🇿🇦 Geography Now! SOUTH AFRICA | African Americans React To South Africa

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  • Опубликовано: 19 ноя 2022
  • 🇿🇦 Geography Now! SOUTH AFRICA | African Americans React To South Africa | The Demouchets REACT
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Комментарии • 499

  • @TheDemouchetsREACT
    @TheDemouchetsREACT  Год назад +58

    21:19 I definitely meant North & South Africa instead of America. The doctor I couldn't think of was the late Dr Stella Ameyo Adadevoh in Nigeria.
    This was a highly requested video and we wanted to honor the request. We made a mistake of reacting to this video at the very end of our recording session when we started having having battery issues and we were getting tired. We will make it up to y'all (South Africa) this week. Love y'all!❤

    • @Justafox305
      @Justafox305 Год назад +2

      can you react to the African American language/culture (Gullah or gullah geechee and then Sierra Leone’s Krio language/tribe. Krio tribe is the first tribe in west Africa that was formed by African Americans (the Gullah ppl of Carolina/va)

    • @TheDemouchetsREACT
      @TheDemouchetsREACT  Год назад +2

      @@Justafox305 Yes!!!! We have yet to visit in person, but I love the essence of Queen Quet! I don't know about the Krio tribe, but I will try to find good videos to share.

    • @Justafox305
      @Justafox305 Год назад +1

      @@TheDemouchetsREACT ❤️❤️

    • @baroznoma2056
      @baroznoma2056 Год назад +1

      React to Kenya. Very similar to South Africa

    • @lennonmuthusamy3560
      @lennonmuthusamy3560 Год назад +1

      Hi if you are visiting Durban in South Africa you have to visit Florida Road we have the best the best restaurants and eat outs with mixed culture's

  • @vat81
    @vat81 Год назад +119

    Colored people absolutely have their own culture that they created.

  • @Matthew-qc1xz
    @Matthew-qc1xz Год назад +158

    I'm a Cape Coloured person, and I'd say yes we do have identifiable cultures. We were all segregated and could only associate with our own group and so a unique culture developed. Most Cape Coloureds speak Afrikaans, but its distinct from the Afrikaans the Afrikaaner people speak, because of segregation.

    • @sarikehibbert2676
      @sarikehibbert2676 Год назад +13

      I would recommend that they check out the Kaapse Klopse festival

    • @brendonjoseph4007
      @brendonjoseph4007 Год назад +15

      We can Argue but we are Khoi and San. But being from Cpt I believe that we have a totally different vibe from the rest of the country

    • @Matthew-qc1xz
      @Matthew-qc1xz Год назад +19

      @@brendonjoseph4007 I believe we have Khoi and San ancestry(as well as other ancestry, including Bantu) but we are not Khoi and San...
      You don't know the first thing about surviving in the Kalahari so please be respectful when claiming a culture and way of life!

    • @mnmeskc848
      @mnmeskc848 Год назад +4

      Coloured Afrikaans has distinct since long before segregation even. It was our enslaved and Khoekhoe ancestors who turned Hollands ("Dutch") into Afrikaans ("African") in the first place. But the Boere whitewashed that history when they decided they wanted to be Afrikaners (a name they also used to call creole slaves and Khoekhoe).

    • @agrid2608
      @agrid2608 Год назад +4

      khoe-san was not a culture. It's a clumsy European way of life catch-all descriptor for AFRICAN pastoralists (khoe) and AFRICAN hunter-gatherers/foragers (San), or alternatively for a largely moribund "latin" linguistic classification.
      The houses/chiefdoms that rose to encompass the modern living cultures that form the extant nations of today (Xhosa, Tswana, Sotho, etc) formed out of these agro-pastoralists, pastoralists & hunter-gatherers.
      I'm all for including Coloured but this bizarre trend of mixed race Asian-Caucasian-African people using the ancestry of the above mentioned natives as an ahistoric, pretend exclusive "cultural identity" is simply daft.
      No actual organic indigenous culture uses a European-created abstraction as a culture. There was no such organic historic culture.
      Incidentally it is the Cape Xhosa, an actual organic native culture, that formed a modern nation in the native reserve of the Cape Colony that is continuous, organic & practices millennia old Khoi practice like "Ingqithi".

  • @ClumsyPanda-oj3he
    @ClumsyPanda-oj3he Год назад +110

    Hey 🙋🏻‍♀️ yes it’s ok to call coloured South Africans coloured… we have a bunch of our own traditions and foods depending on where you’re from in the country.

    • @MartinMenge
      @MartinMenge Год назад +7

      I think it's fine if used as a name for the ethnocultural group but not necessarily as short-hand for any South African that has mixed heritage. From my experience most mixed-race South Africans who aren't Coloured aren't that bothered, but will quietly correct you.

    • @realriaan3620
      @realriaan3620 Год назад +22

      @@MartinMenge no. I'm Coloured, I've never met a Coloured person that's ashamed of being called Coloured.

    • @TheDemouchetsREACT
      @TheDemouchetsREACT  Год назад +2

      It's just a culture shock for us due to segregation our families went through.

    • @marting9600
      @marting9600 Год назад

      ​@@realriaan3620but does it really makes sense? I do digest it but not really digest it because there hv always been something I don't like about it since child age

  • @realriaan3620
    @realriaan3620 Год назад +51

    Coloured person here🙋🏽‍♂️
    Some Cultural and ethnical differences between Coloured and Black people.
    *Note, Coloured people are not primarily just people with a black and white parent. We have deep generational mixing, going 3rd, 4th 5th down in our generation. And our distined culture also separates us from black and white South Africans. Henceforth, a person like Trevor Noah with a black and white parent can't be considered Coloured, as Xhosa is his culture.
    Differences :
    - Ethnically, black people have African ancestry.
    - Coloured people have African, European and Asian ancestry.
    - Black people primarily speak African languages.
    - Coloured people primarily speak English and Afrikaans.
    - Black people have an African and Western diet.
    - Coloured people have a Eastern and Western diet.
    - Black people have African traditions (Labola, ritual sacrifices ect)
    - Coloured people have Christian and Islamic traditions.
    - Black people are Black.
    - Coloured people come in all different shapes and sizes and skin colors.
    - Black people consider themselves purely African.
    - Coloureds consider themselves as children of the world.
    Althou we share many differences, majority Blacks and Coloureds accept our differences and rejoice our oneness of being South African.
    We may be different, but we are equals.

