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@@blackkirbyopinion3355 the majority of Eumelanated beings in the Americas don't like the term "African Americans" Because not all of us originated in Africa. In fact the Eumelanated people in the Americas are the most ancient beings on earth. All hueman ife did *not* start in Africa, you've been taught a lie.
It offends me when Africans try to say we don't have a country or culture or anything to connect with. We have our own culture and we literally built this country. We are very much our own group and proud of our heritage, culture, and history.
True! Africans have a hard time grasping this. I'd noticed that Africans don't do this to Black people in Latin America or the Caribbean who are also descendants of slaves.
👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏 I use to get offended, but I know it's out of jealousy they want to replace us just keep Educating yourself and don't take no shit, because every chance they get they will insult you !!
I also think now more than ever we as a people need band together and decide on a label that is just for us. We live in an age where people want to know where they “really” come from. They take one dna take and decide that they are something different do you see Caribbeans and Hispanics doing this? No! But this is a product of white society telling we’re other or less American than them even though we built this country.
@@silvercole9291 Yes its like they resent us because we're American, which is something we can't help. This country is all we know because our families have been here for so long, literally since the founding of this country.
95% of slaves were taken to South America, Central America and the Caribbean yet Black Americans are always the target of the "you don't know where you're from" jokes.
@Jarard Jones We're culturally from the US. That's where our culture was born. Everything before that is the culture of long gone ancestors who had to adapt in the new world because the culture back in Africa were willing to fight and sell each other off to Europeans over tribalism. That way of thinking didn't work for us in the US. I'm not shitting on Africans or their culture, but we know where we're from and we know our culture and it's time for us to take control of it again.
I wish I could be in these conversations because these conversations lack substance of the African American perspective. It also stereotypes us and helps to perpetuate ignorance about us.
You actually could have this conversation! If you wanted to.....gather up a mixed group of Blacks and Africans and tape it! Look forward to hearing and seeing your perspective about this issue.
Oracle4 Christ I've actually have had this conversation with Africans and African Americans. I'm referring to these conversation with the yotubers who promote these videos, but thank you for your feedback.
Wode Maya:::Keep in mind you have a country in Africa(Ghana) were you have over 5 thousand African-Americans who have chosen to live there...You can always talk to them, and maybe bring both groups together for discussion.
I personally feel like Africans think we African Americans have no cultural heritage. But we basically played a big ass role in making what America is today
@Lorenzo Williams Jr. I have studied black American history since they where sailed to the Americas.After villages raided one another and sold prisoners of tribal wars as slaves.I also understand the labour of blacks making USA what it is today.But let's be factual AA while never be seen as part of US no matter what in the eyes of white supremacist,as long as you crossed the ocean the story ends here..Africa for all blacks across the globe it's the only land God gave blacks to live with they kind.I wish AA travelled alot and learnt about the continent on the ground.
I don't agree with the first part of your statement but the second part, yes. There would be no America; economically or culturally without African- Americans. The blood of enslaved Africans made this country prosperous. A lot of the images that the USA export or that is embraced across the world like music, culture etc is mostly African American contributions.
AJENKINS1920 I want to call Africans in USA, African! But was told it’s rude and told me to call you all blacks! I think calling someone black is rude.
@@fastingislife3766 The word "many" says that he doesn't know all African Americans. But it signifies over 50% but not 100%. Since watching Wode Maya, I have this urge to visit Africa starting with Ghana.
I love and care about africans that love n care about me. Hell, my ancestors came from the continent. I have family there. I just don't know who. I do know one of my great great great grandmothers mention to my mother that she was Angolan.
@@risingsun5999 where I'm from when you are told you act like a nigga it's an insult. It basically means you're a fucking looser. No one really wants you in is house
Candace candace I don’t like black not because they are black but because of you lifestyle it’s my right. But I don’t wish your death or the worse. I just don’t want you guys in our lives by experience.
As a black American we don't hate Africans or African immigrants but we have our own culture and history that we created on our own we're our own people/group. This is true for every group in the diaspora (Afro-latinos, Afro Caribbeans) but for some reason African Americans are the only ones that get called out for this no one calls the black people from Jamaica, Brazil, or the Dominican Republic African they call them by their nationality. I don't see the problem.
Because it was designed that way, the same way they created borders in Africa, they divided us by nationality. We are all the same people, just scattered, the only difference between an African America and a Jamaican, or a Afro-Brazilian, Afro Cuban, whatever... Is a boat stop Because they knew that, United we stand, but divided we fall... so they separated us. Called us by different names, so that we wouldn’t see each other as brothers, but a different people, all the while, suffering the same oppression.
Eugene Sanou what are you talking about we don’t need approval from outsiders to validate what we are. We are black Americans descendants from slaves and we celebrate our African heritage but that doesn’t make us African. White Americans don’t get offended because white is already celebrated. Hispanics don’t get offended because they which they were more white than they already are. The Dominicans/PR that celebrate their European dna are the ones with the inferiority complex not us.
Yahwo I view the rest of the diaspora and the rest of the descendants of slavery in the Americas as my brothers and sisters because of our similar history and because of the boat stop logic. However we don’t share that same connection with Africans. Also, although I view the afro-diaspora as my brothers I would never say that we’re the same because we have a different culture.
Eugene Sanou lol whatever I know what ethnicity is I’m taking a race and ethnicity course right now yes I do know how to read thanks for noticing. Also, I’ve learned that whenever you ask someone a question or to explain and they deflect with insults it’s usually because they don’t truly know what they’re talking about but are simply regurgitating information that was forced fed to them.
I once told a Ghanian colleague that I was African. He told me, "You are not African." If I'm not African, what am I? He couldn't provide an answer. I assume a "Black American." My DNA is comprised of 90% African DNA. I feel that gives me the right to distinguish myself as an African. I have had the pleasure of traveling to Africa and hope to return soon. I have met Africans that view African Americans with the same stereotypes used by other non-black people. The Africans that I've met treated me different when they saw none of those stereotypes applied to me. I just hope that we can come together and stop this nonsense that keeps us seperated.
Funny... fuck him and those who dont think so... Once again we suffer seriously and we are African all day long weather I'm 50 percent or 60 percent african.. ancestors straight from the mother land... I will welcome my self to African soil.. that's my soil......bet
My brother am african from gambia but forget about this people they don,t know that is why it is not who told african you are not african.majority of you come from big tribes in africa. They have to give freedoom lands to you because your ancestory share is there.black is id is africa
@@silvercole9291 Ring shout is culture, AA quilts is culture, fried okra is culture, Sunday dinners is culture, Family Reunions and barbeques are culture, line dances are culture, sweet 16 parties are culture, praise dances are culture, soul singing is our culture, Harlem Renassiance paintings and books are culture, jazz and blues and rap and spoken word are our culture heck even Kwanzaa lol. The black happy birthday song is culture. Langston Hughes A Raisin In The Sun poem is our heritage. Maya Angelou Phenomenal Woman poem. People act like we just sat here from the early 1600s until now just chillin and doing nothing.
After slavery in the late 1800s and early 1900s black people built whole black towns in Greenwood, Tulsa, Oklahoma aka Black Wallstreet which was the most sucessful town. Then there was the black town Wilmington, North Carolina that had it's own newspaper. And there was also Weeksville in Brooklyn, New York.
Louisiana second line parades are black culture. Gumbo is black culture. Voodoo is black Louisiana culture. Louisiana even has a parade when people die. The Gullah Geechee on James Island ring a bell when people die. They eat red rice and fish which comes from Senegal others say its a form of jollof rice in Nigeria or Ghana. The Gullah dry their shrimp to add more flavor to soup. Blacks in the south used to dry high john the conqueror and put it in their pockets for luck or love spells. Muddy Waters sang about this (he called it johnny conquero and his mojo). Is this not a culture? Louisiana also does the Easter Rock dance around the table in church. Kumbayah song, is a Gullah Geechee (black Americans on the Sea Islands of the U.S. coastal Georgia, south carolina, florida) song that means Come by here. They used words like "bobo" meaning "boy" and "kraka di teeth" meaning "talk" and "day clean" which means "sun down" and comes from a translation in Ga.
Always Alanna hey that really bother me a one way conversation where is an African American in this conversation....because a lot of Africans don’t know are history
I’m not going to say that they ain’t shit but I do sense animosity towards us for being more visible than they are. I find it interesting we are called uncultured and lost when many do not know anything about our history in America, and only know us by what they see on tv. They are quick to say we learn about Africans from tv, but it is the same for them as well.
I think it just it's curiosity . I know a few Africans to me they are nice. But I'm nice so I usually get along with everyone, however my Nigerian associates think blks don't take what they feel is advantage of the so called freedom they feel we have .they don't understand most blks don't feel like they gonna Schuck and jive to get what they worked for.. where as in my opinion Nigerians r more open to playing the game and don't mind marrying whites
I am a African-American man I am African born in the United States that's what I say because my ancestors were enslaved and brought over here from Africa but Africa is my ancestors home land so I am African no matter what. As a African-American I am proud of my African roots and I took a DNA test I have cameroonian in me so my ancestors might have came from Cameroon
@@fjellyo3261 I met a white man that has a European necklace so he knows that he has European heritage and you have to understand America tries to brainwash us to get rid of our original Heritage and make sure that are only Heritage is American and we all know that is not true
@@fjellyo3261 and you have no right to tell me who the hell I am and the necklace was of Scandinavian heritage so obviously the guy was proud to be Scandinavian and you know you're German so why are you even upset that I'm trying to get back with my heritage you're just a hater and a troll
@@evanking0588 I just meant that I am a German citizen that's all. I don't give a shit were I come from. I am home there where nice people are around me. We all live on the same world, we are all from the same place. And in the end all humans come from east Africa.
My observation is that some Africans seem to generalize Black Americans because they have a shallow sense of the BA experience & understanding of the history. There are many discussions just as this one & it makes me cringe because of the prejudices and stereotyping. Some Africans think that because they watch BET or come across a few ignorant ppl or have been called an "afro boot scratcher" in the 4th grade that they have an excuse to form a bias or resentment against an entire group of BAs. Thats an issue within itself. The truth to me at least is that Africans do not need to understand or analyze the Black American because they have their own issues to deal with. Honestly, I do feel like the way some Africans talk about BAs is condescending and from a place arrogance. I rarely see BAs having generalizing discussions about Africans like this. I only really see Africans making videos on this subject. Interesting. My hubby is Nigerian & we joke all the time about our cultural differences. I have love for everybody. We may not be brothers and sisters, but we definitely cousins.
I agree. West Africans can be arrogant as hell for no reason. They love to brag about how well they are doing in America or the UK but when you bring up the failure and ineptitude of their home country, they have nothing to say. Most African countries cannot even keep their electricity on for 24 hours straight.
Get the fuck out of here!!! The moment you step in America and open your mouth..... it is these ignorant African Americans that will point out your 'accent' and use that to ascertain your intelligence. We get more more respect from whites than African Americans. Why will I associate myself with these dummies! If your an African and goes to High school in the US, you'll see the stereotype from African Americans. We like our arrogance and its built up on resentments we get from African Americans.
@@ernestotchere2715 they are full of shit, watched a UA-cam video where some guys from this channel called All Def digital tried African (Nigerian) food, the amount of disrespect they had was disgusting, spitting out food eating the food the wrong way even Making comments like "they don't have forks in the motherland" that is how most black Americans act toward Africans, then when Africans in the us avoid them it's "Africans are arrogant"
@@jesse8716 I live in Atlanta, Georgia. I've been here for over decade. I can tell you first hand how disrespectful they are towards Africans and when you give them the same attitude, they hit you with that bullshit: 'Africans don't like us'. Ask Jamaicans or Haitians or any other non African American, they'll tell you the exact same thing! It's even worse if you attend school with them. Their level of ignorance is beyond redemption. I could care less about them.
