So glad to see the guys are being respectful of the camera and trying their best to deal with the Gambia 🇬🇲 👍🏾 but they do know they have a place of peace.
The downfall of Africa is opportunities for the youth. However, these young men must start brainstorming now to find ways to make legitimate money. The youth don't like agriculture but it is a money maker!
We're ready to leave the Americas and start a new life in Africa. Our children are grown now and looking to expand their horizon also. Great content as always. Peace.
Thank you for showing the world their experience and answering my question. I appreciate it. I will not lie; it broke my heart that they felt teased for being different. I am glad they found comfort in each other.
Great video. It’s so refreshing to hear the youths perspective. What they seem to feel is missing are opportunities for them to grow economically, which is exactly how a lot of Gambian youths think. It is also sad that they find it hard to fit in with Gambian boys, but they will always be seen as more privileged and if they don’t know any of the languages it will continue to be hard.
I can see a bright future for all the young MAN here InshaAllah💙. You’re doing an amazing job sister praying for your success in this world and the next and also all the other families. They will truly appreciate all the sacrifices you’ve all made for them as parents. Stay strong and creative as you go along.👍🏾
Like these kids, it’s how most of us Gambian youth think. We love our country but we wanna leave so bad because of economic hardship. You live comfortably here if you are well off. If wasn’t broke, I’ll never leave Gambia for another country.😅
They did great, hard to get kids to open up at all these days. my biggest hope for them is that they find determination and purpose wherever they are. Too many black boys falling to the wayside due to apathy and lack of aspiration.
Buys thrive way more than girls as an African diasporan when our mums took us back first time the boys thrived in a way we just didn’t.Young men are drawn to the freedom and sense of identity and simple expectations and clear paths for them.The thing I believe makes or breaks it though I think is having friends and maybe even family or community there to take you under their wings and provide routines.My brothers would spend summers there and they’d have breakfast,get picked up by their male cousins go check out one of their businesses or go on a road trip come back have lunch,visit a relative,retire for naps and then get picked up again for some street food or tea outside in the evening.They did this like 6/7 days of the week and loved it.
Aaaw they are young and right now have a very different view of the continent but let me tell you something, at least 3 of them will be back on the continent. It might not seem like much to them right now but trust me once they experience the cycle in the US as adults it might be a different story . All the best to them as they continue to self discover.
I agree! It's like they know ultimately it's best for them, but they still need to have fun😂 and make a little money (get their first jobs etc) in the west. The experience they have of seeing a different world will forever impact their outlook on life.
@@summersinafrica my eldest did exactly that after graduating high school on the continent she came and did her under grad and started working right away. She’s always traveling back home for vacation and tells me eventually she will make her way there permanently. She loves and appreciates life on the continent.
Diasporans that were raised in The West sometimes we are in limbo. In the country we were born & raised we are seen as our foreparent's nationality but in our homeland we are foreigners. One good thing about being raised abroad is there's a niche in the market for things we take for granted in The West. The West can be over saturated but in the diaspora you'll be unique
These guys have seen me at my worst haha!They get yelled at right along with my own son🤦🏾♀️. Alhamdulilah rabil alameen I only have 1 teen son lol! And Inshallah it will be 6 years before my other sons reach 13 and 14🤲🏾😂
😢😢😢😢😢😢😢 I risk my life to reach Europe but trust me one day I'll settle down InsAllah. Poverty is crime since year 2000 starts The Gambia lacks understanding due to abject poverty but with the rightful leader we shall overcome poverty n ignorance 😊
There are many problems in gambia: people in gambia are still living according old dated tradition, religion and to say it in one word: old dated culture. The upgraden their mobile Phone, but not their mind. Looking for intellect in gambia, is trying to find a needle in a haystack. Last but not least: people in gambia are putting everthing in allahs hand!
@@Queenmomefua Well try to find your original purpose you'll realise Allah is the true purpose of Creations. Well you might not believe in what we believe but we're guided by the most high Allah despite the poverty and ignorance 🤷♂️ is all test from Allah. For the real life is just after we die. 🔎 your purpose before death comes
@@bambabambo-SeneGambia while you are waiting for the life after death, iam in life now and leaving my real life. Do your thing and believe in what you want, but dont try to convince me about islam.