  • @isomario
    @isomario Год назад +88

    South Africa had a lot to digest. Interestingly, In 1958 Jamaica was the first territory in the world to ban trade with South Africa to show solidarity against the apartheid system. This was before our official independence in 1962 and we be vocal in the UN efforts to end apartheid. Our music also reflected the struggles of Africa at the time via Bob Marley, songs like "Africa Unite". We still have strong ties with South Africa today. A popular myth is that the SA flag includes a bit of the Jamaican flag in honor of the support.💛💚🖤

    • @TheDemouchetsREACT
      @TheDemouchetsREACT  Год назад +6

      THIS is why we loooovvvveeee Jamaica! The bravery, the tenacity, the love!

    • @Vaal650
      @Vaal650 Год назад +4

      Whoa, learned something new today, thank you!

    • @Mamakhe048
      @Mamakhe048 Год назад +2

      ❤️❤️❤️

    • @wayne1984ish
      @wayne1984ish Год назад +4

      Further to the above; it was India that raised the racial practices (Apartheid) to UN and put it on their agenda in 1946. They were the first country to showcase the racial practices in South Africa to the World.

  • @oarabiletshwagong1736
    @oarabiletshwagong1736 Год назад +54

    Well in South Africa schools normally teach in two languages, English and another language.
    But it depends which part of South Africa you are in

    • @TheDemouchetsREACT
      @TheDemouchetsREACT  Год назад +12

      Language depends on where you are in America as well. We have Spanish and French immersion schools and in middle & high school we had a choice of which language we'd like to learn.

  • @theevoiceless
    @theevoiceless Год назад +24

    Y'all make us love our country more n more keep up the good work 🇿🇦♥️

    • @TheDemouchetsREACT
      @TheDemouchetsREACT  Год назад +3

      Wow! Thanks for this! It's helps us understand our impact even more.

    • @theevoiceless
      @theevoiceless Год назад +1

      @@TheDemouchetsREACT ♥️

  • @sportmemer3178
    @sportmemer3178 Год назад +15

    I swear coloureds are just built different, they give us a lot of things, you can watch trevor noahs analysis on that

  • @gixoupa4898
    @gixoupa4898 Год назад +16

    So here I am, learning about my country. 🇿🇦🇿🇦🇿🇦🇿🇦
    Thank u guys!!!

  • @benjiza0314
    @benjiza0314 Год назад +44

    SA is not the biggest country in Africa when it come to size or population but its one of the most powerful countries in Africa together with Egypt and Nigeria...

    • @ishmaelchiponda6383
      @ishmaelchiponda6383 Год назад

      South Africa it's big country interms of land

    • @ishmaelchiponda6383
      @ishmaelchiponda6383 Год назад

      Who lied to you? South Africa it's big country by landmass , imean size but not population

    • @benjiza0314
      @benjiza0314 Год назад +5

      @@ishmaelchiponda6383 read to understand not to reply... read again

    • @zaneledubazana5124
      @zaneledubazana5124 Год назад +3

      Algeria is the biggest in Africa. In sub-Saharan Africa, it is the Democratic Republic of Congo that is the biggest. South Africa comes in at no. 9 in all of Africa.

    • @shalbec3232
      @shalbec3232 Год назад +1

      @@ishmaelchiponda6383 it not the biggest🤣 not even in terms of Land the two biggest in Africa is algeria🇩🇿 and RD Congo🇨🇩 south Africa is on the least of some big countries but it not the biggest not even in terms of land

  • @hlalelemahlaela77
    @hlalelemahlaela77 Год назад +14

    The lady is very intellectual 🧠.
    I love how she thoroughly keeps on exactly understanding our country's history. Keep the good job guys.

  • @abster4709
    @abster4709 Год назад +25

    Coloured here, we definitely have our own culture and food too. Have a look at the kaapse klopse which is a huge part of our culture. We have mixed race like Trevor Noah who comes from a black mom and white dad and grew up with Xhosa culture then there's coloureds who are not just black/white mix. Some mixtures include Koi, Indian, Asian, black, white and Malay. There are so many different combinations and no two households are the same. When you visit Cape Town, you'll see a lot of us around.

    • @sylviasworld9397
      @sylviasworld9397 Год назад +1

      Yes, my mum had a tenant in the UK who was San. I could instantly tell because of the fold in his eye lids. I also had a teacher who was coloured, but she was mixed with so much. I don't think she was San at all though. My absolute favourite teacher in primary school. She was firm/strict, but always gave us the best advice. She fled SA, because she was member of the ANC.

    • @abster4709
      @abster4709 Год назад +1

      @@sylviasworld9397 That's definitely how most coloured moms/aunties are...very strict and passionate, especially when they're angry, but with lots of love for their kids/family.

    • @rainbowtrust6347
      @rainbowtrust6347 Год назад +1

      Yeah, this is a correct description of colored people. And coloreds prefare to take Dutch language as their vanacular , and English as 2nd language, both European languages and they have none of their African side language.

    • @rowen42069
      @rowen42069 Год назад

      ​@@rainbowtrust6347 I'm coloured and I don't speak Dutch i speak Afrikaans

    • @ririchida5721
      @ririchida5721 4 дня назад

      ​Afrikaans is dutch

  • @oagileagi5334
    @oagileagi5334 Год назад +34

    Dope reaction 🔥And yes, those are real worms not just insects. They are mostly loved by people who live in the north of South Africa. There’s even a tree full of them called mopani tree (that’s where the name mopani worms come from).

    • @mhlave2440
      @mhlave2440 Год назад +7

      Those are not worms. Those are caterpillars 🤷🏽‍♂️. The caterpillar of the Emperor moth to be exact.

    • @oagileagi5334
      @oagileagi5334 Год назад +3

      @@mhlave2440 Yoh I didn’t know that 🫢I just made my research…all along I thought they were worms. It’s more tense now that I think about it (moths)

    • @ianbeddowes5362
      @ianbeddowes5362 Год назад +2

      The Emperor Moth is impressive. Very large but common especially along the boder areas of Zimbabwe ans Botswana. For the Kalanga people they are a common daily meal and there are different ways of cooking them.@@mhlave2440

    • @TheDemouchetsREACT
      @TheDemouchetsREACT  Год назад +3

      I had to do a quick Google search. These worms look similar to the worms we have here. They frightened me as a child. I have a deep trauma with these worms (we call them caterpillars).