I have been to Central Africa ( Congo) 4 times. I want you know that African Americans we have culture. It is in our DNA check our music, dance, movement, art, food etc. One of the thing I notice about Continental Africans they do not comprehend our struggle.Currently, all the freedom they enjoy when they come to the Americas our ancestors had to fight for it. Next talk have people from America so there is a better perspective.
I’ve never heard an adult use the phrase African Booty Scratcher. As a matter of fact I haven’t heard that term since the 80’s. 🙄🙄🙄 EDIT--- I don't know where the term originated from, however, I think it was a movie. As a kid, we (African Americans) called each other that as a joke. As a child you really don't know what things like that really mean. Like I said I haven't heard that phrase in years. I have kids and I've never heard them use it. I just wish people were more careful about what information they are putting out. By the way I'm a proud African American who hopes to someday visit the Motherland!
Exactly, that was in a movie and little kids are going to thing that term is funny because it has the word "booty" in it. African Americans called each other that as well. That's not a word among us that we use to talk down on africans as they believe.
Yeah you could tell from the very jump that she was full of shit and does not like black Americans. She wants to sound educated but the fact is she's really just a white person in black skin, what I mean is she talks all the same bullshit stereotypes that they do, basically doing the work for the white man sewing seeds of dissention. To be real with you, I go in (DEEP) on any of these mother fuckers that come here talking nonsense about my people. Our ancestors built this country into the most powerful nation in all the world. Their sacrifices in most cases will never be told. As An American descendant of slaves who grew up in the South I Carry a deep pride and respect for the sacrifices of my ancestors. Black American culture is all over the world, we have changed the game For all other None white people. The irony is, the girl talking negativity about us is probly getting piped down by a white boy....typical.
I hate one sided conversations. yall don't never say that bout Caribbeans or afro Latinos. I think because we the trendsetters of America. we make America hot because we produce the most. but yall say we ain't got no culture.
If it wasnt for the people's greed it would be like Europe or America maybe better I am indian so I do know how it feels that when people do forget about the long heritage and their amazing culture
@@susansue6531 Phuqq that, context is King, and which the context I saw the word use towards #ADOS was in a separatist, derogatory, degrading elitist way towards us. I'm not having it, no ma'am.
@@susansue6531 Akátá is a word believed to be derived from the Yoruba people of Nigeria in West Africa Africa. The term is used among Nigerians and other West Africans in the United States to refer to African Americans, similar to the term oyinbo used for whites. The word Akata means Panther in Yoruba language.
@@whutha Akata is not even derogatory as I have read a lot of people say. And moreover, not even all Nigerians will know what the word, Akata means, if you are not resident in Lagos and you are not Yoruba, chances are you may not have heard that word.
I never once heard any american ever utter the words "African booty scratcher" but i've heard hundreds of Africans call black americans all kinds of Akatas!
i think one of the problem some african american believe african did sold their ancestors or did not come to their rescue and they were abandoned to the most cruel suffering things a human being can experience.there is this feeling that africa did not look out for them like a mother abandon her child,they feel betray by africans.they sold us out or they did not care enough about us to come and save us from this suffering so they are some mistrust there.i think 90% of african american love and want to know about africa
Whatever be the case, they had no option truly speaking cos the colonizers came already with a determined mind and force so whether Africans sold Africans because of money or power, the others who tried to stop it were killed anyway so yh.. Some did bad, others who were trying to do good got killed.
No, they sold us for smoked fish and guns. Its documented if you actually look at the history. I could see if everyone died fighting white colonizers but that's not what happened tribes and kingdoms participated in capturing Africans to give to Europeans because they wanted money and other things. Then West Africans specifically Nigerians have the audacity to call us Akatas when they are the reason we are in America. How do you call someone a stray cat (since that's the definition that yall think is less offensive, we will never know the real definition) when you had a hand in shipping us across the ocean.
That has nothing to do with african americans personally. African men just don't give a f about their nation. There are slaves in Libya now, who comes to their rescue? Right nobody. Why, cause the black politicians are corrupt, they don't care, they don't defend anybody, they are selfish. That's why Africans come to the white mans land . Nick cannon just proved that you guys are Africans. He explained the black male leadership psychology. Blacks have no leadership. They have patriarchy but no men.
How in the hell are you going to have foreigners speaking on what African Americans think and feel? African Americans know the name of Africa isn't Africa. Africa is name after a socalled white man. Put a brother in that mix.
@@laughingemoji5445 I guess it was colonized before the white man arrived there also. You guys hate AA so much that you can't receive any truth from us. These people are doing the same thing they did when entering the Motherland before which were acknowledge the Hamites people didn't exist or were salvages running around wild. And now colonizing Africa all over again with an fraction of what they are taken out of there.
@C S who are you talking to if it me please don't be an internet bully and meet me in person. I will never dog out my people nor African people period.
I have never heard any of my African-American friends ever call Africans names. Agree there is a separation between Africans and African-Americans because we ARE different. We have different experiences and cultures, we need to respect that and move on.
@@laughingemoji5445 For simply being about to step foot in America, gain citizenship and education. Without our fight in the civil rights era your people wouldn't be able to step a foot in this country so before you talk trash about African Americans learn the history of this Country and what we went thru after slavery.
The tall lady was very condescending and had very little positive to say about American decendents of slaves. The problem she has is within herself not someone else. In contrast, the other young lady said exactly what our challenges are. She stated that we have not learned about each other, the fact is no Africans in the Diaspora know of each other's history. African Americans don't know the history of Afro Brazilians, Afro Brazilians don't know the history of Jamaicans, Jamaicans don't know the history of ugandans, Ethiopians don't know the history of African latinos in Mexico...etc. We need to start a movement to encourage travel to learn of each other's history and see things with our own eyes , that will be a monumental influence in changing our perception of each other.
Hmm I don't know about this one. It seems to me that Africans are so quick to jump down our throat for wanting to be called African American/Black. Is it wrong for me being proud of where I come from as much as so be it to you? I'm from America and same as many generations of my family(as to how I got here is another story) and so that makes me an African American. Me wanting to be labeled as an African American has nothing to do with Africa and the stereotypes and that there of. It has everything to do with where I'm from and where I was born. So stop telling us how/what we feel about it when you don't know anything. I won't blame society because at the end of the day you can have a robotic mind or a mind of your own to find the truth. To be honest I have many African friends but there is also a lot of them here who look their nose down on us and are very very rude.
Tammy Johnson hey 👋🏿 I’m a Genealogist (Family History Tree Maker): If you have taken an AncestryDNA (www.AncestryDNA.com) test, you may also be able to find your biological, genetically “Blood” related living Africa-born Family Members. This is a guide to finding possible African DNA matches... on Ancestry.com/DNA. I wrote this some time ago, and posted it to FB. If you are Afro-Caribbean, African American, Afro-Latina/o, or Afro-European, and have taken an AncestryDNA test via Ancestry.com... In this post I outline three strategies for searching for Africa-born relatives, among your “DNA matches”, on AncestryDNA (www.AncestryDNA.com; www.Ancestry.com/DNA) You know what’s really neat...? There is also a current movement, within the African American community/continental African community, of taking DNA test, such as www.AncestryDNA.com / www.23andme.com, in an effort to find out not only “how much African” is in us... But for Continental Africans to find family members, who were taken from their families via the TransAtlantic Slave Trades, who are today, their biological Relatives (albeit 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, and 8th cousins); and vice versa for those in the “multigenerational” African Diaspora...to find their biological Africa-born Relatives...from the Families, across the African continent, their Ancestors were taken from. 1) One way to find many of your African matches, if you or your parents, grandparents...or other AncestryDNA tested relatives, is: tracingafricanroots.wordpress.com/2017/05/10/how-to-find-those-elusive-african-dna-matches-on-ancestry-com/ As a result, many families from across cultures and continents are reintegrating each other, into their lives/families...etc. trips are being made, back home in Africa, amongst the African Americans who can... to visit their Africa-born family( in cities and villages), from Senegal to Mozambique. Many are taking traditional African names, in naming ceremonies, across not only Africa...but across the United States, in ceremonies that often have Continental African dignitaries, Chiefs, and other forms of royalty, from the community of the Naming...presiding over the ceremonies. All while members of each respective African community represented...celebrate the “coming home” of sorts. It really is a beautiful thing to watch, in the moment. One such organization that does this, every year... is a Nigerian organization called ‘Council of Igbo States in America’ “www.cisandiigbo.com” in partnership with ‘dnaTestedAfricans’ “www.dnaTestedAfricans.org” 2) A second strategy is to type into the search box, different African countries, seeing who pops up, and looking at their DNA compositions, to see the likelihood of them being born on the continent. 3) Another strategy to see if you have any Africa-born cousins, would be to figure out how many pages of DNA matches you have, then work your way backward, going through each DNA match individually, looking for African sounding, Portuguese, or Spanish names... looking at the DNA composition ( All African DNA; African DNA +Iberian; African DNA+ Middle Eastern DNA and/or + Iberian. It’s Its from Madagascar, look for Southeastern Bantu DNA +Southeast Asian... etc)
Tammy Johnson thank you. African born vs African diasporan will not change the injustices we all face from White supremacy. Get to know each other and be open minded when it comes to Africans and African Americans.
StudioArtFX Lol skepticism is healthy. I would like to add though, as a testament to the power of these autosomal test... last year we finally found my Mom’s oldest sister, whom my Grandmother gave up for adoption, in 1942 (raped by her uncle), to a white family, who moved her from Ohio to NY. All thanks to these DNA test.
@@hasanicarter5543 This aspect of DNA I know and understand. If you have enough information, for example, a father and a son, you can find other long lost brothers who came from that same father. That's matching. Finding where someone's ancestors came from 500, or more, years ago, though is completely impossible, as DNA has no relation to geography.
As African American...more n more of African Americans are moving out of American and moving to Ghana....over 25000,00 AFRICAN Americans are living in Ghana
@@alfredbaxter1061 your motherland is America and not Africa. You are in your own land and you are colonised and they lied to you and told you came from Africa. Fight for you land and don't run because the foreigners are going over there to replace you.
@@satura4113 America is are land but are ancestors came from there we need connect with africa reason why other countries doing it Africa have resources and other countries taking there resources like China Europe american.
I don't understand the part where African Americans do not want to hear, they are Africans.For example, on an employment application in the ethnicity part , it says African American.
I received my African name when I visit Ghana 2018 August MaMi Ama Adorkor Kosiwah I visit Cape Coast nd Elmina Castle where I learned so much history nd very emotional for me being there I felt the spirits of my Ancestors 💕 Just that moment nd that strong spiritual feeling I knew I was a AFRICAN😘 my ancestors akaawaba me home I will Return back 2019 December for Christmas in Ghana 🙆😍 I will do my DNA ANCESTRY before I return back I LOVE THE MOTHERLAND 💜 #MyRoots 💛
The reason why I don’t want to just be called African is because I wasn’t born in Africa and because my ancestors have done a lot in America to gain their freedom, to gain their rights, to keep their dignity, to fight for their family and generations to come. This country was built off of the backs of my Ancestors (literally). I have absolutely no problem claiming African American. But I can’t just call myself African. I am a DOS! And I am proud of t! And See but I don’t know about this because a lot of Africans come over here (America) despising African Americans, they don’t like us (I’ve been told by African friends) but all smiles and giggles for the white man and his family. I’ve seen this plenty of times so Wode Amaya Talk about this too please.