@@Queenmomefua Your forefathers believe in submission in 1 God before the coloniser colonised. So do your research. Just because Christianity was corrupt doesn't mean religion is not true. I might sound harsh on my writing's. But I swear I care about this message even for my enemy. For am notice lying, The Gambia is blessed because of the proclamations we make everyday and night That "There's Only One God Worthy Of Worship that's our only strength 💪. God made everything, so He deserved Our life. True Purpose
Nice video!! I wish one day to move to Gambia!!I'm from Burundi I need some east african immigrant(Burundian,Tanzanian or Rwandese who live there so that he gives me more information about Gambia
I see that many black diaspora people in Gambia just keep to themselves. I’m surprise coz it’s so easy to make friends in Gambia. They should start interacting with people of their age, either going to play sports or just talking to people. It will be much better for them
It's not easy for kids from abroad to mix with the locals of the same age. My son is 18 and has been in Ghana for 14 yrs and he used to play football and mix with the local kids when he was younger. They were always asking him to ask me, his mother, for money. When they asked to come to the house, he was beginning to feel they were not coming to see him , but to play on his play station or watch a film. He now spends his time trying to avoid them.
This is 100% the reason. The boys I interviewed told me this, but I just didn't share that part for several reasons...It must be experienced to understand. Thank you.
@summersinafrica Africans love to bond over movies or games. As a youth that was how I bonded with my friends. It doesn't mean we were using one another. Also learning the language will help them fit more.
@mola3845 you know when somebody wants to know you because of the things you have, as apposed to wanting to bond with you, especially when the begging for money is a factor whenever the so called " bonding" is taking place. You've seemed to ignore the part where I mentioned they are always asking for money.
@mola3845 My friends daughter who is now back in the uk had friends who were local and from her school. She stopped wanting to go out with them because anytime they would go out to eat, her friends would sit down and wait for her to pay.
Every kid in here is in a situation or their parents forced them to come over to Africa.The Somali kids in my country are the same and I was like these kids a couple years ago thank God I faced my obstacles and went back
The Gambia was cool for me I’ve been about 4 times,but I couldn’t really see myself staying there. I had family living there,but they moved out of The Gambia to another country. Now this country that they moved to I can see myself living there….
As salaamu alaykum sis thanks for another very interesting video. I have a question. What are the African boys their age doing, besides I guess going to school?
I understand exactly what they are saying, it not easy for them to just stay in the Gambia without something going on for them like job or business etc, that’s why they said they are going back for some fewer years make some money invest it in the Gambia then after they will come and settle down for good, the economical structure is poor over there compared to the US, UK or the EU, so that is the only reason they are going back to make some money cause they are still young guys, hope y’all understand this explanation.
Gambians are born and raised in an ethnic, religious and social harmonious society and have both good and bad people. Follow Allah’s path and you’ll be guided ! No pain no gain .
Agree 100%. Stayed in Nigeria and felt like that . Although you Black and from diaspora they don’t look at you as the same . But keep you around to get what they can get . US/UK is more authentic/genuine.
More often than not most Gambian youngsters want to befriend them unfortunately here there is more attention on the less prevalent occurrences of being seen different as you feel different. It is nothing compared to the black on African snobbery in the west, only getting a bit better recently.
I think they in age of making money and it could be hard to get Capital to do business in Gambia. They can make money in U.S and come back and be their own boss
Someone says that success is who you are, therefore if you go anywhere in this world, what you do tells everything...who are as black in America? and who are you as an African in Africa?
Hello, I love your videos, I am half Gambian and my dream would be to live in Gambia, I have two children, one a teenager and the other still a junior, I have a question, what kind of schools to attend? Education is very important to me and I would like to give them the opportunity if they want to go back to Europe or America in the future that their studies would be compatible.