    • @oagileagi5334
      @oagileagi5334 Год назад

      @@TheDemouchetsREACT I recreated the same way when I first saw them alive as a child (was traumatic indeed)….few years later I realised people eat them. Since then , I’ve only seen them dried. I guess Myb that’s why I can’t bring myself to eat them because of the childhood trauma, (my whole family eats them thou).

  • @mnmeskc848
    @mnmeskc848 Год назад +7

    Coloured people definitely have their own cultural traditions that can differ from region to region, and community to community reflecting different aspects of our heritage from before and under colonisation.
    For instance, in this video they group Cape Malay with "Asian" (like Indian South Africans and Chinese South Africans), but that's actually a Coloured subculture based on the community being Muslim. It's important to note that Coloured identities grew not simply out of "white and black mixing", but specifically from the history of slavery and genocide in the Cape Colony. The Dutch settlers/Boers brought people from all over especially East Africa, India, Madagascar and Indonesia to work as slaves on wheat and wine farms, in the Dutch fort and do all sorts of domestic and craft work in the Cape Town. The different African and Asian slaves mixed with the Khoekhoe whose lands and cattle were taken by the Boers to form new cultures that we now group together as "Coloured", with specific communities also going by other identities too, like the Griqua clans and the Cape Malays.
    There's traditional dances among rural Coloured communities that are a mix of Khoe and European styles. There's musical instruments like the ghoema drum played at the Second New Year's Carnival which has East African origins and the ramkie (kinda like a little guitar) with South Indian origins. We have dishes like bobotie, koesiestes (very different to the white Afrikaner koeksisters they showed here) and waterblommetjie bredie which reflect the influences of our Indigenous African, Asian and European ancestries. And there's the Afrikaans language which developed out of slaves and Khoekhoe having to speak Dutch to each other and slave masters.
    It wouldn't usually be expected for a Coloured South African to know or take part in e.g. Xhosa traditional practices unless they have that specific family connection as many Coloured people in the Eastern Cape province do. Otherwise, Coloured refers to creole cultures of the descendants of slaves and landless Khoekhoe forced work on Boer farms.

  • @Justafox305
    @Justafox305 Год назад +4

    Thanks to shows like Netflix’s blood & water, so many black Americans want to visit South Africa ❤

  • @kgallykgalallo7582
    @kgallykgalallo7582 Год назад +10

    In South Africa being a coloured is more than just being a descendant of mixed races, they do have their culture that they practice and their indigenous food is also amazing and they're proud
    I'm 100% black Pedi (Northern Sotho) you know that tribe that eats Mopani worms 😁 yes I said worms

  • @nondumisobuthelezi4570
    @nondumisobuthelezi4570 Год назад +11

    OMG I'm very Zulu, from the North of KZN (where culture is still practiced heavily) ...i didn't even know there was an app for ilobolo 😳, my reaction was like yours 🤣

    • @Mbalings
      @Mbalings Год назад

      The app was a ridiculous joke. It’s not a real thing, was surprised Geography Now took it seriously 🤣 I’m also from North KZN

    • @nondumisobuthelezi4570
      @nondumisobuthelezi4570 Год назад

      @@Mbalings 🤣🤣🤣🤣 i was so shook like, haaibo when did all this happen lol

  • @ianbeddowes5362
    @ianbeddowes5362 Год назад +15

    Mopane Worms are the caterpillars of a moth . They eat the mopane bush. They are mostle eaten in Limpopo and North-West Povinces as well as Zimbabwe and Botswana. They are delicious and you will find recipes on RUclips. My wife is Zimbabwean and we eat them frequently.

    • @sylviasworld9397
      @sylviasworld9397 Год назад +1

      Those worms are called different things around Africa but are quite commonly eaten, especially in villages. The white ones are also eaten, even in Australia by the Aboriginal people, they call it Witchetty Grubs.

  • @mishawildeman5687
    @mishawildeman5687 Год назад +7

    I'm a South African colored we do have our own cultures we are a mixture of cultures mostly cape Malay and Afrikaans cultures. We have a language aswell which is a Afrikaans English mix

  • @Arti-ficiallyChi
    @Arti-ficiallyChi Год назад +2

    I'm a proud coloured from Cape Town. And we use the term proudly because we have our own heritage. My parents ancestors are descendents of slaves and European s. So try to not think of the term was used in America as coloured people here use the term very proudly.
    The Khoisan /Bushman are the original inhabitants of South Africa ...they would kind of be classified as coloured as well because of how they look

  • @MosesMatsepane
    @MosesMatsepane Год назад +6

    The Dutch were not the first Europeans in the Cape, that's what they are taught in their history books. The first Europeans in Cape were the Portuguese, and they used to trade well with the Khoisan and Xhosa people for decades. This is well documented in Portuguese shipping manifests from that time period. There is also evidence of Chinesse and Arabs visiting the Cape, long before the Dutch. The Dutch narrative is popular because they brought violence, oppression and subjugated people. The Dutch East India Company was the largest enterprise on earth, with a navy larger than any nation.

    • @82pattycake
      @82pattycake Год назад +1

      Yes, Vasco da Gama was the Portuguese explorer, and first European who discovered the sea route to India via Cape of Good Hope

  • @anunnaki_ent
    @anunnaki_ent Год назад +3

    Look: I'm a Tswana man married to a Coloured woman and I can confirm that they have created their own culture and norms.
    I need to add that although theirs is more close to western culture than it is to African culture, they have adapted certain aspects and practices from the Natives.

  • @KhayaDlanga
    @KhayaDlanga Год назад +7

    South Africa is about double the size of Texas. Algeria is the largest country on the continent, South Africa is only 9th largest.
    The reason Xhosa has so many click sounds is because of the inter mindling and trading between the two peoples. They would even intermarry.
    Coloured people are mixed race people who continue to mix with other mix race people. In fact, South African coloured people are the most mixed people on the world.
    Fun facts: South Africa has more Sotho speakers than Lesotho, more Tswana speakers than Botswana and more Swati speakers than Swaziland (now eSwatini).
    We also have the repeat visitors. This means of a person visits South Africa, they are much more likely to come back.