Neo Kaidu No that’s your friends! I’ve personally seen Africans being rude to African Americans and being much nicer and more pleasant to the white man. Y’all treat them with more respect than African Americans, for some reason. Y’all come over here being rude to us and looking down on us and then having the nerve to talk trash! Don’t tell me it’s not true because I have African friends and they tell me truth about what their parents say about black people, they believe the stereotype and are brainwashed. It’s pretty clear but you can’t see it because you’re not in our shoes.
@D.E. Booker Africans contributed more to the world than any other humans sit down boy and fuck the USA africans owes yall nothing your country and its allies lives of African resources they owe the continent over trillions of dollars and its not Africans fault that black Americans don't do shit in school and born on welfare u guys complained about africans doing better than yall yet instead of working yall listen to rap music smoke steal killed other people does black on black crimes remind you anything ?
@@AButterflyinChrist lol africans don't want to live in Africa ? Where's your evidence for your bullshit theres more whites in africa than theres Africans in the USA and Europe combined And there's barely 2 million africans in USA compared to the 1.2 billion africans in Africa trust me the majority of africans don't want to live the continent so your already lying and Asian taking over the continent ? For once stop believing everything your media tells u and also u guys are the most racists people i ever met when i was living in the usa yall where so racists to me and my friends all because we were africans, jaimacans, and Haitians not once did the Mexicans whites and Asians ever said any racist shit to us they didn't cared that we where different and as for your comment on africans Americans being stronger than any other group of black people lol thats wrong Central African Bantus and Massai warriors are the strongest i would love to see an african American taking on a herd of lions leopards and crocodiles and survive and i love how u guys think whenever a foregein black succede in the USA was because the struggle of african Americans that is sometimes true and sometimes wrong Africans succeed everywhere in the world especially Europe so do tell me do they own their achievement to black Americans there too ?and how about when black folks succede in Brazil China Australia the middle East Japan New Zealand and every other countries. Thats not the USA was it because the struggle black Americans that cause all of this ? And also theres barely few Asians in my country u guys probally think Africa is country lmao liers will be liers
@D.E. Booker me and my family feed ourselfs we have 4 gardens full of fruits grains and all other vegetables and 1 small farm with 44 chickens 2 goats 5 cows and not everbody in Africa is hungry dude and Africa accomplish and gift to the world is music science arts written languages mathematics astronomy Medicines the foundation of civilizations migrations architectures and many more we are the alpha and the omegas we are the birth giver of the human race no other human accomplish beats this
I don’t want to be known as a color it’s elementary. Do we call Koreans yellow, Hispanics orange, or Indians brown/olive 🙄🙄🙄 Europeans found it easy to label something they had no education of and label it as a color.
I am kind of offended by this video. You have a panel talking about African American, Black Americans, Afro Americans. Non of you are any of those. So let me educate my African Kings and Queens...........First off African booty Scratcher was a kid dis from back in the 80s. No one says that anymore. I was shocked you even brought that up.
It hasn't died. My 2nd grader just told me she heard a brown boy say it to another brown boy at school last week. The only place he could've gotten that from is home. I've also spoken with Africans who were subject to that insult and still hold some resentment from it, the implications and how they couldn't understand why other kids who descended from Africans were using it against them when they were expecting acceptance.
As A African American I'm glad that my African cousins from the continent are having this type of dialogue so that both sides can learn from each other and Heal all the pain,and trauma that both sides suffered from the past.❤🌎🌍
Thank you for the compliment as a African-American I appreciate that African people are wonderful and rich people we need to come together and unite I love my African brothers and sisters
In my opinion Africans born people can not explain the ways or thinking of African Americans our history and struggle are totally different. As an African American women don't get it twisted some of us like myself is very well educated about the African Continent and have travel outside of America. Here in America we have Blacks University and Black professors. In my opinion it is the African people who know little about African Americans ways or the hidden history of what part the Africans play in the slave trade. In the end we are all Black people born and raised in different part of the world.
Check out his interview with fellow youtuber Nativeborn...I'm subscribed there also. Nativeborn is African American and he lives in Ghana with his family.
Fjelloy 32! Should different shades of Brown and different shades of Pink! That's the closest I get. I might be colour blind, but Man you are on cue! Big up to you
brwnish eyes don't even respond. Knew he was white when he said "cunt"😂 that's like the highest insult for them, and that literally means nothing to us🙄😂 disregard the colonizer. 😂😂
Ohhhh, this conversation is so loaded that it would take hours and hours to complete.😂😂 The discussion gave me all types of emotions honestly, from happiness to sadness and then anger and then back to numb and all over again. Because I like the channel, I listened. Any other channel, I would have scrolled by the topic because it transcends anything that can be expressed in words. You just have to understand. We just have to understand. It’s difficult and yet easy on so many levels. It’s exhausting. I personally let it go because of how exhausting.😂 It’s pulling through past generations of madness that, like the young lady sitting next to you, Wode Maya, said.... the history and knowledge about AAs isn’t taught to Africans and African history we have always had to pull and dig for over here. Tho ppl hate to say it, but slavery broke soooo much. It’s exhausting on the heart and mind. Like I said, I let it go, not in a bad way but a freeing way. I accept who I am and where I was born and raised-period. I don’t need a “TIE” to somewhere anymore. All my life I literally tried to find something that I will NEVER find, and as soon as I accepted that it would never be found, I was at rest. Being African American has never been a diss to Africa, but an acceptance of where a kinfolk I will never know is from and at the same time an acceptance of the culture, abilities and things I love and know being an American with the kinfolk that I do know and love buried in this soil and those still living right here in the USA. We built this land. It’s mine. That’s how I feel. It’s not a sin to feel this way just like it isn’t a sin to say I also love Africa at the same time. I have all the dynamics in myself to make it possible... to literally love two lands and people at once, be angry at the injustices in two lands at once and feel like I have every right to do so, defend two lands at once. I am two lands at once. The problem comes in when ppl try and “ONLY” or “SOLELY” this thing down. It can’t be done. We are who we are. We don’t have to just be one thing because we aren’t. We can come and go to and from Africa, but home is home... and EVERY country has its racial issues, financial woes, ghettos and castles, crime and etc just like America. As far as not knowing “our culture” as black ppl, (something I have heard)I feel that’s bull. We do what we do here based on what we grew up doing... the same as anyone in Africa, Japan etc. To me it’s a slap in the face and disrespectful to say AAs don’t know their culture because it is saying “y’all need to change AGAIN” like something is wrong with us or something. I feel like Africans who grew up in Africa do what they do and that’s that. I do what I do having grown up in both Europe and America, and that’s that. Nothing is WRONG with either. I dunno😂😂 It’s just soooo freaking much until, I let it all go. I take INDIVIDUALS as they are and don’t lump ppl into one big mound. Hello, I’m me. We are the same but grew up vastly different. How are you? 😂😂 Let’s go have some fun. It’s an easier conversation. Good video, Wode Maya. My whole day is busted now. I can’t wait to hit the bed.
MirikaCOfficially sister I’m african from the continent,, I do understand your point,, but believe me is gonna be ok ,, I have never been to America,, I live in Spain I have met a lot of african american over here but I get long with them ,,I don’t know where these things came from ,, I mean the tensions,, in my country in Guine Bissau when I was younger my English teacher was an african American brother,, he was loved back home ,, he was just one of us ,, to this day he still live there ,, married with local with 2 kids ,, I mean unity is coming. Blessings to you and your family.❤️❤️❤️!!!
I’m a Genealogist (Family History Tree Maker): If you have taken an AncestryDNA (www.AncestryDNA.com) test, you may also be able to find your biological, genetically “Blood” related living Africa-born Family Members. This is a guide to finding possible African DNA matches... on Ancestry.com/DNA. I wrote this some time ago, and posted it to FB. If you are Afro-Caribbean, African American, Afro-Latina/o, or Afro-European, and have taken an AncestryDNA test via Ancestry.com... In this post I outline three strategies for searching for Africa-born relatives, among your “DNA matches”, on AncestryDNA (www.AncestryDNA.com; www.Ancestry.com/DNA) You know what’s really neat...? There is also a current movement, within the African American community/continental African community, of taking DNA test, such as www.AncestryDNA.com / www.23andme.com, in an effort to find out not only “how much African” is in us... But for Continental Africans to find family members, who were taken from their families via the TransAtlantic Slave Trades, who are today, their biological Relatives (albeit 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, and 8th cousins); and vice versa for those in the “multigenerational” African Diaspora...to find their biological Africa-born Relatives...from the Families, across the African continent, their Ancestors were taken from. 1) One way to find many of your African matches, if you or your parents, grandparents...or other AncestryDNA tested relatives, is: tracingafricanroots.wordpress.com/2017/05/10/how-to-find-those-elusive-african-dna-matches-on-ancestry-com/ As a result, many families from across cultures and continents are reintegrating each other, into their lives/families...etc. trips are being made, back home in Africa, amongst the African Americans who can... to visit their Africa-born family( in cities and villages), from Senegal to Mozambique. Many are taking traditional African names, in naming ceremonies, across not only Africa...but across the United States, in ceremonies that often have Continental African dignitaries, Chiefs, and other forms of royalty, from the community of the Naming...presiding over the ceremonies. All while members of each respective African community represented...celebrate the “coming home” of sorts. It really is a beautiful thing to watch, in the moment. One such organization that does this, every year... is a Nigerian organization called ‘Council of Igbo States in America’ “www.cisandiigbo.com” in partnership with ‘dnaTestedAfricans’ “www.dnaTestedAfricans.org” 2) A second strategy is to type into the search box, different African countries, seeing who pops up, and looking at their DNA compositions, to see the likelihood of them being born on the continent. 3) Another strategy to see if you have any Africa-born cousins, would be to figure out how many pages of DNA matches you have, then work your way backward, going through each DNA match individually, looking for African sounding, Portuguese, or Spanish names... looking at the DNA composition ( All African DNA; African DNA +Iberian; African DNA+ Middle Eastern DNA and/or + Iberian. It’s Its from Madagascar, look for Southeastern Bantu DNA +Southeast Asian... etc)
Honestly, i don't think there is much difference between Afrikans and Afrikan Americans because white people are just as present THERE as they are HERE, if not physically, then they are IMPLICATED in everything else, from economic structure (Capitalism) to religion (Christianity). Even the clothing styles of many Afrikans is western, with some exceptions (the women seem to embrace Afrikan styles MORE than the men).
@@gotcha9934 PEOPLE create culture, and they are impacted by OTHER PEOPLE, and this impact can be seen in their cultural ways and habits. Capitalism, for example, is NOT an Afrikan economic system but a European one, yet its global existence shows us how white people are implicated in our economic lives. But you seem to be convinced that i'm wrong, which means you can't be persuaded, even with facts. But i do appreciate your comment. I'll give you the last word if you like. If not that's kool too. Peace.
I'm black American. I go by that term not to disrespect Africans.. I've never been there but my culture life family generations have been on US soil. My citizenship is in USA. MY connection to africa IS through lineage LOOONNG time ago. That's it that's all. BLACK AMERICAN. respect that!
Being an African American 1 thing family from the continent will not understand is how we have no history and how that effected us. Everything was stripped from us we don't have a connection to anything and we're treated as undesirables by everyone. We as Americans have our culture differences with Africa by being raised as Americans but many of us love Africa and it hurts when africans come over and look at us as shit because of what they see on tv and im sure Africans feel the same. I have a few African friends and they tell me their parents tell them not to marry or bring an American girl home and vice versa. But I agree with the video having social media has really opened a lot of Americans eyes to the real Africa and not just what we saw on national geographic. Over the last 2 days I've watched about all your videos and love it I'm learning from them as well keep up the good work and I'll be hitting the continent some time late this year or early next year.
