🦞 CAJUNS & CREOLES | What’s the difference?

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Комментарии • 8 тыс.

  • @mackenzieblair8135
    @mackenzieblair8135 8 месяцев назад +42263

    “You need to know the difference.”
    ‘It’s kind of impossible to distinguish the two.’

    • @The53732
      @The53732 7 месяцев назад +1752

      Basically: white = cajun
      Black = Creole
      You won't offend anyone that way

    • @MrAB-fo7zk
      @MrAB-fo7zk 7 месяцев назад +664

      There is a historic difference, not so much a modern one.

    • @bigcheese2128
      @bigcheese2128 7 месяцев назад +787

      Not impossible to distinguish the two, impossible to separate the two. They inform each other culturally but are still their own distinct groups

    • @parsnipproductions8875
      @parsnipproductions8875 7 месяцев назад +108

      Understanding that these things can both be true true is important

    • @frederickannan4698
      @frederickannan4698 7 месяцев назад +13

      Said the same thing lol

  • @shaunNkaidensDAD
    @shaunNkaidensDAD 7 месяцев назад +9977

    "Can i just get my food?" 😂😂😂

    • @ObiMbagwu
      @ObiMbagwu 7 месяцев назад +100

      Delicious food.

    • @JohnDeSeanTV
      @JohnDeSeanTV 7 месяцев назад +33

      😂

    • @Aquarianjoi
      @Aquarianjoi 7 месяцев назад +32

      Thank you.LMAO… I just shouted lol….. @2:30AM EST …… alone …. In my dark ass(dimly lit lol)house lolol

    • @user-kq5hn4gm1f
      @user-kq5hn4gm1f 7 месяцев назад +27

      Well... you know how we came about this recipe. See we SmoKe it for bout 5 ours.....

    • @adelasmart
      @adelasmart 6 месяцев назад +27

      I'm creole and I approve this message 😅.

  • @goten3965
    @goten3965 2 месяца назад +642

    Ok but why is the quality some documentary level shit plus your voice fits oddly well for voice acting

    • @toastymctrigger6061
      @toastymctrigger6061 Месяц назад +2

      Except he's wrong in a couple places lol?

    • @kristianstrm2375
      @kristianstrm2375 Месяц назад +2

      Pretty sure the voice is AI. Has some parts where it messes up oddly, like when it tries to say New Orleans

    • @user-gc6rf6fo3i
      @user-gc6rf6fo3i Месяц назад

      If this is documentary level for you then you're a dumbass. 😂

    • @HOLY_SPIRIT_GOD
      @HOLY_SPIRIT_GOD 4 дня назад

      So they are French Mexican

    • @BoopHenderson
      @BoopHenderson 3 дня назад

      ​@@kristianstrm2375nah he's doing the voiceover, you're hearing the cuts from editing out pauses most likely

  • @Uncleharkinian
    @Uncleharkinian Месяц назад +22

    Cajun music reminds me so much of the east coast Canadiana folk I grew up with on the TV, the apple really doesn’t fall far from the tree

  • @Jon79w
    @Jon79w 7 месяцев назад +8147

    Bro, just gave us a history lesson but told us it doesn’t matter anyway😂

    • @kenseim9314
      @kenseim9314 7 месяцев назад +13

      Lmao

    • @kenseim9314
      @kenseim9314 7 месяцев назад +11

      Lmao 😂

    • @MrGeneaux13
      @MrGeneaux13 7 месяцев назад +24

      As one should 😂

    • @erg0centric
      @erg0centric 7 месяцев назад

      Revisionist history, incomplete, inaccurate.

    • @ZootedSosa
      @ZootedSosa 7 месяцев назад +73

      It’s like Irish vs Scottish very similar with a lot of overlapping but also different

  • @curtygriff6636
    @curtygriff6636 8 месяцев назад +2732

    "Don't be stupid. You need to know the difference"
    "Truth is, it's almost impossible to separate..."

    • @chiccngeorge3058
      @chiccngeorge3058 7 месяцев назад +34

      White people are Cajun brown to black people are creole but culturally it’s the same

    • @ownthenight01
      @ownthenight01 7 месяцев назад +48

      ​@@chiccngeorge3058it is no where near the same, culturally.

    • @roybabineaux5353
      @roybabineaux5353 7 месяцев назад +17

      ​@@ownthenight01Well, what did the cajuns brought to Louisiana that we can say it's distinctly cajuns? Literally nothing in Louisiana is cajun.

    • @ownthenight01
      @ownthenight01 7 месяцев назад

      @@roybabineaux5353 ok.

    • @DrFrankenschtein
      @DrFrankenschtein 7 месяцев назад +5

      DERR, LOOK EVERYONE, TWO PHRASES OUT OF CONTEXT, DERRRRR

  • @Arizona_rider
    @Arizona_rider Месяц назад +30

    I lived in golden meadow Louisiana for 3 years work related. It was the best time of my life. The people all over Louisiana were great. I was young then and got to experience a lot

    • @itsjustme4848
      @itsjustme4848 3 дня назад

      On a trip to LA in 1976 we stopped for lunch at a cafe in Golden Meadow. We were surprised to find that everyone in the cafe was speaking CajunFrench. The waitress was kind enough to deal with us in English.

  • @gic8849
    @gic8849 2 месяца назад +214

    I lived in Mandeville for a while, right on the shore of Lake Pontchartrain, directly parallel to New Orleans. My home’s perimeter was a wall of bamboo. When we moved there and my daughter saw the bamboo, she was shocked, came running back up into the house (it sits on 9ft columns) “You didn’t tell me we moved out of America!!” 😂
    It’s the most perfect city in the United States, as far as I’m concerned. Virtually no crime, no litter, everyone’s friendly. Summer night vibe is fireflies, twinkle lights, massive willow trees, the smell of magnolia & fresh lemonade, and the faint sound of live smooth jazz playing somewhere at the lakefront park..usually just a couple of teenagers with their instruments..
    You’d swear it didn’t really exist in America if you’ve never been there. One of my closest friends is a 60 year old creole woman ..she taught me how to make all of these amazing meals. As a Long Islander far from home, i’d never even heard of mirliton before she showed me how to stuff one with shrimp lol.
    Louisiana has my whole heart.

    • @runawayfaeIX
      @runawayfaeIX 2 месяца назад +6

      But why did you move away from paradise? 🥺

    • @gic8849
      @gic8849 2 месяца назад

      @@runawayfaeIX my mother was diagnosed terminal and I sold everything to move in with her and take care of her til she passed. I lost her 6 months after I moved ..
      Edit: there was absolutely no way she was going to spend her last days on earth in a nursing home. I stayed here to take care of my elderly-disabled father until mom calls him. I’m tethered as a caretaker, but my children and I are giving my father the love and care, and pep in his step that he needs to have a more fulfilling life. I’ll find my way back to paradise, one day ..

    • @Stardust414
      @Stardust414 2 месяца назад +23

      The way that description read you should be writing novels 😂 Seriously though, you should be writing novels 👍🏼🤓

    • @gic8849
      @gic8849 2 месяца назад +21

      @@Stardust414 I do write books lol. That’s too funny.

    • @PleistocenePat
      @PleistocenePat 2 месяца назад +11

      Louisiana has one of the most interesting and unique cultures In North America based on what I've heard. It's the birthplace of Jazz too, as a jazz nerd I would love to visit one day.

  • @coracrawford5951
    @coracrawford5951 7 месяцев назад +3041

    As a Cajun, it’s awesome to see videos on our culture that aren’t a joke or stereotypical.

    • @xald1234114
      @xald1234114 7 месяцев назад +92

      As a Nova Scotian it always amazes me that nobody was taught that elsewhere. Acadians and cajuns? Y'all got the short end for daring to believe the natives were people too even having kids with em. The expulsion is barely taught about these days and it's depressing that public school seems to be a government decided curriculum that neglects to ever teach the governments past failings, almost suspicious, innit?

    • @b2kzangelalwayz
      @b2kzangelalwayz 7 месяцев назад +32

      As a human, I like how he explained that none of it matters anyway.

    • @Lunatic5306
      @Lunatic5306 7 месяцев назад +19

      As a comedian, I will continue to make jokes on the culture and it’s stereotypes.