  • @celestenkosi4617
    @celestenkosi4617 Год назад +40

    Hey guys, I hope you guys are doing good 🤗❤️
    Katherine said that they do not teach the Native languages like they teach English and Afrikaans. That's actually not true and it depends which school you go to, I for one did only English and IsiZulu in school and I didn't do Afrikaans. The heritage day is for one day but for the whole week people wear their traditional clothes and especially on weekends when they go to church, and I am one of those people ✊🏾🤭. Mopani worms are real worms and they are mostly eaten by the North Eastern people of South Africa like the Venda and Tsonga people, and I heard that they are actually very nice👌🏾💯

    • @mhlave2440
      @mhlave2440 Год назад +7

      Hi Celeste, as a Matsonga I want to debunk the misnomer of masonja as worms. They are not worms but caterpillars rather. The caterpillar of the Emperor moth to be exact.

    • @celestenkosi4617
      @celestenkosi4617 Год назад +2

      @@mhlave2440 thank you for that info Mhlave 🤗

    • @TheDemouchetsREACT
      @TheDemouchetsREACT  Год назад +2

      Thanks for sharing with us, Celeste!

    • @jabulilem1474
      @jabulilem1474 Год назад +3

      Mopani worms are also eaten by your Pedi and Tswana people...

    • @yandisajaggers4841
      @yandisajaggers4841 Год назад +1

      It is true that investment into English and Afrikaans languages is far more than our native languages. That's due to our Apartheid/Colonial history. Proof of this is how few white people speak native languages but people of colour HAVE to know at least one of them to make it even though white people only make up less than 10% of the population.

  • @Mbalings
    @Mbalings Год назад +35

    We farm our own food in the rurals. In my home we have the following fruit trees 🍇 🍍 🍏 🍌 guava, papaya, 🥭, mulberry, sugarcane and a couple “wild fruits”. Planted by my father in the 80s and we still enjoy it today.
    We have a veggie garden and a huge maze field which we farm in yearly.
    We also have our own chickens (meat and eggs) and some families have cattle and goat. ❤️ 🇿🇦 ❤️
    Edit: Our Coloured People definitely have their own culture. But not all mixed race people are Coloured People. But even mixed race people do not find being classified as Coloured as offensive, they just correct you and it’s not a big deal. ❤️
    Apartheid was not a “controversial system” it was a crime against our forefathers. We’re still waiting for reparations.

    • @sylviasworld9397
      @sylviasworld9397 Год назад +1

      Sounds so good, I'm daydreaming about it.

    • @TheDemouchetsREACT
      @TheDemouchetsREACT  Год назад +6

      This is our goal when we purchase our home! We want to grow our own food. It is amazing you all are able to continue eating the crops your father planted in the 80's. You all make us so happy when you share stories like this.
      Indeed.

    • @erit.africa
      @erit.africa Год назад

      Lol@ Papaya worms! 😂😂😂😂

    • @Mbalings
      @Mbalings Год назад +2

      @@erit.africa LMAO! It’s what he heard hle!

    • @Mbalings
      @Mbalings Год назад

      @@TheDemouchetsREACT ❤️❤️❤️

  • @marvellousigbineweka6830
    @marvellousigbineweka6830 Год назад +5

    @14:57. The movie you are taking about was talking about the Ebola outbreak in Nigeria and how it was handled successfully. The first of it's kind. The woman you are referring to in the movie is the late Dr.Stella Adadevoh and the country's index case( the man who brought it into the country) was Liberian Diplomat Patrick Sawyer.

  • @1HourOf.
    @1HourOf. Год назад +4

    For the last I've been appreciating how amazing this country of South Africa is ...and it makes me happy that more and more African - Americans now knowing that Africa is not one country that is a jungle that only has wild animals and poor people🙂

  • @riftenratt
    @riftenratt Год назад +1

    From the late 1800's and about 5 decades later, indentured laborers from India were brought to South Africa by the British to work in farms and plantations and mines. It's often overlooked history, but Kwa-Zulu Natal has the largest Indian population outside of India itself.

  • @TinyToonStar
    @TinyToonStar Год назад +4

    I'm a Cape Coloured, proud to be one too 😁. I find it quite interesting to see how differently we react to the word. I believe we were given an option to change it but we were just like "Nah, we're good". The word, despite how we got it, carries very little negativity in us. We're chilled with it.
    We do have our own unique culture separate from the others (and us Coloureds do have a certain tradition that we've had for about the 4 or so centuries we existed) , so do the White Africans. We learnt the original African traditions in school because its part of the curriculum. In one of school subjects, Life Orientation, we have an entire topic dedicated to Cultures, Traditions and Religions so we mainly learn it from there.
    As for lobola, from what I remember: the more educated the girl is, the more expensive she is. So a lady who had gone to university would cost more than a lady who only went as far as high school. Someone can correct me on that though.

  • @nd4523
    @nd4523 Год назад +7

    Hi there. I am Cape Coloured. We are a completely separate ethnicity and do have our own culture and traditions. And it's completely ok to use the name, We are coloured and proud, What's great about South Africa is, We are integrated with most of the cultures and traditions from a young age. Although we have our problems. SA is a great country

    • @Matthew-qc1xz
      @Matthew-qc1xz Год назад

      Everyone has culture friend. Your household has it's own culture. We have a national culture as SAns and Cape Coloured people have a culture. There is no society without culture.

    • @TheDemouchetsREACT
      @TheDemouchetsREACT  Год назад +1

      What is your most favorite aspect of your culture?

    • @MosesMatsepane
      @MosesMatsepane Год назад

      Absolutely.

    • @nd4523
      @nd4523 Год назад

      @@TheDemouchetsREACT Our Versatility and openess :) Within the coloured community, We are surrounded by all religions and you grow up learning about all aspects. We also live a fully integrated life where we celebrate both Christian and Muslim holidays. We are also very friendly, Have our own sense of music and Food is a big part of being coloured. Every house you enter, You will be fed :)

  • @pollen_ntlapo
    @pollen_ntlapo Год назад +51

    There is no ebola in South Africa

    • @vincentkm5379
      @vincentkm5379 Год назад

      Exactly

    • @yolandamorrison8079
      @yolandamorrison8079 Год назад +2

      Was surprised to hear that too.

    • @iasproduction2993
      @iasproduction2993 Год назад

      Ebola like aids are imported into Africa for many reasons.

    • @mogp427
      @mogp427 Год назад +6

      Even malaria...