Truth be told most African Americans are just as or even more ignorant than white Americans in issues about Africa lmao. They can barely name 10 countries in Africa, let alone understand it..
I can assure you that, Africans do not know anything about your pain until you see us and you start talking down to us. Thanks to God bcos of social media AA have seen that we live well and not sick and lacking food like we were portrayed years ago.
This is exactly what I'm saying while watching this video. I don't know who they are talking to but we don't have a problem with our brothers and sisters from the Mother Land but they seem to have an issue with us...
I have never heard in my entire life a black American refer to an African as a booty scratcher, or to Africans living in trees. When Africans who r members of tribal groups refer to themselves by their tribe, no one says that they r trying to separate. We r already separated by centuries, language and a vast ocean. But the Africans in this conversation I feel one with. I’ve met many like this in Africa. In the States however it seems black foreigners tend to have a deep burning hate for black survivors of American Slavery. That said between me and Maya there is very little space. He’s a thoughtful intelligent brother. Unfortunately he’s not representative of the bulk of blacks who have settled in the US recently from the continent and the West Indies.
I’m African American and a person who grew up in the 70’s. I can remember watching National Geographic and the news during this era and saw how Africa was introduced to Americans. It was very negative with stereotypes and what was taught in school as well as today was and is very limited. I have never traveled to Africa but have learned from reading and through my friends that are from different areas of the Continent . I’ve always had a strong connection with African people and have always felt welcomed. I do plan on visiting several areas where I have been given an open arm invitation from my friends in the future. I want to say thank you for the conversation on the subject. If you are African American and want no part being called African with the connection of being American then you are lost and do not understand the struggle of your ancestors or you are ashamed of them because they were sold into slavery. If you are in North America or Caribbean and Latin America and have melanin in your skin; your ancestors have a connection to Africa. Thank you and keep the conversation going.
AA women here w/ unfortunate yet true experience in "African" braid shops. The exclusion towards me was honestly no different than that from I got in Asian nail salon.
Then the hateful people who own the braid shop # 1 if they hate like that they won't do a good job . # 2 they can just do like they do in Japan - post a blue or red sticker outside the building or establishment - I have been in Japan and have seen it .# 3 If they are that cold , no way in hell I would go back in there . You only came to get braids it's not like your'e the Reverend Jim Jones or somebody .
That would have definitely set me off .I wouldn't go back in there if I were you . I would find another location . You owe them nothing . You show up in good spirits only to have a black mf from over seas screw up your day . A bad attitude leads to less money .
Its not you personally..its what you represent. The things you think are ok .. Is not ok everywhere else . for example African Americans love homosexuals
When people ask me , I say im African born in america. I dont like being called African American. I also like being called Black. Without the “american” part....
I feel the same way sistar. And to make it even more authentic I use the spelling of Afrakan that way to signify the "Ra" and "Ka" evoking the power of the ancestors. Ra=sun Ka=elevated. I love being Afrakan all day!
The tall women has a lot of knowledge. I want her to know even though we were slaves no matter our plight we made big strides (African Americans). As slaves and as freemen we built America. Imagine what we could do on the continent we came from.
I love these conversations but I do wish an "African-American" woman was a part of this. I truly believe that most African-Americans love learning about Africa. There's no continent that I want to travel to more. Just being human, we remember negative experiences more. For example, I've had biracial or light skin black people tell me that I look African. They say it as an insult and are surprised when I say, Thank you!" In Namibia, some African girls were assumed that I wouldn't know as much as I know about different African countries. However, the majority of my experiences with African people have been positive. We have to start there, from the positive. There's no continent I want to experience more.
Not completely true, they still French, but many Afro-latinos have kept a lot of their culture, the people of San Basilio de Plalenque in Columbia, have been isolated for 400 years, and have matained their African culture and their own language.
ADOS is a unique culture of our own. We are not African and Africans know this. This is why they seperate themselves when they come here to America. Our experiences are totally different. Even dark-skinned Black Americans can have White parents, grandparents and great-grandparents. We have helped build America and have invented so many inventions that have made America a world leader. ADOS have fought for rights that African immigrants dont even have in Africa. They come to America to get these benefits we fought for but look down on ADOS. ADOS need to work for our unity and goals. We are a force and we are tired of other groups benefitting off of our hard work without doing any of the work. I feel a change coming for ADOS people. We need to unite and do for us and only us.
There are about 300 Million Biracial AFRICANS which is way higher than in AMERICA. So what's the point. Travel to AFRICA and you'll notice that the AFRICANS who live in the Coastal Cities tend to look ambiguous due to inter-marriages with Arabs, Europeans, Indians etc for hundreds of years ...
U sound stupid ever heard of populations growth ? Africa population during slavery in the 1600to1800s was 300 million now its 1.3 billion same could be said for Brazil during slavery the slave population was 5 million now its over 60 millions
Armed Ninja how can population grow when majority of the slaves were men and most women died before they got here? So out of 300k 100k died and most that died were women....we not african dumass
Yes, most the others were sent to Latin America and the Caribbean islands, after awhile the number of Africans increased naturally in usa, so they didn't have to keep bringing in "bossal" (new Africans) Slavery in places like Brazil, Haiti etc. mortality rate was much higher
Can we just throw this out there... African booty scratcher is not just reserved for Africans, I think almost ALL Darkskinned people in the black community grew up being called that, typically by other black ppl. Not tryna take away from anyones hurt, but I tend to hear alot of Africans use this and I don't think they realize how common (as bad as that is) that insult since colorism is such a problem.
Where do Africans get this hilarious idea that African Americans don't have culture??? We just don't have YOUR culture. I'm glad that the conversation started to turn to Africans learning about African Americans...yes, we (AA) indeed have a culture.
@Blacks vs Everybody The Africans that Live next Door too me say rude Stuff To me on the regular. she told her son to Stop being around those Akatas . i didnt. say nun but i just knew it wasnt right
Maya this is a good topic but next time I want u bring in a African American guy or a lady. They have a lot of African American in Ghana that live in places like east legon. I am Liberian nice video keep it up .
Really, are you serious , most of the inventions you enjoy today are from us. We are indeed the same people, but your people have let the whites corrupt you with their worthless money and dumb metal cars. The problem is your people have failed and allowed the enemy to take your own people across the waters. We literally built the dam world. So stop being stupid. Greed is the down fall of the people. People starving and you making dumb comments.
I am not African American I’m of Tuscarora and Cherokee Native American. May have African ancestry considering Africa is the birthplace of humanity. I love Africans,food etc. I don’t have a direct connection to Africa!!🙏🏾♥️
@@aliciamomat7963 wtf are you talking about? It does concern me. We have been stripped of that part of our history, identity etc. what I’m saying is there’s no such thing as an African American. Maybe your headscarf wrapped around your head too tight.
I am Afrikan American and I can tell you that many so called Black Americans identify as Afrikan American. I have been to Egypt, Ghana, and Nigeria. In fact, I lived in their homes, learned about my Afrikan Culture, and I adopted a Afrikan Name. I identify as Afrikan American, Pan Afrikan and I know my roots. Throughout the United States Afrikan People are embracing Pan Afrikanism. This is has been going on since the 1800 or before.
Black Americans have a very rich culture. I’m tired of hearing that. We are a strong people. Leave black Americans alone. We live day to day just like every one else on this planet.
I'm a Black man, living in the Americas. I love Africa, most vacations we always strive to visit Africa. It's the Throne, from the Throne we controlled the world. It always feels like I'm coming home. I have a deep respect for my people anywhere I find them in this world. It hurts when we meet & treat each other like enemies. Tribalism is the root & this European mindset is the killer. May Peace be our way & Brotherhood be our mindset.
Thanks for the internet, freedom of information, this has taken such a long time for this connection. It is so exciting. Black people, you have a special light or spirit, that brightens the atmosphere. It was great listening to you all.
I'm a black american and i am proud of my people.Even if many hate us i still respect all Africans and hope we can find peace among each other. But all the hating on each other is senseless. We black Americans been here for years, 100s of years, So we know nothing of Africa any more. We was force by slavery to forget our history and our land, 100s of years ago,So we created our own culture and we fought hard for our black brothers and sisters to be free in this country.They raped our mothers, worked or killed our fathers, They stole children from family's and sold them to slavery, Our mothers work the land, On hot days and cold winters they Cook the foods and took care the whole family even the whites. Our fathers suffer harsh terms, Hangings, Shootings , Cutting off the male parts, Jail for nothing. We fought back and raised up for our people. We also fought in all the wars in this country's history, we were helpers and were leaders in this country, We had black cities and were owners of that land we build churches we build our own schools, we had our own stores and ran our own towns and they burned it down in an air raid. They destroy our people in many ways, They destroyed black leaders who even thought to build up our people. And all we survive the bullshit. We as black Americans help shape this country, Reason why blacks in this country can live freely and get a good education. Just because the media show us like nobody"s as they would show us about how Africa is with war and burned villages, Doesn't mean we are. We help build this country even before it was known as the united states and before the 13 colonies, Our roots and our family blood is coated in this land, We are now rooted in this country's history as well as it's future. Peace to all the brothers and sisters.
No wonder why that can’t make it in their home countries, and come here to dismiss the very people whom ancestors build this country. It’s jealousy at its finest.
Micheal Vanderkorn Please dude, like I said your government fucked y’all over for some European fake ass coins. Now if it want for the African Americans you would not be here.
michael clayton facts, these Africans are bugging. If you don’t black Americans stay in your undeveloped countries. Most of the countries in Africa look like 19 century America. It’s the richest continent in the world, yet their Africa coming to the USA.
I'm American and you guys look just like my family. No matter rather Black Americans are African or not WE recognize WE are apart of your family although we are different. In America we almost blend in when WE hang out together. WE are only divided by legendary stories true and false narratives. Thanks for the good message beautiful people. Its up to us to help spread the unity of African Americans and true Africans.
I'm a black UK guy working in Brussels, Belgium. This city is probably the closest I have ever been to an African culture. I look just like them, well at least the Congolese and often I am mistaken by all races to be Congolese. However not once did I even think of myself as African. I'm black, but I'm not African. My cultural heritage is Jamaican with both parents being born on the island with a wider culture of being of the black Americas - the diaspora. I'm happy with this and proud of our cultural achievements. For me it is not a case of looking down on Africans at all. I enjoyed the company of the Africans I met here in Brussels and trust me, some of the black African women in Belgium are the most stunningly beautiful females I have ever seen - but I'm not African. Why should we call ourselves African? Being 'African' was never even a concept in black Africa until very recently. i.e. colonial times. Funnily enough I think it is only black people in America who describe themselves as 'African' American ... well some of them, many simply prefer 'black' or just 'American'. I have never heard a Jamaican say he is 'African Jamaican' nor a Trini, Badje or anyone else for that matter.
I'm not sorry for typing this but where not African Americans Nor descendants of Africans My people are in fact Israelites the true Israelites. We know who we are now.
As a race, we are all the same. As individuals, we are different. None is better, just different. Those who hate us, hate us and oppress us as a race. If we don’t defend each other, we will be doomed.
Once in my presence two educated West African men were talking, one proceeded to mock caribbean people, he assumed that I was West African, it sent a chill through me I will never forget.Whatever my ancesters may have been, although in my heart some part of me yearns for that "original" homeland, it feels lost to me & I wonder what the motives are of Africans wanting black peoples to go Africa. I wish well to anyone who makes the journey.