    • @Thekarateadult
      @Thekarateadult 7 месяцев назад +11

      Now, you know Boudreaux and Tibadeaux exist for real

    • @MAGA_Extremist
      @MAGA_Extremist 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@Thekarateadult😂

  • @leefu.6176
    @leefu.6176 7 месяцев назад +2036

    Knowing the difference doesn't mean you need to be able to distinfuish them by sight.
    It means you know the history and nothing more. Thank you for sharing this information! I love it!!

    • @tashavolovsek9115
      @tashavolovsek9115 7 месяцев назад +15

      Cajuns are often mixed with three tribes from Canada and the Houma of Louisiana.
      Creoles are most often Spanish/proper French/ black and native American.
      Some families mixed .
      They didn't just come here they were pushed out of France, burned out of Canada and wound up on lands that would not grow crops . The swamps

    • @boris1387
      @boris1387 7 месяцев назад +2

      Is distinfuish a cajun or creole word?

    • @cuauhtemocthethird
      @cuauhtemocthethird 7 месяцев назад +4

      I like being able to distinguish by sight, allows me to be racist easier

    • @joiisler8986
      @joiisler8986 7 месяцев назад +7

      @@cuauhtemocthethird
      Whelp. At least you Publicly Admit who (and What) you are.
      I hope you just as proudly accept the inevitable Consequences of same.🕊️

    • @cuauhtemocthethird
      @cuauhtemocthethird 7 месяцев назад +4

      @@joiisler8986 I'm from Mexico but people say I look like a East European Jew so I actually don't know who I'm supposed to hate but I'm with whoever is winning you know

  • @MrContemplation
    @MrContemplation Месяц назад +57

    I still remember meeting people in the swamp that didn’t speak English, only slang French. Louisiana has to be one of the most interesting states I’ve ever visited. Huge plus that I absolutely love the food.

    • @LS-be8gr
      @LS-be8gr 5 дней назад

      Drive across the Atchafalaya Bridge. Absolutely beautiful.
      Like a painting.

    • @cristofino
      @cristofino 2 дня назад

      Love the food, zydeco, hurricane protocol: huddle n get drunk

  • @BruceNewhouse
    @BruceNewhouse Месяц назад +9

    My second cousin married a full blooded Cajun who had some Creole. On a visit to the 1984 Worlds Fair, they took me to me their extended family on the shores of Lake Verret. It was a wonderful experience. Great people.

    • @user-we4wo5ds6w
      @user-we4wo5ds6w 25 дней назад +1

      Lake Verret! I am a lady of lake Verret! I might know your people!

  • @nicholastorres44
    @nicholastorres44 3 месяца назад +1403

    Creoles: “You can doooiit!”
    Cajuns: “You can dooitt all night long!”

    • @newt2120
      @newt2120 2 месяца назад +5

      I dont get it

    • @dankcash007
      @dankcash007 2 месяца назад +11

      Goat comment 😂😂

    • @dankcash007
      @dankcash007 2 месяца назад +22

      ​@newt2120 you never watched the waterboy movie?

    • @dingleberry9947
      @dingleberry9947 2 месяца назад

      Otherwise known as Edomites

    • @fliprodriguez5250
      @fliprodriguez5250 2 месяца назад +3

      Perfect way to sum it up! 😂

  • @SoulsInsanity
    @SoulsInsanity 7 месяцев назад +1284

    Thank you for using the cover of the book “they say the wind is red” when you mentioned indigenous peoples as creole. That book is about my mothers’ father’s tribe the MOWA and our fight for acknowledgment as a distinct tribe and not a part of the larger Choctaw nation culturally.

    • @LivingDeadBabyDoll
      @LivingDeadBabyDoll 7 месяцев назад +37

      My dad has this book in his giant collection of historic and cultural media, I remember the cover but I never actually got to read it myself. Thank you for commenting about it, that’s amazing! Can’t wait to find and read it now

    • @McGoogger
      @McGoogger 7 месяцев назад +4

      Very cool!

    • @SoulsInsanity
      @SoulsInsanity 7 месяцев назад +27

      @@LivingDeadBabyDoll please do. This book has been around since the 90s and unfortunately never had the impact our tribe wanted, the MOWA are still considered a band of Choctaw. Hopefully if enough people learn about us, we can try again with more success.

    • @christinegelabert1651
      @christinegelabert1651 7 месяцев назад +11

      ​@@SoulsInsanitythanks for mentioning this, I didn't know but I'll definitely check it out. Sending you much love from the Eastern door. #NYMohawk #BearClan #Taino

    • @aerotheepic
      @aerotheepic 7 месяцев назад +1

      Bruh.

  • @Polytrout
    @Polytrout Месяц назад +19

    "Cajun" is a distorsion of the French word "Acadien", the people who occupied Acadia, a part of New Bruswick (I'm not sure if they are from Nova Scotia).
    In French, "Acadien" us pronounced
    Ah-Cah-Dzee-Yien. The "Ah" sound was dropped. "Cah" morphed into a "Kay" sound while the "Dzee-Yien" evolved into "Jun". Some Cajuns actually returned to New Brunswick.

    • @kessiawright1710
      @kessiawright1710 11 дней назад +1

      Yes, they are from Nova Scotia. There are still Acadians here. Acadia University in Wolfville, NS is named after them.

    • @chasm9557
      @chasm9557 9 дней назад

      Acadiens settled in parts of what's now New Brunswick, Noa Scotia, and Prince Edward Island. 1755-1764 was Le Grand Dérangement. British forced our ancestors away form their land onto boats and forced to leave. Some went back to France then down to what's now Louisiana. Those are the Cajuns. Some of my ancestors and many others made their way to Cape Breton Island in Nova Scotia. Others went up the St. John River and settled in what's called the St. John Valley which includes part of northern Maine and western New Brunswick. I happened to be there in 2014 for the Congrès Mondial Acadien. There are more places that Acadiens moved to after the British forced our ancestors away, and some of us have traced our genealogy back to Le Grand Dérangement, but there's this problem where the British destroyed any records they could find and most of us can't trace back our ancestors beyond that point in time.

    • @Polytrout
      @Polytrout 9 дней назад

      @chasm9557 That's interesting, especially when it's history that is not always included in a school board's curriculum. It is particularly disheartening to hear of records being destroyed for whatever reason, but worst of all, to cover up wrongdoings.
      I'm glad to have read your account, and I liked reading it, but I'm not going to press "like" because I don't like the injustice.

    • @chasm9557
      @chasm9557 9 дней назад +1

      @@Polytrout If you're interested in learning more, there's plenty of information available between New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island, and Nova Scotia. I've also heard good things about the Acadian Archives in Fort Kent Maine, but haven't had a chance to visit myself. There are also plenty of Acadian historical sites, and those I've been to have all been worth the trip in my opinion. I would recommend if you don't speak French that you be more careful when selecting a destination since some places in the maritime provinces are purely French speaking and not bilingual.

    • @Polytrout
      @Polytrout 9 дней назад

      @chasm9557 I'm due for a trip to the Maritimes. I will indeed make it a point to check out some sites. Since one of the provinces I'm aiming for is New Brunswick I reckon many of the places could be French only. I lived 7 years in Quebec City and 8 years, though in Ontario, with my Québécoise wife (I may not necessarily understand the local Acadien slang, (they all speak a more standard French when dealing with outsiders) the displays would use a formal, literary French; as you probably know, these Acadiens aren't really uneducated and illiterate - that's just a Toronto impression/stereotype (prejudice?).
      Anyway, thanks for the heads up.

  • @TheRealStoner
    @TheRealStoner Месяц назад +8

    If I wasn't confused enough before, I am even more confused now! Thank you for the clarification!

    • @bossfan49
      @bossfan49 Месяц назад +1

      Right? This is how I felt when I watched a baseball video on what constitutes a balk. "This is legal, except when it's not."

    • @TheRealStoner
      @TheRealStoner Месяц назад +1

      ​@bossfan49 , I thought I'd die without knowing the difference, but phew! Thank God for this man explaining it to us!... One thing is not like the other, but they are the same, and you can't tell the difference... that explains it all! 😂😅😅😅

  • @murrayc9615
    @murrayc9615 7 месяцев назад +1429

    As someone born and raised in Nova Scotia, Canada, I am extremely impressed with the historical accuracy of your video. Well done!