    • @shalbec3232
      @shalbec3232 Год назад

      @@mogp427 desease is a thing that comes a go never say never any country can have maleria or ebola

  • @granvilledauds8276
    @granvilledauds8276 Год назад +2

    Hi guys, just to make a small thing known. Coloureds like me are actually not known by being mixed race, but we are the Khoisan people rebranded by the Apartheid govt.

  • @izzyrahtlholeho6070
    @izzyrahtlholeho6070 Год назад +5

    Big up to you guys, love from Lesotho

  • @msp4254
    @msp4254 Год назад +5

    Even though we refer to coloureds as mix, it's not the same as biracial.
    One or both parents must be coloured to be coloured. It is a race.
    Trevor Noah is mixed but not coloured, he is biracial.

  • @nelenesmithSA
    @nelenesmithSA Год назад +11

    You can visit the Vredefort crater, it's not closed off to the public..I've never been there but I believe it's a tourist attraction where you get taken on a tour and they explain everything to you. In terms of the hospital and it's size..yes it might be big but it's government run so it's completely dilapidated..the Drs are great but the wards are terrible..people have to take their own blankets and pillows there. The bathrooms are shocking..the service is shocking.. if you can afford a private hospital then you will avoid government hospitals at all cost..
    When it comes to the African languages taught in school, it depends on where you are based. The majority in the area's language will be taught..so I think she is from Cape Town so she was taught Xhosa but here in Gauteng and Johannesburg specifically, Zulu is the 3rd language taught.
    The coloureds have their own culture..look it up..they have the Kaapse Klopse which is an amazing colorful coloured parade full of beautiful dances and music. The whites as they mentioned are spilt between Afrikaans and English. Afrikaans is the people who broke away from the english..we have our own language (Afrikaans) and our own culture. We are God fearing and very traditional in terms of family. There was a "Boer war" where the english killed 28000 Afrikaans women and children in concentration camps. Today we are all mixed and live happily together. Like I mentioned in your previous video, I married an english man and even though some rural Afrikaners might frown upon that, it is mostly seen as normal these days. An interesting fact about Cape Town: it is the gay capital of the world. It is seen as a very metro and liberal city. It also has 4 seasons in one day so people like us never know what to wear there when we visit 😅
    Heritage day is only celebrated for the day.. but we have many, many different public holidays. And even though heritage day is the day where more people show their traditional clothes, we still live our traditions every day..and a braai takes place at least once a week in our house because it just makes the food taste so much better

    • @TheDemouchetsREACT
      @TheDemouchetsREACT  Год назад

      Interesting! We will look more into the Kaapse Klopse. We still get so shocked about history sometimes. I'm curious to know how both of your families felt about your marriage. We love barbeque, too!

    • @nelenesmithSA
      @nelenesmithSA Год назад

      @@TheDemouchetsREACT My parents adores him.. he is more like a boer (Afrikaner) in his mannerisms (I think it comes from his dad's Zimbabwean side). I expected them to not like him with all his tattoos, the fact that he's english and he isn't a Christian..but because he treats me so well and he really is the only one that can hold a candle next to my dad, they really love him as a son. He is a wonderful husband and they couldn't have asked for anyone better for me. He also respects my faith so he attends church when I ask him to and we are raising our child christian..he even reads the bible to our daughter. I'm sure you will absolutely love the "Kaapse klopse" once you see it. It's such a celebration of the coloured culture in South Africa. Love your reactions, keep it going 🙏

  • @lethu_z
    @lethu_z 11 месяцев назад +1

    A lot if people sleep on South Africa, the first heart transplant in the world was performed in South Africa.

  • @bhekanimemela134
    @bhekanimemela134 Год назад +1

    i've enjoyed this episode, very informative, shout out to the other guys for sharing so much info.

  • @kabelokhumalo3739
    @kabelokhumalo3739 Год назад +1

    Heritage day happens on the 24th of September but if the holiday happens on a Friday then it’s usually celebrated the whole weekend

  • @Big_Kid007
    @Big_Kid007 Год назад +6

    South Africa 🇿🇦 have two oceans were they meet together in Western Cape (Indian ocean and Atlantic ocean)

    • @ianbeddowes5362
      @ianbeddowes5362 Год назад +3

      The interesting thing is there is a clear line between the two. The water is two distinct colours.

  • @Yaya-im2kg
    @Yaya-im2kg Год назад +6

    Yes,coloured people have their own culture and tradition. Trevor Noah for example,he looks coloured but he is not coloured culturally so he is just mixed-race or biracial and has a Xhosa background and culture. He is not coloured because coloured people in South Africa are a group of people,much like Xhosa,Zulu and other nations(groups),who have their own traditions,culture and to some extent language too.

  • @chrisandwilliams78
    @chrisandwilliams78 Год назад +3

    Although Trevor Noah looks liked a typical coloured person he does not identify as one. I stand corrected but I think he mentions this in his book. As coloured people we are so diversely and uniquely mixed and have our own culture. Some notable coloured people are Wayde Van Niekerk (Olympic track and field athlethe), Cheslin Kolbe and Bryan Habana (Rugby players) , Kim Engelbrecht, Lesley-Ann Brandt (Actress), Amy kleinhans and Tamryn Green (Former Miss SA). Herschel Gibbs (Cricket player), Jonathan Butler (Musician), Adam Small (writer), Rapper AKA and many others.

  • @asandasibiya2747
    @asandasibiya2747 Год назад +7

    Great Reaction👌🏾
    Car Manufacturers do not change the paddles order or the gears they just take everything to the other side. The challenge about switching sides is blind spots. It's very difficult to turn to the right to see your blind spot if you used to looking to the left other than that it's not difficult

    • @TheDemouchetsREACT
      @TheDemouchetsREACT  Год назад

      This would be a culture shock we'd have to get used to quickly!

  • @bafanamahlatse1923
    @bafanamahlatse1923 Год назад +1

    One thing I've noticed is that coloured is not exactly an ethnic group.the only thing that unites coloureds us the fact that their of mixed origin.
    But the admixture can be different depending on the province..
    Cape coloureds tend to have admixture from khoisan,Bantu, European, East Asian, and South asian.they r very diverse..
    They can be found mainly in western and eastern cape.
    Northern Cape coloureds tend to mainly have khoisan and European DNA.these ppl tend to have a more African identify than the westernised cape coloureds.
    Kzn coloureds .this group tends to have Indian,Bantu and British DNA.the mainly speak English.