We had no choice in building this country and we were limited and controlled through both direct violence and physiological torture day after day,year after year and generation after generation until we only had these manipulations to hold on to when were finally free. Now we have a choice to not build there countries and continent for them but to build it together with them. We African American can contribute our experiences in these land and our shorter but very rich history of overcoming obstacles while carrying the weight of racism from all around the world. And the African peoples can help us find what was stolen from us (our original cultures, peoples, and ways). If this can be done successfully we African Americans can discuss what life we wish to pursue based on what we learned in the joint building up of the continent based on our individual beliefs preferences and experiences
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Now I can see it
@@blackkirbyopinion3355 the majority of Eumelanated beings in the Americas don't like the term "African Americans" Because not all of us originated in Africa. In fact the Eumelanated people in the Americas are the most ancient beings on earth. All hueman ife did *not* start in Africa, you've been taught a lie.
Halito *Wode Maya* I am Aniyuwiya and Ogeechee by blood not African Yakoke
@Keemo Imani dude can you prove all Eumelanated beings come from Africa? I'll wait!😐
It offends me when Africans try to say we don't have a country or culture or anything to connect with. We have our own culture and we literally built this country. We are very much our own group and proud of our heritage, culture, and history.
True! Africans have a hard time grasping this. I'd noticed that Africans don't do this to Black people in Latin America or the Caribbean who are also descendants of slaves.
👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏 I use to get offended, but I know it's out of jealousy they want to replace us just keep Educating yourself and don't take no shit, because every chance they get they will insult you !!
@@garlandowls1134 👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
I also think now more than ever we as a people need band together and decide on a label that is just for us. We live in an age where people want to know where they “really” come from. They take one dna take and decide that they are something different do you see Caribbeans and Hispanics doing this? No! But this is a product of white society telling we’re other or less American than them even though we built this country.
@@silvercole9291 Yes its like they resent us because we're American, which is something we can't help. This country is all we know because our families have been here for so long, literally since the founding of this country.
95% of slaves were taken to South America, Central America and the Caribbean yet Black Americans are always the target of the "you don't know where you're from" jokes.
Garland Owls11 west Africa
Exactly
@Jarard Jones We're culturally from the US. That's where our culture was born. Everything before that is the culture of long gone ancestors who had to adapt in the new world because the culture back in Africa were willing to fight and sell each other off to Europeans over tribalism. That way of thinking didn't work for us in the US. I'm not shitting on Africans or their culture, but we know where we're from and we know our culture and it's time for us to take control of it again.
For people like that , they have this thing called "The Pine Box ". Here in America .
@Crowdfund77 I know but it seem like Africans come at Black Americans more than West Indians though.
I wish I could be in these conversations because these conversations lack substance of the African American perspective. It also stereotypes us and helps to perpetuate ignorance about us.
Lilli L'amour I agree 💯 I think they fear the daunting truth of where it all stems from.
You actually could have this conversation! If you wanted to.....gather up a mixed group of Blacks and Africans and tape it! Look forward to hearing and seeing your perspective about this issue.
Oracle4 Christ I've actually have had this conversation with Africans and African Americans. I'm referring to these conversation with the yotubers who promote these videos, but thank you for your feedback.
I'd love to be apart of a video of that nature!!
Frederick White hit me up on my Facebook. I'd like to make it happen
We love you African Americans. The voice of Africa from The Gambia (West Africa).
Justice human-rights I’m AA AND I LOVE YOU TO AFRICAN UNITY
Thank you
I LOVE YOU TOO! 🤗🤗🤗
Justice human-rights We love you too. My husband was from Kenya!!! I'm very proud of that!!!
I love you too💖African-American from Ohio
Wode Maya:::Keep in mind you have a country in Africa(Ghana) were you have over 5 thousand African-Americans who have chosen to live there...You can always talk to them, and maybe bring both groups together for discussion.
I have a video like that!Will upload it later
Also you have the African american association in Ghana which is a hub in assisting AA in repatriating back to Ghana
Queen Mercy yes I love them!
I personally feel like Africans think we African Americans have no cultural heritage. But we basically played a big ass role in making what America is today
Since you played a big role to make America what it is,then fit in fight for your rights of belonging.
@Lorenzo Williams Jr. I have studied black American history since they where sailed to the Americas.After villages raided one another and sold prisoners of tribal wars as slaves.I also understand the labour of blacks making USA what it is today.But let's be factual AA while never be seen as part of US no matter what in the eyes of white supremacist,as long as you crossed the ocean the story ends here..Africa for all blacks across the globe it's the only land God gave blacks to live with they kind.I wish AA travelled alot and learnt about the continent on the ground.
Sanci Godwin you do know colonizers sailed here too right?
I don't agree with the first part of your statement but the second part, yes. There would be no America; economically or culturally without African- Americans. The blood of enslaved Africans made this country prosperous. A lot of the images that the USA export or that is embraced across the world like music, culture etc is mostly African American contributions.
@@Usthereout read Deuteronomy chapter 28 understand and come back here.
As AFRICAN AMERICAN.....white America has kept us separate because they don't want us to come together
Na what has kept us separate is culture,you are not African stop it.You are American be proud.
AJENKINS1920 I want to call Africans in USA, African! But was told it’s rude and told me to call you all blacks! I think calling someone black is rude.
Why always blaming white look yourself no one should tell you who you're what pass is pass
u can't call white on everything, we need to take responsibility too
@@edgarolet3169 100%
This conversation is stereotyping Africans Americans. Many of us are not ignorant and are deeply in love with our African heritage.
Exactly
Chad Tep thank you bro !!!
@@fastingislife3766 The word "many" says that he doesn't know all African Americans. But it signifies over 50% but not 100%. Since watching Wode Maya, I have this urge to visit Africa starting with Ghana.
It's the vibe I'm getting from the jump.
I love and care about africans that love n care about me. Hell, my ancestors came from the continent. I have family there. I just don't know who. I do know one of my great great great grandmothers mention to my mother that she was Angolan.
Black Americans have the best culture got everyone in the world mimicking our styles
cold-hearted Tuff lmao where did you got that shit?
@@gotcha9934 the proof is there
@@risingsun5999 where I'm from when you are told you act like a nigga it's an insult. It basically means you're a fucking looser. No one really wants you in is house
Candace candace I don’t like black not because they are black but because of you lifestyle it’s my right. But I don’t wish your death or the worse. I just don’t want you guys in our lives by experience.
cold-hearted Tuff lol
As a black American we don't hate Africans or African immigrants but we have our own culture and history that we created on our own we're our own people/group. This is true for every group in the diaspora (Afro-latinos, Afro Caribbeans) but for some reason African Americans are the only ones that get called out for this no one calls the black people from Jamaica, Brazil, or the Dominican Republic African they call them by their nationality. I don't see the problem.
Because it was designed that way, the same way they created borders in Africa, they divided us by nationality.
We are all the same people, just scattered, the only difference between an African America and a Jamaican, or a Afro-Brazilian, Afro Cuban, whatever...
Is a boat stop
Because they knew that, United we stand, but divided we fall... so they separated us. Called us by different names, so that we wouldn’t see each other as brothers, but a different people, all the while, suffering the same oppression.
Eugene Sanou what are you talking about we don’t need approval from outsiders to validate what we are. We are black Americans descendants from slaves and we celebrate our African heritage but that doesn’t make us African. White Americans don’t get offended because white is already celebrated. Hispanics don’t get offended because they which they were more white than they already are. The Dominicans/PR that celebrate their European dna are the ones with the inferiority complex not us.
Brother Tracy Stone FACTS!!!
Yahwo I view the rest of the diaspora and the rest of the descendants of slavery in the Americas as my brothers and sisters because of our similar history and because of the boat stop logic. However we don’t share that same connection with Africans. Also, although I view the afro-diaspora as my brothers I would never say that we’re the same because we have a different culture.
Eugene Sanou lol whatever I know what ethnicity is I’m taking a race and ethnicity course right now yes I do know how to read thanks for noticing. Also, I’ve learned that whenever you ask someone a question or to explain and they deflect with insults it’s usually because they don’t truly know what they’re talking about but are simply regurgitating information that was forced fed to them.
I once told a Ghanian colleague that I was African. He told me, "You are not African." If I'm not African, what am I? He couldn't provide an answer. I assume a "Black American." My DNA is comprised of 90% African DNA. I feel that gives me the right to distinguish myself as an African. I have had the pleasure of traveling to Africa and hope to return soon. I have met Africans that view African Americans with the same stereotypes used by other non-black people. The Africans that I've met treated me different when they saw none of those stereotypes applied to me. I just hope that we can come together and stop this nonsense that keeps us seperated.
You are African Queen don't ever let anybody take that away from you
@SBLACKW C me neither Queen I know I'm African at heart
@Blacks vs Everybody Naaa, That's a one-off, very rear that an African would say that.
Funny... fuck him and those who dont think so... Once again we suffer seriously and we are African all day long weather I'm 50 percent or 60 percent african.. ancestors straight from the mother land... I will welcome my self to African soil.. that's my soil......bet
My brother am african from gambia but forget about this people they don,t know that is why it is not who told african you are not african.majority of you come from big tribes in africa. They have to give freedoom lands to you because your ancestory share is there.black is id is africa
Black Americans identifying as Black Americans and NOT Africans doesn't necessarily mean that they hate or deny their African roots.
Jamaicans can call themselves Jamaican all day though.
@@jasminepearls1047 Right! Same with Haitians, Dominicans, Brazilians, Bahamians, Bajans, Trins, Panamians, etc..,
We get a lot of hate just because we are American. Americans in general get alot of hate.
@@ravinj8625 Exactly!
Exactly.. You don't hear Haitians calling themselves African.
We know our American culture. Stop saying we dont know our culture. We have been in the U.S. since 1619
They are bat shit crazy smh jealousy is all it is .... if I knew I was better I wouldn't spend time trying to explain how smh
@@silvercole9291 Ring shout is culture, AA quilts is culture, fried okra is culture, Sunday dinners is culture, Family Reunions and barbeques are culture, line dances are culture, sweet 16 parties are culture, praise dances are culture, soul singing is our culture, Harlem Renassiance paintings and books are culture, jazz and blues and rap and spoken word are our culture heck even Kwanzaa lol. The black happy birthday song is culture. Langston Hughes A Raisin In The Sun poem is our heritage. Maya Angelou Phenomenal Woman poem. People act like we just sat here from the early 1600s until now just chillin and doing nothing.
After slavery in the late 1800s and early 1900s black people built whole black towns in Greenwood, Tulsa, Oklahoma aka Black Wallstreet which was the most sucessful town. Then there was the black town Wilmington, North Carolina that had it's own newspaper. And there was also Weeksville in Brooklyn, New York.
Louisiana second line parades are black culture. Gumbo is black culture. Voodoo is black Louisiana culture. Louisiana even has a parade when people die. The Gullah Geechee on James Island ring a bell when people die. They eat red rice and fish which comes from Senegal others say its a form of jollof rice in Nigeria or Ghana. The Gullah dry their shrimp to add more flavor to soup. Blacks in the south used to dry high john the conqueror and put it in their pockets for luck or love spells. Muddy Waters sang about this (he called it johnny conquero and his mojo). Is this not a culture? Louisiana also does the Easter Rock dance around the table in church. Kumbayah song, is a Gullah Geechee (black Americans on the Sea Islands of the U.S. coastal Georgia, south carolina, florida) song that means Come by here. They used words like "bobo" meaning "boy" and "kraka di teeth" meaning "talk" and "day clean" which means "sun down" and comes from a translation in Ga.