    • @esseeedee
      @esseeedee 6 месяцев назад +6

      Wtf

    • @rogaldom4979
      @rogaldom4979 6 месяцев назад +15

      But he got it wrong they weren't exiled for refuses to bow to a different monarch but exiled to make way for English speaking settlers. This is highlighted by that fact that Quebec in addition to its Quebecqui population also features a small Acadian population made up of exiles

    • @phoney4387
      @phoney4387 6 месяцев назад +14

      Creole is actually a specific,fully melinated human tribe.They are not the products of forced miscigenation.Now the term is usurped to mean 'light skin good hair' but ethnic Creole are not descendants of euros or spaniards.Cajuns are not 'closely related' to Creole in any way except the parts of the southern Slave culture they imitated.Most importantly,not all fully melinated people originate from Slaves or in Africa which is a modern continent.Before you attempt to 'educate',make sure you aren't spreading whitewashed info put out by colonziers❤

    • @tylerdejesus6333
      @tylerdejesus6333 6 месяцев назад +2

      @@rogaldom4979the video just said monarch, never specified which one.

    • @tylerdejesus6333
      @tylerdejesus6333 6 месяцев назад +13

      @@phoney4387no it’s actually not. Their are creoles of all different colors from different backgrounds. It’s not a race it’s an ethnic group.

  • @MilkAndChocolateCookies
    @MilkAndChocolateCookies 7 месяцев назад +1111

    This is important for foods because you need to know if it's going to be cajun or creole style. For example, greole gumbo (a popular soup down here) is known for having duck, onions, or tomatoes. A traditional cajun style will have chicken and sausage. And keep in mind that some people over here will go bonkers of you get it wrong.

    • @thenext9537
      @thenext9537 7 месяцев назад +28

      It gets nuts. Most of the time, it’s a mix. You get étouffée, gumbo, blue crab, frog legs, fried pickles and a side of lagniappe and a kiss from your momma! C'est Si Bon

    • @edgykoala1732
      @edgykoala1732 7 месяцев назад +7

      Gumbo is the best. I would say the only way to tell how creole a family is… sit down for dinner.

    • @TheSophisticatedSavage
      @TheSophisticatedSavage 7 месяцев назад +3

      I don't care. Get mad...

    • @jrich436
      @jrich436 7 месяцев назад +20

      Calling my gumbo soup is a cause for violence

    • @mattchew4491
      @mattchew4491 7 месяцев назад +16

      @@jrich436As long as it doesn’t have tomatoes

  • @Fairytwinkleglitterfarts
    @Fairytwinkleglitterfarts 2 месяца назад +125

    I’m Creole but it’s nice to hear about Cajuns; everyone just forgets about them!😂

    • @MadameDanteInferno
      @MadameDanteInferno Месяц назад +5

      Not if your a Gambit fan.

    • @JamMasterKae
      @JamMasterKae Месяц назад +1

      are you from Louisiana? because how could you forget?

    • @Fairytwinkleglitterfarts
      @Fairytwinkleglitterfarts Месяц назад

      @@JamMasterKae No, I’m a Texan🙂

    • @warweasel2832
      @warweasel2832 Месяц назад +3

      Cajuns are more widely know than Creoles in everywhere BUT New Orleans apparently, because we have Cajun restaurants all the way up here at the Canuck border, but I didn't know what "Creole" meant until a couple years back.

    • @Retro-y7p
      @Retro-y7p Месяц назад +1

      Literally noone in any state I've ever been had forgotten about either. They may mix up associated contributions, and it's terribly difficult most times to tell one from the other vs everyone else who is not Creole or Cajun, but literally everyone knows that both distinctions exist.

  • @atsilayona
    @atsilayona Месяц назад +18

    The term creole was originally used by “black” people to differentiate themselves from Africans who recently arrived as slaves. It says it on the French creole website.

    • @BirchBark-ge7ix
      @BirchBark-ge7ix Месяц назад +5

      Actually, the word as it originated in colonial Mexico was "criolla" and it specified Spaniards born and raised in the New World. The word came to Louisiana during the time Louisiana was Spanish. New Orleans mulattos call themselves "Creoles" erroneously. Creoles were Spanish colonials.

    • @Jakeupbandit
      @Jakeupbandit 23 дня назад +2

      If it says it on the website, then it must be true😂

    • @peterbanner4820
      @peterbanner4820 23 дня назад +2

      Hell anyone can make up whatever story that serves their needs.

    • @APTTMH_3
      @APTTMH_3 22 дня назад

      Yt people steal everything. I bet most yt people don't even know why the French sold them Louisiana for cheap. They were afraid the new freed Haitians would come across the waters and incite the black folks n America to revolt. And they come in these comments trying to Gaslight people like history don't exist. Creol don't belong to yall but yall still took it, just like how humans beings didn't belong to yall but you guys still had owned them.

    • @ao-111
      @ao-111 10 дней назад

      It's almost like words can have different meanings in different places. Creole in the Bahamas does not equal creole in Louisiana, for example.

  • @petejuneaux7549
    @petejuneaux7549 7 месяцев назад +102

    This the first correct definition of the difference between a Cajun and a Louisiana Creole I have seen on RUclips! Great Job!! Take it from a New Orleans born, Louisiana raised half Cajun, half Creole, 100% Coonass historian, this the correct definition!!

    • @vonda26777
      @vonda26777 7 месяцев назад +6

      Yes, I’ve so many people say so many stupid and half true statements that it’s crazy. I also love the pictures.

    • @MicheleOverton-mb8it
      @MicheleOverton-mb8it Месяц назад

      I'm a Cajun who lives in California. I'm surprised when people even understand what a Cajun even is! 💖​@@vonda26777

  • @derrickdannajr.386
    @derrickdannajr.386 7 месяцев назад +1095

    As a Nola (creole) I can proudly say you did Louisiana justice with this one sir. Thank you, I definitely just learned something I never knew myself even being native.

    • @citomakaveezly
      @citomakaveezly 7 месяцев назад +26

      He’s leaving out the most important fact that they were forcefully moved down there in what was called “The Great Expulsion” because there was already a French presence in Louisiana, they were sent down there forcefully, they didn’t just happen to end up there … the Acadians came from Maine as well and many of them mixed with Natives. This was good but bruh left out key parts that people should know.

    • @citomakaveezly
      @citomakaveezly 7 месяцев назад +7

      People should know they were forcefully moved in the Great Expulsion. Also Acadia national park is in Maine. Acadia is of course where the word “Cajun” comes from.

    • @kaisha915
      @kaisha915 7 месяцев назад +12

      ​@@citomakaveezlyhe did say they were exiled.

    • @citomakaveezly
      @citomakaveezly 7 месяцев назад +8

      @@kaisha915 I know but he said “some ended up in Louisiana” as if they were butterflies in the wind who happened to end up in Louisiana as a result of random fate or whatever, haha. When the truth is they were sent directly down there by the British.

    • @donarthiazi2443
      @donarthiazi2443 7 месяцев назад +3

      ​@@citomakaveezly
      You should have mentioned _Evangeline_

  • @ShamW0Wzer
    @ShamW0Wzer Месяц назад +40

    I've always sinplified creole & cajun to black-french and white-french lol. Loved getting this explanation.

    • @Jules-fr5gm
      @Jules-fr5gm Месяц назад

      That’s what I got from this. White vs non-white French descendants.

    • @raulpascual3947
      @raulpascual3947 Месяц назад +4

      @@Jules-fr5gmno. see it again. Creole is not that

    • @prosquatter
      @prosquatter Месяц назад +1

      There are still white creoles alive today, but nowadays they call themselves Cajun (even though none of their ancestors were Acadian), because as you said it, most people just separate it down the racial line.

    • @tashannalew1888
      @tashannalew1888 Месяц назад +2

      I mean, that isn't technically correct, but I grew up in the New Orleans area (westbank) and that's kind of how it is categorized in my mind too.

    • @PrincessPebbles0_0
      @PrincessPebbles0_0 Месяц назад

      Nah… because that’s wrong as fuckk
      Both are White French mixed with other heritages

  • @go8663
    @go8663 2 месяца назад +34

    I love this as a native american with some spanish and Mexican roots. This video looks like the good life ive been wanting

  • @LucVNO
    @LucVNO 7 месяцев назад +44

    Heyhey! Acadian here! Always wanted to go South to meet the cousins. :)

    • @MrChanad
      @MrChanad 4 месяца назад +2

      You and me both. I drove my truck by there 20 years ago but, i need to stop by for sure.