  • @ianbeddowes5362
    @ianbeddowes5362 Год назад +8

    There has been no Ebola in South Africa. Reccomended movies: "The Power of One" (from apartheid times). "Tsotsi", "Four Corners" , "Jerusalema".

  • @trayway9067
    @trayway9067 Год назад +2

    i dont remember south africa having an Ebola Case but there is man who brought the covid 19 virus to south africa he was from italy

  • @melodybipolar
    @melodybipolar Год назад +2

    Yes each culture has their own traditions and customs

  • @thereseelizabethries1083
    @thereseelizabethries1083 Год назад +2

    I've been to South Africa 🇿🇦 4 x and the last time I was there for 6 months

  • @saltmoon995
    @saltmoon995 Год назад +6

    The lobolo app is pretty much useless because lobola is a deeply cultural ceremony that involves families meeting and reaching an agreement

  • @vincentayoma3376
    @vincentayoma3376 Год назад +1

    The 5 percent involved in farming are large scale commercial farmers who feed not only south Africa, but the rest of the world.

  • @Nick-ev6im
    @Nick-ev6im Год назад

    Great show guys I'm a local and I love watching your show...😍

  • @Big_Kid007
    @Big_Kid007 Год назад +4

    In SA the white line is in the middle of the road and yellow lane at the edge of the road. We drive on left hand side ( keep left and pass right). Accelerate on the right brakes in the middle a clutch in the left side ) and traffic cops are too friendly but in general all cops are friendly.
    Mixed race has a culture that they created.

    • @TheDemouchetsREACT
      @TheDemouchetsREACT  Год назад

      The lines on the roads are the same here. I think we'd have to be in the car with someone to get the hang of it.

  • @arnodk2852
    @arnodk2852 Год назад +2

    Someone was taking the piss with them, Mopani Worms is not a regular part of the SA diet (it's a tourist thing)

    • @hulisani6845
      @hulisani6845 Год назад +1

      It is. For the venda, Shangaan, Pedi and Tswana people. It's part of our protein diet.

  • @KOurboi
    @KOurboi 5 месяцев назад

    As a South African I see this as an absolute win

  • @jermainejustingalant1214
    @jermainejustingalant1214 Год назад +1

    Definitely watch Leon Schuster, everyone born in the 90s and before can definitely agree him, and his movies are a national treasure

  • @khanyi_zulu
    @khanyi_zulu Год назад

    Love this channel! 🥰

  • @angelamanzini3052
    @angelamanzini3052 Год назад +3

    🇿🇦✊🏾Never perfect but getting there.

  • @Big_Kid007
    @Big_Kid007 Год назад +1

    Heritage day on the 24th September only that is our big day for traditional dress. But September is recognised as a root month.

  • @katli..._everyday
    @katli..._everyday Год назад +2

    The mediarite whole is in Bloemfontein we call it the big whole and yes people are allowed to visit as the site is not radio active

    • @thatomolefe4897
      @thatomolefe4897 Год назад

      No ausi, the big hole is in Kimberly in the Northern Cape and it's a mine quarry

    • @jermainejustingalant1214
      @jermainejustingalant1214 Год назад

      I think they were referring to the Vredefort Dome, where the meteor crashed

  • @siphiwebooi7617
    @siphiwebooi7617 Год назад +2

    Please react Varsity Sing - Hay wena Africa by Tshwane University of Technology. The song is more of an inspiration and/or reminder for Africans to stand up and work for the betterment of their lives. I will also provide you with the full lyrics of the song.

  • @danieroets8324
    @danieroets8324 2 месяца назад

    The vredeford crater (the largest meteor crater) actually have a town built in side the crater

  • @tomevers23
    @tomevers23 Год назад +3

    13:15, the 5% is *formally* employed. The rest probably just have a small garden around their house and are not an official business.

  • @eloisnaraidoo7339
    @eloisnaraidoo7339 Год назад +2

    Coloreds origin are from the Khoisan, I am "colored" and we are from Khoi descendant. The term Colored came from the colonizers when they separated us.

  • @rameses1979
    @rameses1979 Год назад +3

    South Africa is the
    9th biggest country by size
    6th biggest country by population
    3rd biggest economy
    FOR MY AMERICAN FRIENDS
    South Africa is about 1.8 times bigger than Texas.
    Texas is approximately 678,052 sq km, while South Africa is approximately 1,219,090 sq km, making South Africa 80% larger than Texas.

  • @EzziCoZa
    @EzziCoZa 9 месяцев назад

    The boy who harnessed the wind is an African movie and happened in Malawi

  • @matomem
    @matomem Год назад

    On the 2nd January there is an annual event where coloured people gather I'm Cape Town cbd and they shut down some streets to celebrate their unique culture. It is one big carnival. Some people who come from far arrive a few days earlier than the event and the camp on the streets. It is an epic event because they perform. It takes them months to rehearse. They dress up in colourful costumes.
    The Cape Town Street Parade took place in a sweltering city centre on Monday, and Tweede Nuwe Jaar was celebrated as it should be, with about 20 000 minstrels and 100 000 people filling the streets with colour and the sounds of the Klopse.

  • @brendonjoseph4007
    @brendonjoseph4007 Год назад +2

    Coloureds are Khoi and San.

  • @pinkiedlamini7298
    @pinkiedlamini7298 11 месяцев назад +1

    38:30 😅 HERITAGE DAY literally lasts just that day. We have so many Celebratory days and some are officially Public Holiday so if they would go on beyond that day...when would anything get done?

  • @jessey141
    @jessey141 Год назад +3

    Ebole cure (think it's a Vaccine)that's in DRC Congo 😊👍🏽, doctor Jean Jacques Muyembe. In terms of biggest country in Africa, first is Algeria, then DRC Congo (Sudan use to be second, then it divided in south&North), so Sudan is now 3third). Libya 4th, Chad 5th..South Africa is 9th 😊

  • @ceeyarhvanderb-yocker3023
    @ceeyarhvanderb-yocker3023 Год назад

    😂😂only what I heard towards the end, was to slaughter the throat “qawula uqoqo”

  • @mogomotsi6595
    @mogomotsi6595 Год назад +4

    There are 2 African countries inside South Africa, Lesotho and Eswatini(Formely Swaziland) and both their languages are also official languages in South Africa, infact all South African languages and tribes are found in neighbouring countries. Like i said colonialism divided tribes.