Sarissa Vaughn chillin doin nothin and smoking weed 😊
What a one sided sob story 😑😒 Atleast interview a black American to defend what’s true. 💯
Facts sis!
lol I'm yet to upload a video I shot with them
Always Alanna hey that really bother me a one way conversation where is an African American in this conversation....because a lot of Africans don’t know are history
Now go directly to her go fund me page
@YoRUba TheGem everything doesn't have to be an argument...Sometimes it's good to just hear the views /perspective of others.
Why are AAs always on other folks minds? 🤦🏾♀️
I’m not going to say that they ain’t shit but I do sense animosity towards us for being more visible than they are. I find it interesting we are called uncultured and lost when many do not know anything about our history in America, and only know us by what they see on tv. They are quick to say we learn about Africans from tv, but it is the same for them as well.
@Michelle A the same america that mistreats you? Aren't most black Americans in poverty?
@@jesse8716 no most african Americans aren't living in poverty check your stats
Were god chosen people. No nation like us lol
I think it just it's curiosity . I know a few Africans to me they are nice. But I'm nice so I usually get along with everyone, however my Nigerian associates think blks don't take what they feel is advantage of the so called freedom they feel we have .they don't understand most blks don't feel like they gonna Schuck and jive to get what they worked for.. where as in my opinion Nigerians r more open to playing the game and don't mind marrying whites
I am a African-American man I am African born in the United States that's what I say because my ancestors were enslaved and brought over here from Africa but Africa is my ancestors home land so I am African no matter what. As a African-American I am proud of my African roots and I took a DNA test I have cameroonian in me so my ancestors might have came from Cameroon
Well but the question is why are the white Americans almost never referred to as European Americans? They aren't native there either.
@@fjellyo3261 I met a white man that has a European necklace so he knows that he has European heritage and you have to understand America tries to brainwash us to get rid of our original Heritage and make sure that are only Heritage is American and we all know that is not true
@@evanking0588 wow you once met a white guy...with a necklace. And wtf is a european necklace? I am german and have no idea wtf you are talking about.
@@fjellyo3261 and you have no right to tell me who the hell I am and the necklace was of Scandinavian heritage so obviously the guy was proud to be Scandinavian and you know you're German so why are you even upset that I'm trying to get back with my heritage you're just a hater and a troll
@@evanking0588 I just meant that I am a German citizen that's all. I don't give a shit were I come from. I am home there where nice people are around me. We all live on the same world, we are all from the same place. And in the end all humans come from east Africa.
My observation is that some Africans seem to generalize Black Americans because they have a shallow sense of the BA experience & understanding of the history. There are many discussions just as this one & it makes me cringe because of the prejudices and stereotyping.
Some Africans think that because they watch BET or come across a few ignorant ppl or have been called an "afro boot scratcher" in the 4th grade that they have an excuse to form a bias or resentment against an entire group of BAs. Thats an issue within itself.
The truth to me at least is that Africans do not need to understand or analyze the Black American because they have their own issues to deal with. Honestly, I do feel like the way some Africans talk about BAs is condescending and from a place arrogance. I rarely see BAs having generalizing discussions about Africans like this. I only really see Africans making videos on this subject. Interesting.
My hubby is Nigerian & we joke all the time about our cultural differences. I have love for everybody. We may not be brothers and sisters, but we definitely cousins.
I agree. West Africans can be arrogant as hell for no reason. They love to brag about how well they are doing in America or the UK but when you bring up the failure and ineptitude of their home country, they have nothing to say. Most African countries cannot even keep their electricity on for 24 hours straight.
Alia O African Americans generalize us alof what are you saying
Get the fuck out of here!!! The moment you step in America and open your mouth..... it is these ignorant African Americans that will point out your 'accent' and use that to ascertain your intelligence. We get more more respect from whites than African Americans. Why will I associate myself with these dummies!
If your an African and goes to High school in the US, you'll see the stereotype from African Americans.
We like our arrogance and its built up on resentments we get from African Americans.
@@ernestotchere2715 they are full of shit, watched a UA-cam video where some guys from this channel called All Def digital tried African (Nigerian) food, the amount of disrespect they had was disgusting, spitting out food eating the food the wrong way even Making comments like "they don't have forks in the motherland" that is how most black Americans act toward Africans, then when Africans in the us avoid them it's "Africans are arrogant"
@@jesse8716 I live in Atlanta, Georgia. I've been here for over decade. I can tell you first hand how disrespectful they are towards Africans and when you give them the same attitude, they hit you with that bullshit: 'Africans don't like us'. Ask Jamaicans or Haitians or any other non African American, they'll tell you the exact same thing! It's even worse if you attend school with them. Their level of ignorance is beyond redemption. I could care less about them.
I have been to Central Africa ( Congo) 4 times. I want you know that African Americans we have culture. It is in our DNA check our music, dance, movement, art, food etc.
One of the thing I notice about Continental Africans they do not comprehend our struggle.Currently, all the freedom they enjoy when they come to the Americas our ancestors had to fight for it.
Next talk have people from America so there is a better perspective.
🤣😂🤣🤣stop lying you're a Congolese muluba your name is from kasaï.
I’ve never heard an adult use the phrase African Booty Scratcher. As a matter of fact I haven’t heard that term since the 80’s. 🙄🙄🙄
EDIT--- I don't know where the term originated from, however, I think it was a movie. As a kid, we (African Americans) called each other that as a joke. As a child you really don't know what things like that really mean. Like I said I haven't heard that phrase in years. I have kids and I've never heard them use it. I just wish people were more careful about what information they are putting out.
By the way I'm a proud African American who hopes to someday visit the Motherland!
Exactly, that was in a movie and little kids are going to thing that term is funny because it has the word "booty" in it. African Americans called each other that as well. That's not a word among us that we use to talk down on africans as they believe.
Right?
Exactly I have never even heard someone call an African a booty scratcher. Black american don't all grow up around Africans.
@@moneysnappin People are really holding on to being called a booty scratcher in 5 th grade like come on.
Yeah you could tell from the very jump that she was full of shit and does not like black Americans.
She wants to sound educated but the fact is she's really just a white person in black skin, what I mean is she talks all the same bullshit stereotypes that they do, basically doing the work for the white man sewing seeds of dissention.
To be real with you, I go in (DEEP) on any of these mother fuckers that come here talking nonsense about my people.
Our ancestors built this country into the most powerful nation in all the world. Their sacrifices in most cases will never be told. As An American descendant of slaves who grew up in the South I Carry a deep pride and respect for the sacrifices of my ancestors.
Black American culture is all over the world, we have changed the game For all other None white people.
The irony is, the girl talking negativity about us is probly getting piped down by a white boy....typical.
African booty scratcher lol. Im 32 years old and havent heard that one since 1st grade lmao.
Who told the first grader? Smh !
yorubianx That shit was on the movie boys in the hood that came out in 1991
What they don’t get is we were called that as well.
Exactly! Nobody says that she pulled that out her ass that's an old elementary joke from the 80's gurl bye
Right! That bs came from a movie. It died decades ago.
I hate one sided conversations. yall don't never say that bout Caribbeans or afro Latinos. I think because we the trendsetters of America. we make America hot because we produce the most. but yall say we ain't got no culture.
Agree!
@Natasha Luo n we dont ???
I’m African American and I’m proud of our African history. We came from kings and queens before slavery
If it wasnt for the people's greed it would be like Europe or America maybe better
I am indian so I do know how it feels that when people do forget about the long heritage and their amazing culture
Stop referring to ADOS (American Descendant Of Slaves) as AKATA's.
Stop calling yourselves Niggas too. You cant accept a derogatory term and be offended by another.
stop calling yourself a slave 🤦🏾♂️
@@susansue6531 Phuqq that, context is King, and which the context I saw the word use towards #ADOS was in a separatist, derogatory, degrading elitist way towards us. I'm not having it, no ma'am.
@@susansue6531 Akátá is a word believed to be derived from the Yoruba people of Nigeria in West Africa Africa. The term is used among Nigerians and other West Africans in the United States to refer to African Americans, similar to the term oyinbo used for whites. The word Akata means Panther in Yoruba language.
@@whutha Akata is not even derogatory as I have read a lot of people say. And moreover, not even all Nigerians will know what the word, Akata means, if you are not resident in Lagos and you are not Yoruba, chances are you may not have heard that word.
I never once heard any american ever utter the words "African booty scratcher" but i've heard hundreds of Africans call black americans all kinds of Akatas!
i think one of the problem some african american believe african did sold their ancestors or did not come to their rescue and they were abandoned to the most cruel suffering things a human being can experience.there is this feeling that africa did not look out for them like a mother abandon her child,they feel betray by africans.they sold us out or they did not care enough about us to come and save us from this suffering so they are some mistrust there.i think 90% of african american love and want to know about africa
You nailed it, but once you look deeper you’ll know why our people couldn’t come for us they were colonized same as slavery so we were all in bondage
Whatever be the case, they had no option truly speaking cos the colonizers came already with a determined mind and force so whether Africans sold Africans because of money or power, the others who tried to stop it were killed anyway so yh.. Some did bad, others who were trying to do good got killed.
No, they sold us for smoked fish and guns. Its documented if you actually look at the history. I could see if everyone died fighting white colonizers but that's not what happened tribes and kingdoms participated in capturing Africans to give to Europeans because they wanted money and other things. Then West Africans specifically Nigerians have the audacity to call us Akatas when they are the reason we are in America. How do you call someone a stray cat (since that's the definition that yall think is less offensive, we will never know the real definition) when you had a hand in shipping us across the ocean.
That has nothing to do with african americans personally.
African men just don't give a f about their nation.
There are slaves in Libya now, who comes to their rescue?
Right nobody.
Why, cause the black politicians are corrupt, they don't care, they don't defend anybody, they are selfish.
That's why Africans come to the white mans land .
Nick cannon just proved that you guys are Africans. He explained the black male leadership psychology.
Blacks have no leadership.
They have patriarchy but no men.
@alanbev give me one name?
How in the hell are you going to have foreigners speaking on what African Americans think and feel?
African Americans know the name of Africa isn't Africa. Africa is name after a socalled white man. Put a brother in that mix.
Actually the word africa comes from the ancient words Afruika and ifriqiya which where names Egyptians nubians and ancient Tunisian called africa
@@tooswee Africa was already called africa long before scipio
@@laughingemoji5445 I guess it was colonized before the white man arrived there also. You guys hate AA so much that you can't receive any truth from us.
These people are doing the same thing they did when entering the Motherland before which were acknowledge the Hamites people didn't exist or were salvages running around wild. And now colonizing Africa all over again with an fraction of what they are taken out of there.
@C S who are you talking to if it me please don't be an internet bully and meet me in person. I will never dog out my people nor African people period.
@@tooswee ya it was colonized by black people long before there was any white people and what do u mean salvages running around naked ?
I have never heard any of my African-American friends ever call Africans names.
Agree there is a separation between Africans and African-Americans because we ARE different. We have different experiences and cultures, we need to respect that and move on.
Im glad you didn't, but it happens AA can be very ignorant and condescending n cold too and say negative things about Africans
It definitely happens, my school is majority AA including me so when I was there I was usually called a “African booty scratcher”
Who is this lady speaking for us African Americans we know we are African
I'm ADOS you can thank my people for your benefits
What benefit ?
@@laughingemoji5445 For simply being about to step foot in America, gain citizenship and education. Without our fight in the civil rights era your people wouldn't be able to step a foot in this country so before you talk trash about African Americans learn the history of this Country and what we went thru after slavery.
@@mediagoon6910 i never been to America but what u said its true
The tall lady was very condescending and had very little positive to say about American decendents of slaves.
The problem she has is within herself not someone else.