Lifestyle and work issues is the only problem with Africa I grew up in USA have my own business if I go back it’s gonna be tough for me it’s also depends what part of Africa you from where I’m from I have no chance.
The one thing i am surprised you did not ask them is how they think their same peers from other races cope, namely ,chinese lebanese and indian who most probably come from more wealthier parents who have businesses there, we as black people must face the reality that the intelligence and social standing of our children will always be based on how well we do as parents?😊and the best experiances both economically and interlectually that we give our kids .
I would like to see a group of inner city black kids from the hoods of Chicago, Detroit, New Orleans, etc... to go to Africa for a month, and see how they would like it.
I dont know about Gambia specifically but I can speak for other west African countries and its not really a safe haven. It's very easy to get caught up in the wrong crowd and the wrong situations in Africa as well.
As a Gambia and Senegalese, I get what they are saying. They are young and there are not many jobs in Gambia especially for young people. However if you have a job or a regular stream of income, the standard of living is way better in Gambia. It would be interesting to hear the views of older expats from the diaspora, especially if they have got something. Since Gambia does not have social welfare, you have to work or live off daddy's allowance in order to get buy. No money, no food, unless relatives give you something. The same for many Gambians living in Gambia. The same is also true for most countries around the world. You need money to get by.
Those young men look like they're just waiting to turn 18 so they can go back to the U.S. It's great they have each other. And it's interesting how the Gambian young man who lived in the U.S. 16 years ended up relating more to the Diaspora guys than to Gambians. For those of us from the African/Black Diaspora, it's not a question of either/or, but both. If you have a US, UK, CA passport etc, you should use it for education, business, medical care, investments, etc. We shouldn't try to pigeonhole Diasporans to one place because we can be found across the African continent, in Europe, and across the Americas. As Nkrumah said, "I am not African because I was born in Africa, but because Africa was born in me. Make Africa central, but if you have that pa$$port, use it to your advantage. And these young men know that.
They are still young. Let them stay there and school for a while, by the time they go to the west when they are done with university education, they'd miss Gambia
The youth don't lie! The Gambia has natural beauty and a slower pace of life, but you need a way to make US/European money and/ or have a thriving business. We really need to move as a group like all the nations because not being able to make deep relationships with the locals is a real thing as well. #wethelostsheep
This is the problem with youth who are not integrated into Gambian culture as well as being hostage to some fabled black culture. These kids are busily wasting their time & I gurantee you they will be enticed to the criminal elements of the Gambia. To make it Gambia, yes you do require Money but you also require parternal supervision from your father who can guide you and help lead you out of that small province of a country we call Gambia. If your father isn't wise or absent, you will suffer. These kids seem to be in the throes of their youthful hubris. Gambia is indeed a poor country, perpetually incompetent & extremely limited in terms of infrastructure. That said, this is where you have to outwork and outhustle everybody. In a deregulated place you have to employ all your improvasational skills but that's impossible if you waste the kids energy stuck in a school, an outdated school that has little purchase in todays time.
It’s so sad how they can’t express how they REALLY feel becaof peer pressure. Definitely a product of their FOMAR environment. They’re old enough to have a more mature way of speaking
Dont know what your oldest son was saying at all. Not to be disrespectful, just sounded like mumbling. If you could put subtitles when the mic is not at their mouth that would be very helpful!
It's not the most ideal setting to ask probing questions of someone who may be inhibited, due to the possibility of offending the interviewer, who is a parent or close family adult friend. The consensus is resources and options are limited, cultural difference is a barrier to establishing strong social connections. They see the economic advantage to being in Gambia if you have a consistent stream or nest of US dollars. Public safety related to crime is the last positive they acknowledge. It would be best to expose your children to the benefits of a Gambia and guide them in a plan to return to the US to aquire a marketable skill or trade and seed seed a life outside the US that down the line could afford you the option of permanent residence in a Gambia.
the only reason they would leave is because of income and thats understandable but other than that the quality of life maybe in gambia is better than america figure out a way to create passive income my brothers.