  • @madtza
    @madtza Год назад +2

    Coloured was a classification made by apartheid regime(look up the "pencil test") and yes they do have a unique culture, mostly originating in the Cape.

    • @mikescythian5729
      @mikescythian5729 Год назад

      Coloureds came into existence long... long ... centuries before Apartheid in 1948. 👍

  • @sirseravelele8868
    @sirseravelele8868 Год назад +1

    We have a great medical system, we seem to undermine it though and people from Europe mostly come to Tygerberg hospital

  • @FifthElementLive
    @FifthElementLive Год назад +1

    27:00 Indigenous Erasure has led to the myth that South Africa's Coloured People are simply a mixture of Black & White with a bit of Asian sprinkled in and the myth that KhoiKhoi & San (Capoid) make up only 1% of the population when in fact up to and possibly above 60% of Coloured People carry a high level of Capoid Genetics (the vast majority of which is through Maternal DNA) meaning they are KhoiKhoi and if the same measures were used that determined whether an American is or isnt Native American then a substantially large number of people who were classified as Coloured by the British as well as the Apartheid regimes and still are us such by the current government would all in fact be Khoisan (Capoid).
    Large numbers of Khoikhoi and San people were classified as Coloured by the colonisers and through keeping all "mixed race" people, Khoikhoi & San descendants, and slave descendents along along with mixed descendants of whites and mixed descendants of Nguni people separate from other "pure" ethnic groups and even from their original parental ethic groups, they were all lumped together as Coloureds.
    Therefor through segregation if for example someone was from a family mixed with Indian, they could not live in an area for "pure Indians" (My maternal grandfather's lineage) and was thus through forced assimilation living with and procreating with others classified as Coloured People which automatically included Khoikhoi & San, which meant many would possibly take a Khoikhoi descendant as a partner (My maternal grandmother's ancestral lineage) and for many it meant that Khoikhoi & San cultural identities were steadily lost over generations and the mantel of Coloured was thrust upon Us.
    Having said that; embracing our KhoiKhoi ancestry (the high kevek of Capoid DNA in up to 60% of Coloureds) also does not erase the fact that South Africa's Coloured People also just happen to have the most diverse DNA of all population groups all over the world, (while still for 60% of us there is included in all that diversity a high level of Capoid DNA).
    That is why we can never be seen to have a simplistic homogenous racial identity, BUT because of Forced Assimilation through Forced Segregation we have evolved a highly identifiable Cultural Identity.
    Therefore Coloured is Not a "race" because by the simple definition of race we are too mixed to be a race BUT we do have a cultural identity influenced by the cultures of all those mixed people, slaves from all over africa and Asia and a large number of KhoiKhoi San.
    PS... The Demouchets REACT I'm a new subscriber and I love the way you Spread Knowledge While You Learn,

    • @TheDemouchetsREACT
      @TheDemouchetsREACT  Год назад +1

      Thank you so much for taking the time to explain this. We appreciate you and hope this will help other people to understand better as well. We're glad to have you apart of the family!

    • @FifthElementLive
      @FifthElementLive Год назад

      @@TheDemouchetsREACT I'm binge watching your videos a few each day to catch up and be up to date, and yeah, I'm gonna be commenting a lot when especially I see South Africans sharing inaccurate information about our different histories and cultures.
      I'm just in awe that you two reflect on so many of the important nuances and issues that I am also passionate about in terms of us as Africans and Africans in the Diaspora including African Americans, and how we are all connected whether we acknowledge it or not.
      Hope you'll come to Cape Town some day.
      Keep up the good work.

  • @istan21
    @istan21 Год назад +1

    Didn’t mention ‘Mama Africa’ 😢 suggest you watch her life story of Miriam Makeba by GOOD MAGAZINE

  • @brendajackson3653
    @brendajackson3653 Год назад

    Go visit South Africa and experience it yourself. South Africa is an experience you can not experience through a video, it's something you should enjoy and experience in person. Go have a 'Jol' in SA

  • @randelljonas8908
    @randelljonas8908 Год назад

    Dambe is northern nigerian martial art sport where they wrap one fist and throw punches and push, you can watch compilation of it on RUclips.

  • @sibonisoxaba4031
    @sibonisoxaba4031 Год назад

    We Drive on the left hand side and we shift with left hand, clutch on left foot, gas pedal on right foot

  • @philapholisangozi6363
    @philapholisangozi6363 10 месяцев назад

    Also fun fact. Khoi, was originally spelt and pronounced Qoyi. But white people could pronounce or spell Qoyi. And because everything was written in mud by onoQoyi as us Xhosa's who actually are of direct ancestry call them. The spelling was changed to Khoi.

  • @lebohangmoramotse9828
    @lebohangmoramotse9828 Год назад +1

    11:38 it's in South African tourism textbooks for 11th grade

  • @yvonnemassehlongwane4682
    @yvonnemassehlongwane4682 Год назад

    Very interesting question. 👌 coloured do not have tradition as much as I know. But they get to great thier own culture way of living.

  • @sifisogumede4214
    @sifisogumede4214 Год назад +1

    Lmao 🤣🤣🙌 I love this reaction I can't believe you guys are so late on this but it's really dope.... "papaya worms"🤣🤣🤣🤣🙆🏽‍♂️💀 it's mampani worms

  • @maritalackey6250
    @maritalackey6250 Год назад +2

    So I'm South African but my dad is totally American and when he comes to visit he takes a while to get used to the roads and every time he wants to use the blinkers he turns on the wind shield wipers so ja...

  • @marrestphonik3908
    @marrestphonik3908 Год назад +4

    We never had ebola in South africa

  • @wickusb
    @wickusb Год назад +1

    regarding the Khoi and San people of South Africa - They have been struggling since the end of Apartheid to be recognised as the First Nation, a title they deserve without question - there is doubt that this will ever be recognised as it will bring the land ownership debate into question. In addition their traditional languages have still not been recognised as any of our 11 official languages, another blot against SA.
    The coloured people of SA speek an Afrikaans that is referred to as Kaaps - personally I find it to be a much purer form of Afrikaans.
    Driving - yes, the steering wheel of our cars are on the right side - like in the UK, since we were a British colony back in the day.
    I really enjoy the show!

