pronounced shompon around here
We have a champagne store here in Ville Platte. Always get a chuckle from hearing people try to pronounce it.
09fredo I live in Leonville, we have the same here
nooooo :( lol the accent is awesome it sounds so cool
Thanks so much for this video. So many people think New Orleans is the place to go in La. but Acadiana is really where all the beautiful culture and people are.
I love them
Hold up... The only ethnic cleansing in North America? What about slavery and forced relocation of Native Americans. I think Cajun history is interesting, but I don't think that man is very aware of American history. That my 2 cents.
Peace
Haz R he said the only ethnic cleansing of "Europeans"
Oh... Thank you...
do you guys still speak with that lovely accent?
Yes we do
im from Eunice,La and why do people keep worrying bout if we cajun or creole or coonass for the matter....we all the same down here...when we do somehting stupid we coonass
The Cajuns already received an apology from the British Crown, shortly after this video aired (in 2003).
The guy explains it in this video which is in French : watch?v=n2ot-CyD7Bk
if i ever have a kid, boy or girl, i'm naming him Brian Champagne
Cajun is the Acadian parishes ONLY, pointe Coupee, lafayette, vermillion, west baton, ville platte, opelousas, lake charles, houma, calcasieu abbeville, lafourche, iberia, st. martin, thibodaux, st landry, assumption, franklin. terrebonne, acadia, evangeline. It is called CAJUN BROKEN ENGLISH. Cajuns are all colors (ethnicity).
atikinm gnuoy Cajun is the people and their culture, language and heritage. There are Cajuns that live in other parishes besides than the ones you listed and are completely Cajun. There are Cajuns that settled outside of Acadiana too, especially in the parishes surrounding New Orleans such as Jefferson, Plaquemines, St. Bernard and St. Charles parishes. And Cajuns are not all colors, they are only whites. Acadians that arrived in Louisiana were whites. Some mixed people could be mixed with Cajun ancestry, but as a people, they are white, not all colors. Not trying to be mean, just getting the truth out there. I'm from Louisiana.
You know nothing about our culture. 99% of Cajun lives in the southern half of Louisiana. They mixed in with the Creole and that's how they became different races
Schools should be bilingual in the Acadian parishes.
+El Matador , Your telling the truth!
+beardedme , What's a mic Mac?
The last name is actually pronounced "Shompine" It's spelled Champagne, but it's not pronounced that way.
PLEASE DO YOUR RESEARCH
A Saturday morning jam session lmao 985 chauvin Louisiana the real cajuns
WHAT'S IN DAT POT?
12:38 Checking out the merchandise!
where's the accent???? : (
cajuns hav such a cool accent!!! I always think of gambit in xmen lol
New Orleans isn’t Cajun country!
Do whatever it takes to keep your culture.
forgot to tell yall im eating seafood gumbo and rice crispies for breakfast rice ill use for lunch
So the British pretty much did the same thing to black folks in expulsions in the US and sundown towns, that Americans did in the south and northern cities
@fusilier45 Nice language. However, I think it accurately reflects what Cajuns can expect from the British "crown". Since no remuneration is being requested, it would be a purely symbolic gesture and a conciliatory action, at least for those who feel strongly about this. But who are we kidding here, they won't waste their breath or the paper to write anything on. Stating all that, I think we have done very well for ourselves, thank you very much.
i want to go their and eat cajun food ..and find a cajun wife X)
@weirdemails he meant european cleansing...
I love boudin ❤
N'oubliez jamais votre culture Française !
michel Forêt une langue n’est pas une culture. En France il n’y a plus vraiment de culture...
Queen Liz has been writing apology letters probably for the 90 years she was on the planet.....Well not really...It's as if they did nothing wrong...or it's someone elses fault....The Great British copout...I'm Scottish, we're still waiting...
your culture sounds cool, which is more then i can say for that "music" thats cajun music ? damn... an acquired taste i guess..
Gambit the greatest cajun ambassador.....Lol
Americains, oui
Mais la faute à qui donc ?
La faute à Napoléon.
Culture et histoire fascinante !
The whole "Cajun" accent is just stereotype. We laugh at people with it xd Its just some humor. Sorry.
New Orleans is not cajun, not even close!
@lukebilleaudeaux08 I resemble that remark
Keep the cajun culture alive? Why did you sell your recipes to the Asian people they are opening restaurants all over America saying Cajun Louisiana food you think you’re going in side of a real authentication restaurant and it’s Asian people who only hire their own they do not hire anybody else
Is the man in 5:30 wearing a shirt with the Philippine Flag? hehehe
It’s the Acadian flag I believe
@weirdemails Ethnic cleansing of EUROPEANS in N. America i believe he said...
Who Dat?!
This is why New Yorkers live in New York the north state, that's not isn't country like them Southern states like Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Florida, Atlanta, South Carolina, North Carolina, and Virginia, and West Virginia. This is why New Yorkers always thinks about New Orleans city country or really country people.
Don't matter how they think about their accents they are speaking in. But I already know that they laughed about country people talked country accent.
@@ms.donnicabab651
Girl every state has country/rural areas
Nobody knows about Italian Cajuns!!!
Ive heard of them.
ma sha we white
negative. Google "Acadiana Flag"
pronounced Shampine
If English language is the language of the GODS, you, that are norway, you prefered speack the language of gods that your own language : norway.What else, 40% of the english came from the french : the normands use the french language when they invaded England ; sorry but this is the true!
They coulda at least told the narrator how to pronounce shit
it looks like Philippine flag lol..
It’s the Acadian flag I believe