They should start an online business and stay in Africa! They can do it! They just need a business idea that allow them to live in both countries! 🫶🏿🙏🏿💪🏿
So glad to see the guys are being respectful of the camera and trying their best to deal with the Gambia 🇬🇲 👍🏾 but they do know they have a place of peace.
They did great😅. Thank you sis!
The downfall of Africa is opportunities for the youth. However, these young men must start brainstorming now to find ways to make legitimate money. The youth don't like agriculture but it is a money maker!
💯‼️
I agree .
Ok I agree 💯 with the young brother from the states , you must have something scheduled out to do if staying longer periods of time
I fuckin llove agriculture as a youth...
best work there is by far
These are some intelligent young men. I am very proud of them! 😊
Kids being Kids wait until they grow 🤣👍🏿 nice interview sister
It was awesome hearing their perspective. Thank you and thank them.
We're ready to leave the Americas and start a new life in Africa. Our children are grown now and looking to expand their horizon also. Great content as always. Peace.
Thank you for showing the world their experience and answering my question. I appreciate it. I will not lie; it broke my heart that they felt teased for being different. I am glad they found comfort in each other.
Teased by who?
Great video. It’s so refreshing to hear the youths perspective. What they seem to feel is missing are opportunities for them to grow economically, which is exactly how a lot of Gambian youths think. It is also sad that they find it hard to fit in with Gambian boys, but they will always be seen as more privileged and if they don’t know any of the languages it will continue to be hard.
I can see a bright future for all the young MAN here InshaAllah💙. You’re doing an amazing job sister praying for your success in this world and the next and also all the other families. They will truly appreciate all the sacrifices you’ve all made for them as parents. Stay strong and creative as you go along.👍🏾
bruv I fee that tho when ur parents sent you home pick up my dhaqan cells mandem 2012 in Somali🤣🤣
3:50 I definitely agree with bro I’ve lived in Africa for 4years almost 5 and it’s not the same. making friends isn’t the same for me
Like these kids, it’s how most of us Gambian youth think. We love our country but we wanna leave so bad because of economic hardship. You live comfortably here if you are well off. If wasn’t broke, I’ll never leave Gambia for another country.😅
What a great interview
They did great, hard to get kids to open up at all these days. my biggest hope for them is that they find determination and purpose wherever they are. Too many black boys falling to the wayside due to apathy and lack of aspiration.
Great experience for the young boys!
Seeing these young brothers, maan' I'm proud of them.
Thank you for this video sis. I learnt a lot from these young men.
Buys thrive way more than girls as an African diasporan when our mums took us back first time the boys thrived in a way we just didn’t.Young men are drawn to the freedom and sense of identity and simple expectations and clear paths for them.The thing I believe makes or breaks it though I think is having friends and maybe even family or community there to take you under their wings and provide routines.My brothers would spend summers there and they’d have breakfast,get picked up by their male cousins go check out one of their businesses or go on a road trip come back have lunch,visit a relative,retire for naps and then get picked up again for some street food or tea outside in the evening.They did this like 6/7 days of the week and loved it.
Aaaw they are young and right now have a very different view of the continent but let me tell you something, at least 3 of them will be back on the continent. It might not seem like much to them right now but trust me once they experience the cycle in the US as adults it might be a different story . All the best to them as they continue to self discover.
I agree! It's like they know ultimately it's best for them, but they still need to have fun😂 and make a little money (get their first jobs etc) in the west. The experience they have of seeing a different world will forever impact their outlook on life.
@@summersinafrica my eldest did exactly that after graduating high school on the continent she came and did her under grad and started working right away. She’s always traveling back home for vacation and tells me eventually she will make her way there permanently. She loves and appreciates life on the continent.
@@taluj2298That’s amazing! Everyone has their own journey. At least they see other opportunities outside of the US when they're ready.
We are praying for us all. The Gambia is sorry and sad. Young guys, just enjoy the experience and stay being curious about life.
Diasporans that were raised in The West sometimes we are in limbo. In the country we were born & raised we are seen as our foreparent's nationality but in our homeland we are foreigners.