  • @lesegogaebeeyn4005
    @lesegogaebeeyn4005 3 месяца назад

    Mrs Demouchet is so well read

  • @EzziCoZa
    @EzziCoZa 9 месяцев назад

    Its real worms haha. My mom used to pick them from her trees and sell them to people passing by haha

  • @reayalltalk9430
    @reayalltalk9430 Год назад +1

    For me it's how she said 'I didn't know SpongeBob was African 😅😅🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣I scrome

  • @hanielhaniel8166
    @hanielhaniel8166 Год назад

    So the lobola system: I speak as a Zulu person is an intimate ceremony between two families. These families come together and try to form a relationship because they'll now be family, so usually what goes on in the number of cow's that the bride's family is going to receive is: 1. Is the lady still a virgin? If not does she have a child? Is she educated? At what level? Usually University degree holders get higher lobola then a person who has a matric certificate (your highschool diploma equivalent). These are the major ones that determine the number of cattles that the bride's family is going to receive.
    Usually when the woman who is going to marry is a virgin there needs to be inkomo kamama and this is loosely translated as a mother's cow for rewarding the mother for raising up such a good woman who respected her purity. These are just some of the highlights that go on when lobola negotiations are being done. But all in all it is about uniting the two families, because when the lobola negotiations are concluded, both families do umembeso, a gifting ceremony where each family writes down what they would want from the other family. These are called izibizo. And after that specific cultural rituals are performed to welcome the bride to her husband's family. This is usually done by slaughtering a goat and introducing her to the husband's family's ancestors and telling them there is a new person in the family who has come to expand the family. The Makoti (new bride) has the bile of the slaughtered goat poured on her head as a sign of being officially welcomed to her new family.
    It now depends where in KwaZulu Natal you live because where I live the new bride is given a new name by the husband's family to symbolize her now being fully accepted by the family. She is usually given by her mother in law or her husband's older sister. This name will be used by the people of the family and the community.
    For example when my uncle married my aunt, she was given the name Nosizwe, meaning mother of nations. She must come and birth children that will strengthen and grow the nation. My mother was given the name Noxolo meaning peace bringer, meaning that may she bring peace to this family and strengthen it and not divide it.
    Hope this shed's some insight of what lobola is all about 🙏🏾🙌🏽

  • @ianbeddowes5362
    @ianbeddowes5362 Год назад +16

    South Africa is not the biggest in either geographical size or population. Nigeria is the biggest in population and I think Algeria is biggest in area -- it use to be Sudan until South Sudan split.

  • @mariaisabellasmall3780
    @mariaisabellasmall3780 Год назад

    Heritage Day. Yes 24th Sept but we draw it out over the Weekend. 😉

  • @mhlave2440
    @mhlave2440 Год назад +1

    In terms of contribution to our GDP, Agricultural contribution is very negligible in South Africa. In 2021 it only contributed less than 2.5% to our GDP.
    The biggest contributors to our GDP are the services industries which comprises of property owning and letting, business and management services, architectural and engineering, and hospitality industries in general.
    The second biggest contributors are manufacturing industries which comprises of motor vehicles manufacturing, manufacturing of parts and accessories of vehicles, iron and steel manufacturing, plastic manufacturing, structural steel and metals manufacturing. etc.
    Then there is the mining sector as well.
    So yeah our Agricultural sector might be big when we compare it to Agricultural sectors in other countries, but comparing it to other sectors just in South Africa 🇿🇦, Agricultural sector contribution is very negligible.

  • @thechosen312
    @thechosen312 Год назад

    23:24😭😭😭I remember going to MVA getting my learner's permit i was so happy but my brain stopped working when they told me that i have to use one leg 🦵 for pedals and the interstate roads were so big for and confusing to me🤣

  • @katli..._everyday
    @katli..._everyday Год назад +5

    No we dont have Ebola.... it was Nigeria

    • @sylviasworld9397
      @sylviasworld9397 Год назад +1

      It was actually Congo that had the outbreak. Nigeria had some cases, though.

    • @katli..._everyday
      @katli..._everyday Год назад

      @@sylviasworld9397 ohh yeah thank you very much for the correction

  • @Qairomuso
    @Qairomuso Год назад +1

    Not a lot of farming happens in Gauteng which is where the gold rush happened ... It's mostly metropolis etc... We get most of our fresh produce from other South African farming provinces (states) like Cape Town, Durban and Limpopo

    • @Mbalings
      @Mbalings Год назад

      Limpopo* (Limpopians don’t like it when we but he the name of their home)

    • @Qairomuso
      @Qairomuso Год назад +1

      @@Mbalings just a typo... I fixed it

    • @everytingscrumptious
      @everytingscrumptious Год назад

      Western Cape, KZN and Limpopo*

  • @philad1439
    @philad1439 Год назад +2

    With culture as u know SA is so diverse, whites have their own culture derived from their descendants for instance Afrikaaners inherited Dutch and German culture, other white South Africans like Kathrine on the video she is English so she inherited English culture. As for coloured people there is no specific culture they choose coz some say they are Khoisan which is regarded as original habitants of South Africa u also have Xhosa's that also claim the Khoisan ancestry. Some coloureds have Cape Malay culture, some have Indian culture, some have white/Afrikaaner culture, hence they are called mixed race. In conclusion all people in SA now intergrade cultures as u have heard Kathrine leaning Xhosa depending where u live in SA coz in KZN province whites and Indians learn Zulu at school while in Western Cape and Eastern Cape they white people learn Xhosa and Blacks learn Afrikaans at school.

    • @rainbowtrust6347
      @rainbowtrust6347 Год назад

      So correct about language and culture. Xhosas ,KHOIS and SANS don't claim, the relationship happened long before coloreds were created. Take for example fixtures of Mandela.

  • @luthandofuniselo2534
    @luthandofuniselo2534 Год назад

    good question...coloureds are still have to appreciate thier encestors

  • @maritalackey6250
    @maritalackey6250 Год назад +2

    Those are real worms and theyre really good 🤣

  • @samukelisiwengcobo4955
    @samukelisiwengcobo4955 Год назад +6

    You guys should react to Mansa Mayne eating Mopani worms 😁😁😁🤭

  • @tsholofelosechemane2170
    @tsholofelosechemane2170 Год назад

    where the big rock hit is now a province which is called gauteng where u find johanessurg interesting heyyy