  • @duaneday5474
    @duaneday5474 7 месяцев назад +416

    I was born and raised in rural Nova Scotia. I met some people from Lafayette. I was shocked by their accent. They sounded like they were from where I was raised in Nova Scotia. My ancestors are from UK and Germany.
    Amazing after so much time has past that we still have much in common. Acadian's influenced Nova Scotia culture and can still be felt today.

    • @JAM661
      @JAM661 7 месяцев назад +7

      Well in MN we have a lot of people who came from Sweden and still make up part of our culture. Basically the USA is a huge melting pot of the world which make one of the most unique countries in the world and one of the greatest. It also cause us to have a problem with racism. Other other coutries do not have the racism like we do mainly because they have mostly one culture and one group who make a huge majority of the people. In almost every country in the world the minority population tends to be looked down on. But I though it was so funny Europe calling out our racism for decades and then they started to get all the Syrians refugees and they are having the same problem we with excepting strangers who have a total different belief system then the majority.

    • @duaneday5474
      @duaneday5474 7 месяцев назад +10

      @@JAM661 Canada is about as multicultural as it gets. The city of Toronto is most notable.
      Not every culture is a good fit for immigration. The immigration policies failed to discriminate when it was necessary for unity and state security. There are many examples. Multiculturalism has always led to conflict over different values and competition for resources going back to antiquity.
      My guess is that the Swedish immigrants have fit in nicely in Minnesota. Much like Dutch farmers have settled well where I was raised. Even though there was jealousy because the Canadian government granted the Duth farmers land rights over the original Canadian families. The culture is compatible with North America

    • @philokevetch8691
      @philokevetch8691 7 месяцев назад +2

      A partir de Lafayette. A partir de Lafayette il font change' mon nom. Lament and love to all...

    • @SniperCR39
      @SniperCR39 7 месяцев назад +1

      Lafayette gang!

    • @metalandwood4u
      @metalandwood4u 7 месяцев назад +5

      Thanks for sharing. Ive moved to Louisiana and was a bit fascinsted by the distinct culture. Lafayette accent has a bit of a different sounding accent as compared to other parts of southern louisiana. New orleans has maybe 5 different accents, one around metarie and kenner some other and most famously distinctive is chalmette a suburb to the east side. Really distinctive crazy sounding accent (no offense). Every time i hear someone i ask them their home town. I would say there are maybe 20 different sounding accents in southern louisiana. Vachery has a distinctive accent as does Gramercy. Its all very interesting to me. Its going to dissapear now with how things are changing society and economy and travel and internet entertainment influence. The sad thing is the french language dissapearing.

  • @cajundevildog
    @cajundevildog 2 месяца назад +7

    Thank you so much!!!!! I've been clarifying this for years, and I only grew up with a Cajun family that my Dad remarried into. Im very proud to have grown up inthe Cajun lifestyle, and that's become my nickname even though I'm not native Cajun. Love y'all bruh!!

  • @VeraStoriaChannel
    @VeraStoriaChannel 5 дней назад +2

    I'm French and grew up in the Western part of France! Part of my ancestors are from there. I have a lot of very distant cousins in Quebec, and the amazing Louisiana culture means a lot to me. Excellent short video! Merci beaucoup!😅

  • @victoriarotramel2274
    @victoriarotramel2274 7 месяцев назад +250

    I grew up 2 hours from the Texas-Louisiana state line and let me tell you, it’s like a whole nother world there. Plenty of people speak languages I’ve never heard of, eat foods that I’ve never seen before, and play music you can’t find anywhere else.

    • @tejaswoman
      @tejaswoman 7 месяцев назад +29

      Back in the 90s when AOL was still a major part of getting people online, I used to participate in a message board about the south. One of the recurring themes was the debate over whether we in Texas and those in Florida counted as the south. I told them at minimum, *_East_* Texas did, because if I were to drop you off in the middle of nowhere along the Texas -Louisiana border and you didn't have a map or a guide, I would defy you to tell me which one you were in based on either the accents or the flora and fauna.

    • @maxxinethewoopitcher
      @maxxinethewoopitcher 7 месяцев назад +3

      Tyler texas here

    • @dana102083
      @dana102083 7 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@tejaswomangood explanation. A lot of lines are.political or scientifi. Based and have no basis on real life. ❤

    • @cailin5301
      @cailin5301 7 месяцев назад +5

      Idk, I live in northern Louisiana (born and raised in Arkansas) and I have yet to encounter any Cajun culture. All there is up here is Popeye's, the occasional crawfish boil, and fleur des lis decorations. Kinda just feels like someone sprinkled a little Tony's on generic southern rural culture. I would like to visit New Orleans sometime to see what it's really like - I haven't been there since I was too young to remember.

    • @spiderlily4386
      @spiderlily4386 7 месяцев назад +6

      ​@@cailin5301Hi. Yes, North Louisiana is pretty much the same as East Texas, Arkansas, and Mississippi. A border running thru Alexandria would make sense lol. Good people and fascinating history on both sides!

  • @RedDog-2X
    @RedDog-2X 7 месяцев назад +838

    They got one thing in common.
    They both ain't into bland food.
    God bless em all.

    • @bigbillybadass
      @bigbillybadass 7 месяцев назад

      They aren't creole

    • @yetiornot5726
      @yetiornot5726 7 месяцев назад +17

      Learned the hard way once that they take personal offense if you ask for food with no spice 😂

    • @StuGT33
      @StuGT33 7 месяцев назад +5

      Not bland.... But not tasty either 😅

    • @FritzMonorail
      @FritzMonorail 7 месяцев назад +36

      ​@@StuGT33 I disagree

    • @StuGT33
      @StuGT33 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@FritzMonorail hey you have every right to. We all have a right to our opinions.

  • @jasminer66788
    @jasminer66788 2 месяца назад +3

    I’m from coastal Alabama and am creole. Creole has always just been black. You can be an ADOS who’s almost 99% African descent and creole. We always said Cajuns were of European descent.

  • @efaun-g3p
    @efaun-g3p День назад

    this was a much bigger knowledge bomb than I was anticipating from the first frame. kudos

  • @rattlecat5968
    @rattlecat5968 7 месяцев назад +451

    As you travel across the United States, you discover that there are almost as many cultures as there are counties! In my travels, I found the U.S.A. to be so incredibly diverse and interesting... and loved the regional foods with few exceptions.
    Before traveling internationally, Americans should take advantage of the cultures right here, at home, first! You won't be disappointed!

    • @commanderrex8351
      @commanderrex8351 7 месяцев назад +4

      What were some of the exceptions

    • @CreativeC13
      @CreativeC13 7 месяцев назад +18

      It's a lot easier to experience more while traveling internationally though 😂 I went to Europe for the first time this summer and got to see three different countries while driving the same distance that would be exactly the same here in the US.

    • @jr3414
      @jr3414 7 месяцев назад +35

      ​@@CreativeC13 you should learn more of your local history 😊 it's only in the last generation or two that states became so blended and meaningless, truly fascinating if you look down and recognize how unique each states history is and their people ❤ I love to travel, but it makes me love my home all the more

    • @jacksblack9081
      @jacksblack9081 7 месяцев назад +1

      What is a county?

    • @rattlecat5968
      @rattlecat5968 7 месяцев назад +13

      Counties are small geographic areas. There are over 3,000 counties in the U.S., though in the southern U.S., a county is called a "parrish," and NYCity has "boroughs," one of which is Manhattan.

  • @paullavoie5542
    @paullavoie5542 5 месяцев назад +694

    I was at my friends the other night and we were talking about our Acadian ancestry here in Canada. He mentioned one of his ancestors being exiled twice. He was sent down to the states, walking all the way back up to marry have children and only to be exiled again.
    We both descend from the women sent over in the 1600s known as the Fille du Roi.