One good thing about being raised abroad is there's a niche in the market for things we take for granted in The West. The West can be over saturated but in the diaspora you'll be unique
No place like home❤ nice interview
Interesting perspective from the young men. Thanks for sharing!
May Allah bless you for this interview--teenage boys are a lot! I have two and I teach teenage boys too 😅😅😅😅
These guys have seen me at my worst haha!They get yelled at right along with my own son🤦🏾♀️. Alhamdulilah rabil alameen I only have 1 teen son lol! And Inshallah it will be 6 years before my other sons reach 13 and 14🤲🏾😂
That 18 year old is so smart
Definately u speaking my mind
😢😢😢😢😢😢😢
I risk my life to reach Europe but trust me one day I'll settle down InsAllah. Poverty is crime since year 2000 starts
The Gambia lacks understanding due to abject poverty but with the rightful leader we shall overcome poverty n ignorance 😊
There are many problems in gambia: people in gambia are still living according old dated tradition, religion and to say it in one word: old dated culture. The upgraden their mobile Phone, but not their mind. Looking for intellect in gambia, is trying to find a needle in a haystack. Last but not least: people in gambia are putting everthing in allahs hand!
@@Queenmomefua Well try to find your original purpose you'll realise Allah is the true purpose of Creations. Well you might not believe in what we believe but we're guided by the most high Allah despite the poverty and ignorance 🤷♂️ is all test from Allah. For the real life is just after we die. 🔎 your purpose before death comes
@@bambabambo-SeneGambia while you are waiting for the life after death, iam in life now and leaving my real life. Do your thing and believe in what you want, but dont try to convince me about islam.
@@Queenmomefua Your forefathers believe in submission in 1 God before the coloniser colonised. So do your research. Just because Christianity was corrupt doesn't mean religion is not true. I might sound harsh on my writing's. But I swear I care about this message even for my enemy. For am notice lying, The Gambia is blessed because of the proclamations we make everyday and night That "There's Only One God Worthy Of Worship that's our only strength 💪.
God made everything, so He deserved Our life. True Purpose
Nice video!! I wish one day to move to Gambia!!I'm from Burundi I need some east african immigrant(Burundian,Tanzanian or Rwandese who live there so that he gives me more information about Gambia
May I ask why you don't want to live in Rwanda? We are considering moving to Rwanda. Just curious.
@@godschild2-yd3jy moving to Rwanda can't be problem for me coz I have friends and some people of family who live there
I see that many black diaspora people in Gambia just keep to themselves. I’m surprise coz it’s so easy to make friends in Gambia. They should start interacting with people of their age, either going to play sports or just talking to people. It will be much better for them
It's not easy for kids from abroad to mix with the locals of the same age. My son is 18 and has been in Ghana for 14 yrs and he used to play football and mix with the local kids when he was younger. They were always asking him to ask me, his mother, for money. When they asked to come to the house, he was beginning to feel they were not coming to see him , but to play on his play station or watch a film. He now spends his time trying to avoid them.
This is 100% the reason. The boys I interviewed told me this, but I just didn't share that part for several reasons...It must be experienced to understand. Thank you.
@summersinafrica Africans love to bond over movies or games. As a youth that was how I bonded with my friends. It doesn't mean we were using one another. Also learning the language will help them fit more.
@mola3845 you know when somebody wants to know you because of the things you have, as apposed to wanting to bond with you, especially when the begging for money is a factor whenever the so called " bonding" is taking place. You've seemed to ignore the part where I mentioned they are always asking for money.
@mola3845 My friends daughter who is now back in the uk had friends who were local and from her school. She stopped wanting to go out with them because anytime they would go out to eat, her friends would sit down and wait for her to pay.
Every kid in here is in a situation or their parents forced them to come over to Africa.The Somali kids in my country are the same and I was like these kids a couple years ago thank God I faced my obstacles and went back
Every African child that grew up in the West had threats of getting sent back home. For some of us that threat became our reality.