In contrast, the other young lady said exactly what our challenges are. She stated that we have not learned about each other, the fact is no Africans in the Diaspora know of each other's history. African Americans don't know the history of Afro Brazilians, Afro Brazilians don't know the history of Jamaicans, Jamaicans don't know the history of ugandans, Ethiopians don't know the history of African latinos in Mexico...etc.
We need to start a movement to encourage travel to learn of each other's history and see things with our own eyes , that will be a monumental influence in changing our perception of each other.
Hmm I don't know about this one. It seems to me that Africans are so quick to jump down our throat for wanting to be called African American/Black. Is it wrong for me being proud of where I come from as much as so be it to you? I'm from America and same as many generations of my family(as to how I got here is another story) and so that makes me an African American. Me wanting to be labeled as an African American has nothing to do with Africa and the stereotypes and that there of. It has everything to do with where I'm from and where I was born. So stop telling us how/what we feel about it when you don't know anything. I won't blame society because at the end of the day you can have a robotic mind or a mind of your own to find the truth. To be honest I have many African friends but there is also a lot of them here who look their nose down on us and are very very rude.
Tammy Johnson hey 👋🏿
I’m a Genealogist (Family History Tree Maker):
If you have taken an AncestryDNA (www.AncestryDNA.com) test, you may also be able to find your biological, genetically “Blood” related living Africa-born Family Members.
This is a guide to finding possible African DNA matches... on Ancestry.com/DNA. I wrote this some time ago, and posted it to FB.
If you are Afro-Caribbean, African American, Afro-Latina/o, or Afro-European, and have taken an AncestryDNA test via Ancestry.com...
In this post I outline three strategies for searching for Africa-born relatives, among your “DNA matches”, on AncestryDNA (www.AncestryDNA.com; www.Ancestry.com/DNA)
You know what’s really neat...?
There is also a current movement, within the African American community/continental African community, of taking DNA test, such as www.AncestryDNA.com / www.23andme.com, in an effort to find out not only “how much African” is in us...
But for Continental Africans to find family members, who were taken from their families via the TransAtlantic Slave Trades, who are today, their biological Relatives (albeit 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, and 8th cousins); and vice versa for those in the “multigenerational” African Diaspora...to find their biological Africa-born Relatives...from the Families, across the African continent, their Ancestors were taken from.
1) One way to find many of your African matches, if you or your parents, grandparents...or other AncestryDNA tested relatives, is:
tracingafricanroots.wordpress.com/2017/05/10/how-to-find-those-elusive-african-dna-matches-on-ancestry-com/
As a result, many families from across cultures and continents are reintegrating each other, into their lives/families...etc. trips are being made, back home in Africa, amongst the African Americans who can... to visit their Africa-born family( in cities and villages), from Senegal to Mozambique. Many are taking traditional African names, in naming ceremonies, across not only Africa...but across the United States, in ceremonies that often have Continental African dignitaries, Chiefs, and other forms of royalty, from the community of the Naming...presiding over the ceremonies. All while members of each respective African community represented...celebrate the “coming home” of sorts. It really is a beautiful thing to watch, in the moment.
One such organization that does this, every year... is a Nigerian organization called ‘Council of Igbo States in America’ “www.cisandiigbo.com” in partnership with ‘dnaTestedAfricans’ “www.dnaTestedAfricans.org”
2) A second strategy is to type into the search box, different African countries, seeing who pops up, and looking at their DNA compositions, to see the likelihood of them being born on the continent.
3) Another strategy to see if you have any Africa-born cousins, would be to figure out how many pages of DNA matches you have, then work your way backward, going through each DNA match individually, looking for African sounding, Portuguese, or Spanish names... looking at the DNA composition ( All African DNA; African DNA +Iberian; African DNA+ Middle Eastern DNA and/or + Iberian. It’s Its from Madagascar, look for Southeastern Bantu DNA +Southeast Asian... etc)
Tammy Johnson thank you. African born vs African diasporan will not change the injustices we all face from White supremacy. Get to know each other and be open minded when it comes to Africans and African Americans.
@@hasanicarter5543 This sounds pretty interesting, though I am not entirely sure I believe in all this stuff.
StudioArtFX
Lol skepticism is healthy.
I would like to add though, as a testament to the power of these autosomal test...
last year we finally found my Mom’s oldest sister, whom my Grandmother gave up for adoption, in 1942 (raped by her uncle), to a white family, who moved her from Ohio to NY. All thanks to these DNA test.
@@hasanicarter5543 This aspect of DNA I know and understand. If you have enough information, for example, a father and a son, you can find other long lost brothers who came from that same father. That's matching.
Finding where someone's ancestors came from 500, or more, years ago, though is completely impossible, as DNA has no relation to geography.
As African American...more n more of African Americans are moving out of American and moving to Ghana....over 25000,00 AFRICAN Americans are living in Ghana
that's some dumb shit, why on earth would you leave your OWN land to go and live in foreign one?
@@satura4113 because america is racist and they don't treat us right and trying built connect to the mother land
@@alfredbaxter1061 your motherland is America and not Africa. You are in your own land and you are colonised and they lied to you and told you came from Africa. Fight for you land and don't run because the foreigners are going over there to replace you.
@@satura4113 America is are land but are ancestors came from there we need connect with africa reason why other countries doing it Africa have resources and other countries taking there resources like China Europe american.
@@satura4113 yeah America is colonize so is africa they are too
I wanna apologize to our People akrozz the water. I love you and I am You
One love 💚
Black first brother!!!
One love!
Bakari Akeel Bey Thank you
Thank you.
I LOVE THAT THEY ALL LOVE THEIR NATURAL HAIR!
I don't understand the part where African Americans do not want to hear, they are Africans.For example, on an employment application in the ethnicity part , it says African American.
The woman in the video who said that was lying in my opinion.
We are not African American or AFRICAN.
We not african bro genetically or historically
I received my African name when I visit Ghana 2018 August MaMi Ama Adorkor Kosiwah
I visit Cape Coast nd Elmina Castle where I learned so much history nd very emotional for me being there I felt the spirits of my Ancestors 💕
Just that moment nd that strong spiritual feeling I knew I was a AFRICAN😘 my ancestors akaawaba me home
I will Return back 2019 December for Christmas in Ghana 🙆😍
I will do my DNA ANCESTRY before I return back
I LOVE THE MOTHERLAND 💜 #MyRoots 💛
The reason why I don’t want to just be called African is because I wasn’t born in Africa and because my ancestors have done a lot in America to gain their freedom, to gain their rights, to keep their dignity, to fight for their family and generations to come. This country was built off of the backs of my Ancestors (literally). I have absolutely no problem claiming African American. But I can’t just call myself African. I am a DOS! And I am proud of t!
And See but I don’t know about this because a lot of Africans come over here (America) despising African Americans, they don’t like us (I’ve been told by African friends) but all smiles and giggles for the white man and his family. I’ve seen this plenty of times so Wode Amaya Talk about this too please.
Neo Kaidu No that’s your friends! I’ve personally seen Africans being rude to African Americans and being much nicer and more pleasant to the white man. Y’all treat them with more respect than African Americans, for some reason. Y’all come over here being rude to us and looking down on us and then having the nerve to talk trash! Don’t tell me it’s not true because I have African friends and they tell me truth about what their parents say about black people, they believe the stereotype and are brainwashed. It’s pretty clear but you can’t see it because you’re not in our shoes.
@D.E. Booker Africans contributed more to the world than any other humans sit down boy and fuck the USA africans owes yall nothing your country and its allies lives of African resources they owe the continent over trillions of dollars and its not Africans fault that black Americans don't do shit in school and born on welfare u guys complained about africans doing better than yall yet instead of working yall listen to rap music smoke steal killed other people does black on black crimes remind you anything ?
@@AButterflyinChrist lol africans don't want to live in Africa ? Where's your evidence for your bullshit theres more whites in africa than theres Africans in the USA and Europe combined And there's barely 2 million africans in USA compared to the 1.2 billion africans in Africa trust me the majority of africans don't want to live the continent so your already lying and Asian taking over the continent ? For once stop believing everything your media tells u and also u guys are the most racists people i ever met when i was living in the usa yall where so racists to me and my friends all because we were africans, jaimacans, and Haitians not once did the Mexicans whites and Asians ever said any racist shit to us they didn't cared that we where different and as for your comment on africans Americans being stronger than any other group of black people lol thats wrong Central African Bantus and Massai warriors are the strongest i would love to see an african American taking on a herd of lions leopards and crocodiles and survive and i love how u guys think whenever a foregein black succede in the USA was because the struggle of african Americans that is sometimes true and sometimes wrong Africans succeed everywhere in the world especially Europe so do tell me do they own their achievement to black Americans there too ?and how about when black folks succede in Brazil China Australia the middle East Japan New Zealand and every other countries. Thats not the USA was it because the struggle black Americans that cause all of this ? And also theres barely few Asians in my country u guys probally think Africa is country lmao liers will be liers
@D.E. Booker me and my family feed ourselfs we have 4 gardens full of fruits grains and all other vegetables and 1 small farm with 44 chickens 2 goats 5 cows and not everbody in Africa is hungry dude and Africa accomplish and gift to the world is music science arts written languages mathematics astronomy Medicines the foundation of civilizations migrations architectures and many more we are the alpha and the omegas we are the birth giver of the human race no other human accomplish beats this
I don’t want to be known as a color it’s elementary. Do we call Koreans yellow, Hispanics orange, or Indians brown/olive 🙄🙄🙄 Europeans found it easy to label something they had no education of and label it as a color.
Depends on the country
@@GREATBLACKSHARK Read what was said and read my reply again.
Lol, good point. Hispanics orange. 😋
Many AAs don't realize that. Words and names do matter.
Exactly. Your american period. The only one who can say they are moreamerican are american indians
@@mentalandfloss2550 werent ethiopians the only non colonialised
I am kind of offended by this video. You have a panel talking about African American, Black Americans, Afro Americans. Non of you are any of those. So let me educate my African Kings and Queens...........First off African booty Scratcher was a kid dis from back in the 80s. No one says that anymore. I was shocked you even brought that up.
Sanchez Clark wooowwww me too!!! I ain’t hear that since elementary & I’m 44! Nobody say that anymore.
Yes african Americans should be represented so they set the record straight esp if the african /african Americans are conscious
Tribalism is dangerous
RONNIE, THIS MADE MY DAY, RONNIE NIGGA YOU STUPID!!!!!!!!LOL, LMBAO, HAHAHAHAHAAAA HAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHAHAHHAAHAHHA
It hasn't died. My 2nd grader just told me she heard a brown boy say it to another brown boy at school last week. The only place he could've gotten that from is home.
I've also spoken with Africans who were subject to that insult and still hold some resentment from it, the implications and how they couldn't understand why other kids who descended from Africans were using it against them when they were expecting acceptance.
We are one I was born in America but I’m still a proud African and am still learning my roots❤️❤️❤️
And your beautiful too 😍
Not all black Americans unless ur unmixed 💀💀
I love this video. As a AA I feel this type of dialogue creates more opportunities for African and AA to be united. Let’s talk and let’s create unity.
As A African American I'm glad that my African cousins from the continent are having this type of dialogue so that both sides can learn from each other and Heal all the pain,and trauma that both sides suffered from the past.❤🌎🌍
Amazing mindset you have👌💯
U are doing a great job ...u are such a hard worker African-American one great people❤
Thank you for the compliment as a African-American I appreciate that African people are wonderful and rich people we need to come together and unite I love my African brothers and sisters
Yh true
😎😎😎👏👏👏👍👍👍
In my opinion Africans born people can not explain the ways or thinking of African Americans our history and struggle are totally different. As an African American women don't get it twisted some of us like myself is very well educated about the African Continent and have travel outside of America. Here in America we have Blacks University and Black professors. In my opinion it is the African people who know little about African Americans ways or the hidden history of what part the Africans play in the slave trade. In the end we are all Black people born and raised in different part of the world.