    • @MicheleOverton
      @MicheleOverton 3 месяца назад +51

      Cajun here! My Dad was born in Kaplan Louisiana in 1919. Our family name is Suire. We were one of the first Exiled families in France One Grandparent is descended directly from France to Louisiana, they were actually deported having broken a law and deported to Louisiana when it was still part of France then one came to Louisiana by way of Nova Scotia. My Dad was the swampiest swamp Cajun you'd ever want to meet 💖

    • @melissasaint3283
      @melissasaint3283 3 месяца назад +18

      Almost everyone descended from "French Canadian" is the descendant of a Fille du Roi, which is crazy to think of, when you consider there were less than 1000 of them!

    • @TheHaywire924
      @TheHaywire924 3 месяца назад +9

      God my 9th grade French class is weeping right now, but fille du Roi means “women of the monarch/king”?

    • @perilouspigeon6613
      @perilouspigeon6613 3 месяца назад +32

      @@TheHaywire924 It's more like "daughters of the king", since these were mostly orphans who depended on the state for survival. The same way we sometimes say that foster kids are under "the care of the state."

    • @TheHaywire924
      @TheHaywire924 3 месяца назад +10

      ​@@perilouspigeon6613 That's very interesting!

  • @teresamichaud1253
    @teresamichaud1253 5 дней назад +1

    Canadian from down east here; I’m a Cajun (Acadian) from the group of leftovers that didn’t go to the meeting with the English but hid in the forest. I love how our traditions are still surviving in Louisiana!!! I hear our French names on tv shows and the French slang that we still use. ❤

  • @jakesux7250
    @jakesux7250 2 месяца назад +1

    “Know the difference”
    “There isnt really a difference”

  • @emmelsmusic79
    @emmelsmusic79 7 месяцев назад +54

    The painting of the native lady looking over her shoulder is one of my husband's ancestors. She and her husband had a part in our nation's founding.
    They were very good spies against the crown.

    • @sasielb8922
      @sasielb8922 7 месяцев назад +1

      oh what's her name? I'd love to research on this

    • @AprilW-ls6bd
      @AprilW-ls6bd 7 месяцев назад

      Yes. Tell us more please.

    • @kentdouglass1001
      @kentdouglass1001 7 месяцев назад

      Wow

  • @BigOleHayden
    @BigOleHayden 8 месяцев назад +2407

    i’m from Creole, Louisiana
    my grandfather was French and my grandmother is Mexican, absolutely love the culture
    my coonass moved to Cecilia now i’m a Cajan

    • @shadowexecutive3243
      @shadowexecutive3243 8 месяцев назад +117

      Love the term coonass, not many people outside Louisiana know it or understand it's not necessarily a pejorative or offensive term

    • @BigOleHayden
      @BigOleHayden 8 месяцев назад +55

      @@shadowexecutive3243 definitely don’t hear it a lot as much either but i’m proud to be from Louisiana
      IM NEVER LEAVING ! #RegisteredCoonAss

    • @matthewthibodoux4539
      @matthewthibodoux4539 8 месяцев назад +12

      No way! I go hunting down in Creole!

    • @BigOleHayden
      @BigOleHayden 8 месяцев назад +13

      @@matthewthibodoux4539 definitely some good duck hunting and fishing down here

    • @draco2k3
      @draco2k3 8 месяцев назад +2

      Me too!!!

  • @lizzparis9060
    @lizzparis9060 22 дня назад +1

    WOW! What an amazing teacher‼️😺thnx

  • @justinmcallister2659
    @justinmcallister2659 Месяц назад +1

    bro got that morning flow

  • @renderuntocaesarwhatiscaes2300
    @renderuntocaesarwhatiscaes2300 7 месяцев назад +422

    I really like this this gave me a quick fun non offensive history lesson while making me wanna learn more if i ever had to opportunity to visit that state. Thank you i really like shorts like this.

    • @ravishing_cadet4625
      @ravishing_cadet4625 7 месяцев назад +14

      You realize history is supposed to offend you right?
      "Those who don't learn history are doomed to repeat it."
      If you don't see the evils of the past, if you don't see the things that make you "Uncomfortable", how will we learn to rise above those evils.
      It falls on deaf ears because now there are people who are trying to exterminate the Jews for the upteenth time in history.
      "Those who don't learn from history are doomed to repeat it. Those who learn are doomed to watch others repeat it."

    • @DracoJ
      @DracoJ 7 месяцев назад +4

      ​@ravishing_cadet4625 well yes the whole learning from history part. But sometimes its nice to learn about the, well, nice parts of history.

    • @M50A1
      @M50A1 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@ravishing_cadet4625Just because you googled those quotes, doesn't mean you're an expert or wise

    • @ravishing_cadet4625
      @ravishing_cadet4625 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@M50A1 Nah you're right, but having a Master's Degree on the subject kinda does though. I'm working on becoming a history professor. Specifically Ancient Cultures. See you don't have to have a degree though. Any idiot can look back in history and see the patterns. It's just too bad people are too stupid to do so.

    • @M50A1
      @M50A1 7 месяцев назад

      @@ravishing_cadet4625 So..... who's the one that decided to look back at those patterns? I didn't 😂

  • @sydthegoat88
    @sydthegoat88 7 месяцев назад +29

    Great example how cultures can blend or live side by side, socialising through food and entertainment.

  • @user-mz3ce8gf2j
    @user-mz3ce8gf2j 2 месяца назад +2

    I love this, thank you ❤

  • @silver-berry
    @silver-berry 2 месяца назад

    I've studied schoolgirl French, and by consequence a bit of French-American culture, but this is the best summary I've ever come across! fantastic.

  • @Meskarune
    @Meskarune 7 месяцев назад +62

    There are also creoles in nearby mississippi and they make gumbo as well 😅

  • @aliciakwong1149
    @aliciakwong1149 7 месяцев назад +103

    Thanks for this very concise explanation. I was born in Lafayette, Louisiana but now live in North Carolina. I can't tell you how many times I've had to explain this to people in North Carolina. Now I'm just going to send them your video

    • @MAGA_Extremist
      @MAGA_Extremist 7 месяцев назад

      😂

    • @MAGA_Extremist
      @MAGA_Extremist 7 месяцев назад

      Lafitte La.here. Every time I use maps or Google and I say Lafitte Lafayette comes up.

    • @billiehummel
      @billiehummel 7 месяцев назад

      We have the best culture. My mom is from Manchac, La and my dad from Tornado, WV where they have lived for the past 25 years. It’s so funny. She has these 5 ft tall alligators pulling a sleigh that she puts out at Christmas. I ship her fresh crawfish in May and King Cake in Feb.

  • @rltj20011
    @rltj20011 5 дней назад

    Wow! Thank for sharing. I learned something new today. Win win.

  • @jadengravett3250
    @jadengravett3250 Месяц назад +3

    I’m Cajun and this was new info to me. My grandpa always just simplified it by saying “They’re almost the same but Cajuns are more French and Creoles are more Spanish

    • @krysti2
      @krysti2 5 дней назад +1

      That's a great explanation 🎉

  • @Loomac1970
    @Loomac1970 7 месяцев назад +249

    I'm English and my dad is Australian. My whole life ( I'm 53) my dad has played cajun and creole music as he loves the music so much. I love it too as it's a childhood memory as well as a current experience. It's incredible. Thank you

    • @Revelian1982
      @Revelian1982 7 месяцев назад +4

      That's a wonderful story, pal.

    • @theway334
      @theway334 7 месяцев назад +2

      "Zydeco" music? Yeah it is super fun perhaps :)

    • @bcfmm12
      @bcfmm12 7 месяцев назад +2

      its called zydeco lol

    • @DHankins19
      @DHankins19 7 месяцев назад +1

      RELEVANCE?

    • @xinniethep00h
      @xinniethep00h 7 месяцев назад

      @@DHankins19 reason for being an asshole? Stop tryna make people as miserable as you

  • @josephbutler4950
    @josephbutler4950 8 месяцев назад +649

    Beautiful lesson in your culture sir. Love from New Zealand.

    • @Unfamiliar_Fruit
      @Unfamiliar_Fruit 7 месяцев назад +21

      As a Cajun who just visited your country last December, my wife and I love your country. We even named our first born son Zealand. We hope to move there one day

    • @danielevans8910
      @danielevans8910 7 месяцев назад +15

      @@Unfamiliar_Fruityour son getting bullied my guy

    • @Unfamiliar_Fruit
      @Unfamiliar_Fruit 7 месяцев назад +7

      @@danielevans8910Thanks for your input. Was waiting on pins and needles for it

    • @michaelyarbrough254
      @michaelyarbrough254 7 месяцев назад

      New Zealand is over rated!