The Gambia was cool for me I’ve been about 4 times,but I couldn’t really see myself staying there. I had family living there,but they moved out of The Gambia to another country. Now this country that they moved to I can see myself living there….
Great interview can you interview the young ladies the next time
❤❤❤awww great to hear 👂🏾how them feel am boys mom too hmm this make me think about them.it will be good to find them a job
Love it thank you
Wonderful
As salaamu alaykum sis thanks for another very interesting video. I have a question. What are the African boys their age doing, besides I guess going to school?
I hope something will be facilitated for these young boys. May Allaah preserve them upon khayr
Maybe they should start a club to meet Gambian boys/men of the same age or a sports club or a gaming group playing tabletop games at the library?
Wishing the Gentlemen the very best.
Positive Vibes..🇬🇲❤💯✌️
I understand exactly what they are saying, it not easy for them to just stay in the Gambia without something going on for them like job or business etc, that’s why they said they are going back for some fewer years make some money invest it in the Gambia then after they will come and settle down for good, the economical structure is poor over there compared to the US, UK or the EU, so that is the only reason they are going back to make some money cause they are still young guys, hope y’all understand this explanation.
Happy to be home❤ in America
A bunch of doctors and scientists right there.
LOL 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
That's my country gambia the smiling Coast of Africa ❤❤❤
I want come visit
Gambians are born and raised in an ethnic, religious and social harmonious society and have both good and bad people. Follow Allah’s path and you’ll be guided !
No pain no gain .
Agree 100%. Stayed in Nigeria and felt like that . Although you Black and from diaspora they don’t look at you as the same . But keep you around to get what they can get . US/UK is more authentic/genuine.
Our people have been corrupted forgive and teach them as hard as it is.
@@carolinegardner8214 YOU WILL GO BROKE GETTING SCREWED OVER BY YOUR OWN PEOPLE
Is a learning curb for the youngsters praying for the kids
I wanna visit gambia too
From africa😊
Precious young men.
Nice video
More often than not most Gambian youngsters want to befriend them unfortunately here there is more attention on the less prevalent occurrences of being seen different as you feel different. It is nothing compared to the black on African snobbery in the west, only getting a bit better recently.
I think they in age of making money and it could be hard to get Capital to do business in Gambia. They can make money in U.S and come back and be their own boss
Gotta love this loool
Someone says that success is who you are, therefore if you go anywhere in this world, what you do tells everything...who are as black in America? and who are you as an African in Africa?
Hello, I love your videos, I am half Gambian and my dream would be to live in Gambia, I have two children, one a teenager and the other still a junior, I have a question, what kind of schools to attend? Education is very important to me and I would like to give them the opportunity if they want to go back to Europe or America in the future that their studies would be compatible.
Lifestyle and work issues is the only problem with Africa I grew up in USA have my own business if I go back it’s gonna be tough for me it’s also depends what part of Africa you from where I’m from I have no chance.
The one thing i am surprised you did not ask them is how they think their same peers from other races cope, namely ,chinese lebanese and indian who most probably come from more wealthier parents who have businesses there, we as black people must face the reality that the intelligence and social standing of our children will always be based on how well we do as parents?😊and the best experiances both economically and interlectually that we give our kids .
Mother Land ❤
I would like to see a group of inner city black kids from the hoods of Chicago, Detroit, New Orleans, etc... to go to Africa for a month, and see how they would like it.
I dont know about Gambia specifically but I can speak for other west African countries and its not really a safe haven. It's very easy to get caught up in the wrong crowd and the wrong situations in Africa as well.
Born in America but parents are daddyy is africa yeah and gambian too
They got sent back ? I mean I did as- well for a while. They’ll be fine 💯💯
The 4th guy is smart 💯
As a Gambia and Senegalese, I get what they are saying. They are young and there are not many jobs in Gambia especially for young people. However if you have a job or a regular stream of income, the standard of living is way better in Gambia. It would be interesting to hear the views of older expats from the diaspora, especially if they have got something. Since Gambia does not have social welfare, you have to work or live off daddy's allowance in order to get buy. No money, no food, unless relatives give you something. The same for many Gambians living in Gambia. The same is also true for most countries around the world. You need money to get by.