    • @josephbutler4950
      @josephbutler4950 7 месяцев назад +3

      @matthewducote8442 big love brother. I greatly admire the Cajun spirit. Also if I ever get over there I gotta try some of that food!.

  • @duncanmcgee13
    @duncanmcgee13 Месяц назад +2

    Hilarious that we, in neighboring Texas, have a large German community

  • @ModeratelySpeaking
    @ModeratelySpeaking 10 дней назад

    Dude! Excellent video. I had no idea.

  • @lukecywalker
    @lukecywalker 7 месяцев назад +27

    Thank you for the video. I am Creole. My mother still speaks Creole French. People do get offended when they get labeled the wrong culture. Both have the best food in the world. My sister made a gumbo last week. Choooooo

  • @JC-ug7qs
    @JC-ug7qs 7 месяцев назад +93

    Creol in Portuguese means born on the continent. In colonial Spanish America, Criollos, which sounds similar to Creol, meant unmixed spaniards as opposed to spaniards mixed with Native Americans or mixed with Africans.

    • @MightieDuckie
      @MightieDuckie 6 месяцев назад

      Ya got weak ass dna

    • @marciovarela8693
      @marciovarela8693 5 месяцев назад +5

      Creolo in portugues means to breed. It was originally used to describe my people. cape Verdians” The original Criolos”. It’s just a mix of multiple language and culture. Usually European, African, etc..

    • @wakawaza5406
      @wakawaza5406 5 месяцев назад

      I highly doubt the natives mixed with the smelly Spanish🤣

    • @1988vikable
      @1988vikable 2 месяца назад +2

      Actually Criollo mean " Spanish Person not born in Spain or born off spain" Basically you are a non Peninsular spaniard. It was a social/caste system. My guess is these terms were used because they didnt trust their nationality (xenophobic) so therefore were considered "second class citizens" basically not TRUE Spaniard citizens just subjects. SMH.

  • @MegaPissed1
    @MegaPissed1 24 дня назад

    Thank you for this awesome breakdown. I always wondered what the difference was.

  • @davesblasting7457
    @davesblasting7457 2 месяца назад +5

    Thank you! I’m a Canadian of Loyalist descent whose ancestors fought FOR the King at the time of the American Revolution and were exiled in 1784 to Upper Canada now Ontario. Your explanation was clear and elucidating. Merci. !!

    • @heycidskyja4668
      @heycidskyja4668 Месяц назад +1

      Thank you for your service.

    • @KB_216
      @KB_216 Месяц назад +1

      ​@@heycidskyja4668 they didn't service anything

  • @Annii_Oakley_
    @Annii_Oakley_ 7 месяцев назад +274

    Schooled us on a few hundred years in 30 seconds! Preciate it!

    • @believeringod.4004
      @believeringod.4004 6 месяцев назад +2

      Be wise not everything online is true

    • @Sebastianator01
      @Sebastianator01 6 месяцев назад

      @@believeringod.4004that’s why you do your own personal research to verify their claims.

  • @TheOnlyLadyBella
    @TheOnlyLadyBella 7 месяцев назад +134

    I'm a light skin black girl from Mississippi but when I moved to Georgia people constantly ask me if I was Cajun or Creole. I never could understand why people didn't know the difference.
    My sister and I were in the park one day when this white guy asked us where we some of them Cajuns from New Orleans. My sister looked at him and said "Naw, We some of them black folks from Mississippi." 😂

    • @DoubleBeezy
      @DoubleBeezy 7 месяцев назад +5

      You got someone recent in your family tree multi generational mixed 60/40 75/25, or a one drop rule because you very yella 😂. I’m not being rude btw, America don’t have middle ground boxes and we all just blk, so ppl may be surprised how mixed they are after slavery times

    • @TheOnlyLadyBella
      @TheOnlyLadyBella 6 месяцев назад +8

      @@DoubleBeezy you'll be surprised how many people mixed after slavery times. You have to remember in Mississippi a lot of people worked as maids. So these women were taking advantage of easily.
      It was a lot of hypocrisy going on. It was all about power. Just because someone believed in segregation didn't mean it didn't apply to them. If you know what I mean. You can't date my daughter but that doesn't mean I can't take your daughter. Storm Thurmond is a perfect example of this. This man was a segregationist who did not want blacks and whites together. However it was revealed that he had a biracial daughter that he took care of.
      I believe her name was Essie Mae Washington-Williams.
      Growing up I knew several older black women who are the offspring of white men and black women. It was a open secret. I knew two kids in my class who were first cousins. One was black and one was white. They both share the same grandfather. The only thing that was different was the black boy knew and I assume the white boy didn't. If he did, he had never acknowledged him. I knew because my mother told me. The funny thing is both of them had the same facial features.
      This is so well known in Mississippi. I'm laughing about it. Look, just because somebody wears a white sheet at night, doesn't mean that he won't get in between the sheets with somebody black. I can tell you so many stories. It's almost like a right of passage to have a white wife and a black mistress. I could tell you some stories that could ruin careers and families. SMH

    • @ReneeFreeman-zc4tj
      @ReneeFreeman-zc4tj 6 месяцев назад +6

      You can't be cajun. Cajun is Caucasian. Creole, is mixed. That's who we call creole. The creole were made to distinguish the African population in louisiana. He made thus video. I was born and raised in Louisiana. I know the history that was taught, but I don't believe it's absolutely true. I'm from the southern part of Louisiana. None of my family considered themselves such. My pawpaw side of the family owned land. Where do you think the voodoo comes from? They are erasing an entire population of people influenced or downplay it. Yall, sitting here saying crazy stuff like is a compliment. Mississippi is another part of Louisiana, but without the Caucasian. We can not erase our African ancestors. Louisiana culture is not just in louisiana, it also in south Carolina and Southern GA. They not creole neither cajun. They are native and African.

    • @DoubleBeezy
      @DoubleBeezy 6 месяцев назад +3

      @@TheOnlyLadyBella we are all mixed with involuntary, voluntary ppl and u have ppl like I explained constantly mixing, so that’s y I never understood how to guess which percentage is automatically bad. I totally understand what u saying though. My great great parent was white and my mom dad also had a white grandparent but somehow they still both half white on dna test and (my grandma had the constant mix also from creole background) my test came out 71% African 28% European 1% indigenous. I personally only see race as a social construct and noticing how it’s no logic to the man made thing (yes I’m a blk man 😂) . I mean if it was at least some logic based on percentages, maybe we could all better understand it’s just a social construct. Btw my dad side was 88%+ African, so I expected my result range

    • @ReneeFreeman-zc4tj
      @ReneeFreeman-zc4tj 6 месяцев назад

      @theonlyladybella44480 I don't get you people. It's not a flex. Many women did it for survival. How can a group of terrorists love a group of people they enslaved? Those slave suffered from Stockholm syndrome. Coloristism still exists amongst black especially in the south. I'm from Louisiana, I know it exists. Brainwashed slave mixing with the slave terrorists....smh...it's nothing to be proud about. I see if slavery never existed. All these people love on their own admission, that wasn't the class. They were mentally beaten down and worship the lesser race themselves.

  • @AnnetteZetterholm-iz9zv
    @AnnetteZetterholm-iz9zv 28 дней назад

    Thank you - so informative!

  • @martineldritch
    @martineldritch Месяц назад +1

    Worked with both on a work crew one winter some 35 years ago. They both taught me to snort a pinch of cayenne pepper when you get a head cold (and it worked)

  • @rocklobster2929
    @rocklobster2929 7 месяцев назад +16

    I swear I thought he was describing two different types of crawfish at first 😂

  • @Dara-ih6jq
    @Dara-ih6jq 7 месяцев назад +99

    I’m a Creole here. I noticed most people use the two interchangeably and they don’t really know that there’s a difference. The foods have blended so much that’s probably why I’d imagine. It’s the food most people think of when they hear Creole and Cajun unless they from Louisiana, and they actually know what it is.