Adam looks like A Boogie a little!
You speak the truth there is not high job here that's why brothers and sisters are going to abroad to make business here
Those young men look like they're just waiting to turn 18 so they can go back to the U.S. It's great they have each other. And it's interesting how the Gambian young man who lived in the U.S. 16 years ended up relating more to the Diaspora guys than to Gambians. For those of us from the African/Black Diaspora, it's not a question of either/or, but both. If you have a US, UK, CA passport etc, you should use it for education, business, medical care, investments, etc. We shouldn't try to pigeonhole Diasporans to one place because we can be found across the African continent, in Europe, and across the Americas. As Nkrumah said, "I am not African because I was born in Africa, but because Africa was born in me. Make Africa central, but if you have that pa$$port, use it to your advantage. And these young men know that.
If you are a Muslim or Christian, which kind of business will let you stay in America?
Tell the Gambian American Mamady says hello, we went to the same elementary school I think.
💌
They are still young. Let them stay there and school for a while, by the time they go to the west when they are done with university education, they'd miss Gambia
❤❤❤🇬🇲
The one in black is actually my brother ❤
@@NabilahWhosThat I hope you enjoyed the video ❤️
The youth don't lie! The Gambia has natural beauty and a slower pace of life, but you need a way to make US/European money and/ or have a thriving business. We really need to move as a group like all the nations because not being able to make deep relationships with the locals is a real thing as well. #wethelostsheep
This is the problem with youth who are not integrated into Gambian culture as well as being hostage to some fabled black culture. These kids are busily wasting their time & I gurantee you they will be enticed to the criminal elements of the Gambia. To make it Gambia, yes you do require Money but you also require parternal supervision from your father who can guide you and help lead you out of that small province of a country we call Gambia. If your father isn't wise or absent, you will suffer.
These kids seem to be in the throes of their youthful hubris. Gambia is indeed a poor country, perpetually incompetent & extremely limited in terms of infrastructure. That said, this is where you have to outwork and outhustle everybody. In a deregulated place you have to employ all your improvasational skills but that's impossible if you waste the kids energy stuck in a school, an outdated school that has little purchase in todays time.
It’s so sad how they can’t express how they REALLY feel becaof peer pressure. Definitely a product of their FOMAR environment. They’re old enough to have a more mature way of speaking
Dont know what your oldest son was saying at all. Not to be disrespectful, just sounded like mumbling. If you could put subtitles when the mic is not at their mouth that would be very helpful!
0:20, does he not feel hot in that jumper & hat?
You need to mic them, or hand your mic to them when they answer. It's too hard to hear (them, not you).
It's not the most ideal setting to ask probing questions of someone who may be inhibited, due to the possibility of offending the interviewer, who is a parent or close family adult friend. The consensus is resources and options are limited, cultural difference is a barrier to establishing strong social connections. They see the economic advantage to being in Gambia if you have a consistent stream or nest of US dollars. Public safety related to crime is the last positive they acknowledge. It would be best to expose your children to the benefits of a Gambia and guide them in a plan to return to the US to aquire a marketable skill or trade and seed seed a life outside the US that down the line could afford you the option of permanent residence in a Gambia.
the only reason they would leave is because of income and thats understandable but other than that the quality of life maybe in gambia is better than america figure out a way to create passive income my brothers.
Lots of opportunities in Gambia… just don’t wanna work hard and smart
Who are you talking about Gambians??
Sooooo, then why hasn’t it been working out for Gambians?! 🤔 🤣🤣🤣
Hw d boys
😂
Wat
Gambia is not the place to be. Egypt is better i get we are trying to be around our kind but religion supercedes all that. May Allah guide us all
They should start an online business and stay in Africa! They can do it!
They just need a business idea that allow them to live in both countries! 🫶🏿🙏🏿💪🏿
Generate income in the western countries and build up a save and strong live in The Gambia.
What school,did they attend
Hw d boys