    •  7 месяцев назад

      This is the way all over the damn planet. And it's always bthis way. way.

    • @jrich436
      @jrich436 7 месяцев назад +4

      Creole really only gets mentioned in a few movies and the biggest was probably Interview with the Vampire and he didn't explain what it meant
      Everything exported says Cajun, on it and they aren't going to research the difference

    • @timbrwolf1121
      @timbrwolf1121 7 месяцев назад +2

      My dad grew up in lousiana.
      If your crawfish boil wedding reception is in the holler with all 127 cousins its a cajun wedding.
      We had to drive through a cow pasture to get there. I grew up in backwoods illinois and missouri and I felt like the city boy at that wedding.

    • @stevenwayneart
      @stevenwayneart 7 месяцев назад +4

      There isn't much of a difference in SW Louisiana. My family there (and many of the neighboring families) who call themselves Creoles are mixed with French, Native, African, Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, and even Jewish, but they're all direct descendants of the French Acadian exiles who settled there, so they're literally Cajuns too.

    • @TBird89
      @TBird89 7 месяцев назад

      Please don’t lose or let go of your heritage

  • @pickleballer1729
    @pickleballer1729 24 дня назад

    Thanks. I always wondered about that.

  • @julies48a
    @julies48a 28 дней назад

    Thanks for the info. Interesting.

  • @celimonteiro3371
    @celimonteiro3371 7 месяцев назад +89

    I was born in Cape Verde ( a small country in Africa colonized by Portugal) we call ourselves “Crioulo”, and we speak Cape Verdean Creole, we speak Portuguese also. I didn’t know about the others “Creole” before coming to America. 😊

    • @LanceDa510
      @LanceDa510 7 месяцев назад +1

      Creole just means language or create a new language. Of course there’s creoles outside of Cape Verde.

    • @dswynne
      @dswynne 7 месяцев назад +6

      That's the thing about the New World. Eventually, even one race, differences and distinct cultures can develop.

    • @celimonteiro3371
      @celimonteiro3371 7 месяцев назад +10

      @@LanceDa510 I never said there was only one creole. I said when I was there I didn’t know about the other ones, because internet wasn’t the same that it is today. I know the definition of creole thank you

    • @candyDander
      @candyDander 7 месяцев назад +4

      I used to think that creole itself was a specific language spoken the same way by every group that spoke creole. It helps now that people are more specific when they say it, like Haitian creole.

    • @hoobeydoobey1267
      @hoobeydoobey1267 7 месяцев назад +3

      There were a lot of people from Cape Verde on Cape Cod in Ma.

  • @willbates8464
    @willbates8464 8 месяцев назад +345

    A man who's educated and educating the people about his own people. Very cool to see someone truly understand the area they're from and why things are the way they are.

    • @benjamintickle1476
      @benjamintickle1476 7 месяцев назад +10

      To bad it's not exactly right, lol. Laissez le bon temp rouler!

    • @blacksnapper7684
      @blacksnapper7684 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@benjamintickle1476ok now I’m interested! what did he get wrong for future reference?

    • @benjamintickle1476
      @benjamintickle1476 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@blacksnapper7684 ok, where people come from for one, creole is what the Spanish called all children born in their colonies and the French and Cajun in Louisiana are different French settlers . If he can't see the difference between creole and Cajuns physically is puzzling seeing how creole have African and Caucasian features while Cajuns don't and although they both speak French in Louisiana in the Caribbean the creole language, a mainly Spanish and African mix, is more dominant.

  • @maryhauser6685
    @maryhauser6685 3 дня назад

    Thank you, from New Orleans Louisiana

  • @Nursfaith
    @Nursfaith 16 дней назад

    Love this education, thank you

  • @tm13tube
    @tm13tube 7 месяцев назад +63

    My preacher was Cajun, dark a swarthy, short. His wife a statuesque, blond Texan. He sang beautifully. I loved him. Humility and kindness.

  • @MarieL10
    @MarieL10 7 месяцев назад +36

    I live in Texas near the Louisiana border. My father is Cajun and I am proud to be half Cajun. Many of my cousins live in Southwest Louisiana. Abbeville to be exact. A beautiful little town south of Lafayette. Nice to hear a correct explanation of our culture. 👍🏻🧓🏻🇺🇸Texas

    • @billiehummel
      @billiehummel 7 месяцев назад

      Yep, that’s what we like to call Cajun Country.

  • @-Einherjar_
    @-Einherjar_ Месяц назад +1

    Proud Louisiana man here. My father is creole and my mother is cajun and neither of them taught me French.

  • @wildewilde5775
    @wildewilde5775 7 дней назад +1

    Makes sense why I always call Newfoundlanders canadian Cajun 😂

  • @subsidized2778
    @subsidized2778 7 месяцев назад +85

    Thank goodness someone finally tried to explain this. People never believe me when I say Cajuns were from nova scotia

    • @JakeNobody1979
      @JakeNobody1979 7 месяцев назад +9

      And New Brunswick.

    • @swannoir7949
      @swannoir7949 7 месяцев назад +15

      Cajuns have no African ancestry. Creoles do. That's the major difference.

    • @Stabbs1313
      @Stabbs1313 7 месяцев назад

      That’s so weird lol. Why wouldn’t ppl believe you on that? It’s in TONS of history books 😂

    • @majorlazor5058
      @majorlazor5058 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@swannoir7949 weird that out of all the racial groups that make up Creole it’s just African ancestry excluded for Cajun.

    • @IW3527
      @IW3527 7 месяцев назад +3

      ​@@majorlazor5058this is the deep south USA we're talking about and these cultures were developing alongside chattel slavery of black people and racial segregation so there being a divergence along racial lines isn't very surprising to me

  • @aserodriguez1425
    @aserodriguez1425 6 месяцев назад +12

    "Don't be stupid you need to know the difference ".......
    "it's almost impossible to separate".😂😂😂😂😂

    • @slickrick8046
      @slickrick8046 3 месяца назад

      😂😂😂😂😂 Being that he’s from Louisiana…he won’t know that he contradicted himself. 🤭

  • @deplorable-0ne
    @deplorable-0ne Месяц назад +1

    I'm more confused now than a mosquito in a mannequin factory

  • @rooshavik9133
    @rooshavik9133 2 месяца назад +1

    damn that old lady really meant it when she said she was creole

  • @Wese-jd2dw
    @Wese-jd2dw 7 месяцев назад +93

    This man just taught me everything my social studies teacher taught me in like half the time

    • @kareydavis
      @kareydavis 7 месяцев назад

      Funny how that works. Some school districts spend more time trying to hide and discourage factual information

    • @Nandoswitharando
      @Nandoswitharando 6 месяцев назад +2

      And that’s why school is largely unnecessary in its current form

  • @movienerd202
    @movienerd202 7 месяцев назад +238

    Both cultures make great food. 😊

    • @TheMandaloreFett
      @TheMandaloreFett 7 месяцев назад +10

      You’re goddamn right😂😤🥰🍽️

    • @thehopelesspragmatic6701
      @thehopelesspragmatic6701 7 месяцев назад +8

      Texan here, I love some Louisianan cooking and agree with this statement.

    • @Mster_J
      @Mster_J 7 месяцев назад +1

      I read this in Jeffrey Dahmer’s voice

    • @daverhoden445
      @daverhoden445 7 месяцев назад +1

      I see you went straight to the important part.

    • @TheAnnoyingBoss
      @TheAnnoyingBoss 7 месяцев назад +1

      I always think about trying to hit a food tour of the southwest starting in san diego and ending in miami

  • @betatester03
    @betatester03 2 месяца назад +3

    THIS is good content.
    .

  • @kianay3875
    @kianay3875 Месяц назад

    I find that history extremely interesting. thanks for the content!

  • @pj195
    @pj195 5 месяцев назад +33

    Love the food! My 7th grade Civics teacher explained his "Cajun" ancestry a million years ago...Thanks Mr. Duzat!!!😊 you are point on! 😊

  • @Dr_Disconnect
    @Dr_Disconnect 7 месяцев назад +81

    As a Cajun when i moved away to FL and went to a restaurant that miss spelled it when naming a dish on their menu. I asked, "what yall doing to make it Cajun? Because i want to know because I am a Cajun." That girl looked at me and said, "oh you are named after a seasoning?" Nearly broke my soul.

    • @jeanhensley3903
      @jeanhensley3903 7 месяцев назад +2

      😂 Nooooo

    • @jrich436
      @jrich436 7 месяцев назад +1

      Has not been a time in traveling this country that I have not come across some "Cajun" restaurant.
      We used to stop in just to see. We don't even waste our time now, its NEVER actually good
      Had an uncle move to Cali. Told us some local place had a chef from "back home" that "flew in" ingredients
      Told him "ive heard this all before and its always BS"
      He kept talking about how good it was and this dish Redbeans Ahnjoulay
      Had me meet the chef and everything when we ordered
      Opened up the beans and there were carrots in it -_-, but thats not where this falls apart
      I take the menu because I want to know how much hes jacking these people out there on this "authentic" food
      Thats when I saw it.... when I stopped laughing I asked him what it was called again
      "Ahnjoulay" he says
      I said "You mean Andouille"? (ahn-dew-we for you uninitiated who may read this) and told him he's been gone to long and should be ashamed of himself
      His wife laughed, he didn't....
      🤣

  • @Neechiee7
    @Neechiee7 Месяц назад

    Bout time somebody covered this ❤

  • @user-bl1ji7io6u
    @user-bl1ji7io6u 8 дней назад +1

    😮I lived in Louisiana for 4 years in Cajun land. Close to the Texan border.
    . I find the people very welcoming, much more than in the Eastern cities. They also enjoy life. They have Fait dodo parties every Friday where they dance and enjoy Cajun food. There is much to say about Cajuns besides their excellent , traditional food.

  • @ambermg7527
    @ambermg7527 7 месяцев назад +83

    The food is banging. I’m in SE TX and the food from both Cajun and Creole culture are staples. My family had gumbo for Christmas and Thanksgiving. It’s never too hot to eat it. 👏🏾

  • @tameikadansby9042
    @tameikadansby9042 7 месяцев назад +18

    I love learning about all the different people in this country and how they came to be here and the contributions they make to the country and how they have influenced our culture. So many different people who came together and made us one.

  • @GregStallion
    @GregStallion 5 часов назад

    I was born in the early ‘90s and started reading & collecting comics in kindergarten. For the longest time, Gambit was the only frame of reference I had for Cajun people.

  • @lastofthe4horsemen279
    @lastofthe4horsemen279 Месяц назад +1

    We were Acadian that stayed in Canada.My Granddad was a boxer and lobsterman.Played a hell of an Acadian fiddle.

  • @chrisbro1849
    @chrisbro1849 6 месяцев назад +128

    As a born and raised creole women from southwest Louisiana, this was done so respectfully.
    I do want to add that when thinking in terms of food just know most is creole as gumbo is obviously a black ( native, African) word and a lot of the rich sauce type foods are considered creole and not Cajun. However, like the host in video pointed out, we are so intertwined that it is hard to distinguish!

    • @jaredclark8335
      @jaredclark8335 3 месяца назад +1

      As a Central Louisianan from Alec up we’re an annex of east Texas

    • @DeepDownInTheOcean
      @DeepDownInTheOcean 3 месяца назад

      Idek what to call myself. I have both Creole and Cajun ancestors... My great (x2 possibly x3) grandfather is cajun, while the others are creole.

    • @Ericsaidful
      @Ericsaidful 3 месяца назад

      This guy could be Creole as well, no?

    • @chrisbro1849
      @chrisbro1849 3 месяца назад

      @@Ericsaidful if you identify as white then u are Cajun if you identify and black; creole.

    • @Ericsaidful
      @Ericsaidful 3 месяца назад +1

      @@chrisbro1849 You can’t really identify as those things, you either are or you aren’t. He looks white in the video but that doesn’t mean he isn’t creole as creole also encompasses people of European ancestry. I don’t know how much you know about Spain and Portugal but a lot of them have white skin as well, always have.

  • @blastingsound
    @blastingsound 7 месяцев назад +220

    Lol Thank Youuu!!! my wife's family is full on Cajun just as you described and I'm a native with our rez just next door and we are both from rural crawfish country. We also travel all around and EVERYTIME we tell someone we're from Louisiana, their first response is always: "oh, I love 'New Orleans" .... and we're just like, lemme explain:

    • @sir3958
      @sir3958 7 месяцев назад

      Girl to be creole you have to directly be born in France then move here. The family is Cajun up until children are born on us soil. Those children are now creole unlike their Cajun parents

    • @f1r33x1t
      @f1r33x1t 7 месяцев назад +1

      lol. is she fat?

    • @Ajayi2003
      @Ajayi2003 7 месяцев назад

      @@sir3958you are what your parents are bruh. Where you are born doesn’t fucking matter.

    • @RICKtoSICK10
      @RICKtoSICK10 7 месяцев назад +6

      ⁠@@sir3958you just contradicted yourself bro

    • @actuallyNo...
      @actuallyNo... 7 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@sir3958, smdh. 🫢😦

  • @cheshirelizzy
    @cheshirelizzy 2 месяца назад

    Thank you! I’ve always wondered!

  • @alistairmills7608
    @alistairmills7608 25 дней назад

    Great explanation, thank you

  • @Caperkidd-qs8vq
    @Caperkidd-qs8vq 7 месяцев назад +8

    As a generational descendant of French settlers my ancestors had broken from the mainland of Nova Scotia and were peacefully living in Cape Breton. I hail from a mixture of French and Aboriginal Mi'kmaq peoples on the east coast of Canada. It's nice to see the message.

  • @tonyonaperky2128
    @tonyonaperky2128 6 месяцев назад +467

    As a Hatian, we also consider ourselves creole as it's our native language
    (Edit) I stand corrected. Two different things

    • @Premye
      @Premye 6 месяцев назад +71

      Actually, your language is Kreyòl not Kréyòl or Creole. Contrary to popular opinion, those three words have different contextual values as they are of the result of three different languages.

    • @ryansauchuk7290
      @ryansauchuk7290 3 месяца назад +10

      I thought the language was societal collapse

    • @MischiefManaged255
      @MischiefManaged255 3 месяца назад

      Nah your ancestors murdered all the men, women, old people and children that were anything “other” than African. You are not Creole….as those are a mix of people. Some of us haven’t forgotten the genocide Haitians committed.

    • @purseypurse4214
      @purseypurse4214 3 месяца назад +4

      @@Premyeexactly right

    • @SadfoxGuyver
      @SadfoxGuyver 3 месяца назад

      @@Premyeway to man splain

  • @Dubya_Busch
    @Dubya_Busch 2 месяца назад

    Cool history lesson, thanks!!

  • @jocelynrichmond7215
    @jocelynrichmond7215 Месяц назад

    Thanks for the education. I found this very interesting.

  • @devinperry3947
    @devinperry3947 7 месяцев назад +35

    Dude, thank you so much for making this video. I have been trying to explain to my wife what I am and when I tell her black white Mexican Indian she’s like what are you talking about?

  • @Someones_account_haha
    @Someones_account_haha 7 месяцев назад +97

    They seem to get along well and have amazing cultures too. God bless them

    • @ricardorascon88
      @ricardorascon88 3 месяца назад +3

      Too much mixing like what are creoles when there a mixture of 5 ethnic groups 😂always confused me ...glad I'm no creole though 🎉I'm happy being Meztizo

    • @ricardorascon88
      @ricardorascon88 3 месяца назад +1

      I'm mixed myself but not that mixed 😂😂I'm Spainard European mixed with Native American indengenous

    • @Swiper_no_swiping777
      @Swiper_no_swiping777 3 месяца назад

      ​@@ricardorascon88I'm a real Creole

    • @ricardorascon88
      @ricardorascon88 3 месяца назад +3

      @Shelikemytakebanana they Said main orginal creole were Spainard and French you look more on the African/Native American side of creole ...

    • @Swiper_no_swiping777
      @Swiper_no_swiping777 3 месяца назад +1

      @@ricardorascon88 i dont know about my being spainard

  • @user-qg5wg9ut2o
    @user-qg5wg9ut2o 14 дней назад

    Thank you for your wonderful educational presentation ❤❤❤🎉🎉🎉

  • @Spacecatbingchilling
    @Spacecatbingchilling Месяц назад

    Thank you for this quick knowledge