African Americans are not the only group of people with struggles....
@@Opinion_Box82 But yet y’all are on our case. Why not make a video black people from South America or the UK why are we always the hot topic?
@@isobangman8728 they dont fucking complain rven though they go through much more than you
@@soumilyarlagadda9764 you don’t know what we go through
@@Opinion_Box82 Exactly 💯
I'm not African-American.... I'm an African born in America! #PanAfrican
am so glad to be the first to comment tonight
From somali horn of african east africa
❤️🌹🌹🌹🌹proud to be AFRICAN
Thanks bro....
Woria wafianta
@@oppongkwasi4912 😂 😂 👏
Why are you proud of something you can't choose? Nothing I am proud of. It just happened.
Keep on updating us the different between African American still some people don't understand Nice video keep it up brok Aya Mayaaaa
It would be nice for you to interview African Americans living in Ghana
Check out his interview with fellow youtuber Nativeborn...I'm subscribed there also. Nativeborn is African American and he lives in Ghana with his family.
Fjelloy 32! Should different shades of Brown and different shades of Pink! That's the closest I get. I might be colour blind, but Man you are on cue! Big up to you
He has. NativeBorne. They have a channel
Why would he interview non "Black Americans" about who we are? This is some real dump mess🤬
These panels always do this. They have Africans speaking on behalf of Black Americans. One sided .
Who loves África you are well come! Who don't Stay Away Is so simple.
@brwnish eyes lol what payback ? What harm did africans ever do to u ?
brwnish eyes don't even respond. Knew he was white when he said "cunt"😂 that's like the highest insult for them, and that literally means nothing to us🙄😂 disregard the colonizer. 😂😂
@@Jjj-qe9ph plenty black british used the word cunt its like the B word over there in the UK
Ohhhh, this conversation is so loaded that it would take hours and hours to complete.😂😂 The discussion gave me all types of emotions honestly, from happiness to sadness and then anger and then back to numb and all over again.
Because I like the channel, I listened. Any other channel, I would have scrolled by the topic because it transcends anything that can be expressed in words. You just have to understand. We just have to understand. It’s difficult and yet easy on so many levels. It’s exhausting.
I personally let it go because of how exhausting.😂 It’s pulling through past generations of madness that, like the young lady sitting next to you, Wode Maya, said.... the history and knowledge about AAs isn’t taught to Africans and African history we have always had to pull and dig for over here.
Tho ppl hate to say it, but slavery broke soooo much. It’s exhausting on the heart and mind. Like I said, I let it go, not in a bad way but a freeing way. I accept who I am and where I was born and raised-period. I don’t need a “TIE” to somewhere anymore. All my life I literally tried to find something that I will NEVER find, and as soon as I accepted that it would never be found, I was at rest.
Being African American has never been a diss to Africa, but an acceptance of where a kinfolk I will never know is from and at the same time an acceptance of the culture, abilities and things I love and know being an American with the kinfolk that I do know and love buried in this soil and those still living right here in the USA. We built this land. It’s mine. That’s how I feel. It’s not a sin to feel this way just like it isn’t a sin to say I also love Africa at the same time.
I have all the dynamics in myself to make it possible... to literally love two lands and people at once, be angry at the injustices in two lands at once and feel like I have every right to do so, defend two lands at once. I am two lands at once. The problem comes in when ppl try and “ONLY” or “SOLELY” this thing down. It can’t be done.
We are who we are. We don’t have to just be one thing because we aren’t. We can come and go to and from Africa, but home is home... and EVERY country has its racial issues, financial woes, ghettos and castles, crime and etc just like America.
As far as not knowing “our culture” as black ppl, (something I have heard)I feel that’s bull. We do what we do here based on what we grew up doing... the same as anyone in Africa, Japan etc. To me it’s a slap in the face and disrespectful to say AAs don’t know their culture because it is saying “y’all need to change AGAIN” like something is wrong with us or something. I feel like Africans who grew up in Africa do what they do and that’s that. I do what I do having grown up in both Europe and America, and that’s that. Nothing is WRONG with either.
I dunno😂😂 It’s just soooo freaking much until, I let it all go. I take INDIVIDUALS as they are and don’t lump ppl into one big mound.
Hello, I’m me. We are the same but grew up vastly different. How are you? 😂😂 Let’s go have some fun. It’s an easier conversation.
Good video, Wode Maya. My whole day is busted now. I can’t wait to hit the bed.
Well said sista. -California American here..
Ericalane B Okay now, sis! SouthEast Coast over here!❤️
MirikaCOfficially sister I’m african from the continent,, I do understand your point,, but believe me is gonna be ok ,, I have never been to America,, I live in Spain I have met a lot of african american over here but I get long with them ,,I don’t know where these things came from ,, I mean the tensions,, in my country in Guine Bissau when I was younger my English teacher was an african American brother,, he was loved back home ,, he was just one of us ,, to this day he still live there ,, married with local with 2 kids ,, I mean unity is coming. Blessings to you and your family.❤️❤️❤️!!!
little flaver Earl ❤️Blessings right back at you, bruh. Much love to you and yours.
I’m a Genealogist (Family History Tree Maker):
If you have taken an AncestryDNA (www.AncestryDNA.com) test, you may also be able to find your biological, genetically “Blood” related living Africa-born Family Members.
This is a guide to finding possible African DNA matches... on Ancestry.com/DNA. I wrote this some time ago, and posted it to FB.
If you are Afro-Caribbean, African American, Afro-Latina/o, or Afro-European, and have taken an AncestryDNA test via Ancestry.com...
In this post I outline three strategies for searching for Africa-born relatives, among your “DNA matches”, on AncestryDNA (www.AncestryDNA.com; www.Ancestry.com/DNA)
You know what’s really neat...?
There is also a current movement, within the African American community/continental African community, of taking DNA test, such as www.AncestryDNA.com / www.23andme.com, in an effort to find out not only “how much African” is in us...
But for Continental Africans to find family members, who were taken from their families via the TransAtlantic Slave Trades, who are today, their biological Relatives (albeit 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, and 8th cousins); and vice versa for those in the “multigenerational” African Diaspora...to find their biological Africa-born Relatives...from the Families, across the African continent, their Ancestors were taken from.
1) One way to find many of your African matches, if you or your parents, grandparents...or other AncestryDNA tested relatives, is:
tracingafricanroots.wordpress.com/2017/05/10/how-to-find-those-elusive-african-dna-matches-on-ancestry-com/
As a result, many families from across cultures and continents are reintegrating each other, into their lives/families...etc. trips are being made, back home in Africa, amongst the African Americans who can... to visit their Africa-born family( in cities and villages), from Senegal to Mozambique. Many are taking traditional African names, in naming ceremonies, across not only Africa...but across the United States, in ceremonies that often have Continental African dignitaries, Chiefs, and other forms of royalty, from the community of the Naming...presiding over the ceremonies. All while members of each respective African community represented...celebrate the “coming home” of sorts. It really is a beautiful thing to watch, in the moment.
One such organization that does this, every year... is a Nigerian organization called ‘Council of Igbo States in America’ “www.cisandiigbo.com” in partnership with ‘dnaTestedAfricans’ “www.dnaTestedAfricans.org”
2) A second strategy is to type into the search box, different African countries, seeing who pops up, and looking at their DNA compositions, to see the likelihood of them being born on the continent.
3) Another strategy to see if you have any Africa-born cousins, would be to figure out how many pages of DNA matches you have, then work your way backward, going through each DNA match individually, looking for African sounding, Portuguese, or Spanish names... looking at the DNA composition ( All African DNA; African DNA +Iberian; African DNA+ Middle Eastern DNA and/or + Iberian. It’s Its from Madagascar, look for Southeastern Bantu DNA +Southeast Asian... etc)
based on what they're saying, they shouldnt get mad about the term ADOS
This are continental africans they don't know anything called Ados
Honestly, i don't think there is much difference between Afrikans and Afrikan Americans because white people are just as present THERE as they are HERE, if not physically, then they are IMPLICATED in everything else, from economic structure (Capitalism) to religion (Christianity). Even the clothing styles of many Afrikans is western, with some exceptions (the women seem to embrace Afrikan styles MORE than the men).
Wrong. The white man has nothing to do with it. The culture has everything to do with it
@@gotcha9934 PEOPLE create culture, and they are impacted by OTHER PEOPLE, and this impact can be seen in their cultural ways and habits. Capitalism, for example, is NOT an Afrikan economic system but a European one, yet its global existence shows us how white people are implicated in our economic lives. But you seem to be convinced that i'm wrong, which means you can't be persuaded, even with facts. But i do appreciate your comment. I'll give you the last word if you like. If not that's kool too. Peace.
Love the natural hair!
I'm black American. I go by that term not to disrespect Africans.. I've never been there but my culture life family generations have been on US soil. My citizenship is in USA. MY connection to africa IS through lineage LOOONNG time ago. That's it that's all. BLACK AMERICAN. respect that!
Being an African American 1 thing family from the continent will not understand is how we have no history and how that effected us. Everything was stripped from us we don't have a connection to anything and we're treated as undesirables by everyone. We as Americans have our culture differences with Africa by being raised as Americans but many of us love Africa and it hurts when africans come over and look at us as shit because of what they see on tv and im sure Africans feel the same. I have a few African friends and they tell me their parents tell them not to marry or bring an American girl home and vice versa. But I agree with the video having social media has really opened a lot of Americans eyes to the real Africa and not just what we saw on national geographic. Over the last 2 days I've watched about all your videos and love it I'm learning from them as well keep up the good work and I'll be hitting the continent some time late this year or early next year.
Truth be told most African Americans are just as or even more ignorant than white Americans in issues about Africa lmao. They can barely name 10 countries in Africa, let alone understand it..
I can assure you that, Africans do not know anything about your pain until you see us and you start talking down to us. Thanks to God bcos of social media AA have seen that we live well and not sick and lacking food like we were portrayed years ago.
dxelson I understand what’s going on in Africa and I. can name more than10 countries and what they speak
This is exactly what I'm saying while watching this video. I don't know who they are talking to but we don't have a problem with our brothers and sisters from the Mother Land but they seem to have an issue with us...
Jesse Ward yeah see all black Americans can’t speak on other black Americans they probably lived in a white neighborhood before they went to Ghania
I have never heard in my entire life a black American refer to an African as a booty scratcher, or to Africans living in trees. When Africans who r members of tribal groups refer to themselves by their tribe, no one says that they r trying to separate. We r already separated by centuries, language and a vast ocean. But the Africans in this conversation I feel one with. I’ve met many like this in Africa. In the States however it seems black foreigners tend to have a deep burning hate for black survivors of American Slavery. That said between me and Maya there is very little space. He’s a thoughtful intelligent brother. Unfortunately he’s not representative of the bulk of blacks who have settled in the US recently from the continent and the West Indies.
Myron Briggs lmao
Its because your mentality is fucked up and you don't know it .. You support feminist and gays .. Africans are not going to line up behind that.
Bottomline, no african can say they are a brother or sister of mine, being a black Americans and they cannot respect us
Why are they talking about US? Live ya life. #ADOS #USFirst
Great conversation!! I wish there was at least one African American to share their experience in the cypher but still this was fun to watch and learn
I’m African American and a person who grew up in the 70’s. I can remember watching National Geographic and the news during this era and saw how Africa was introduced to Americans. It was very negative with stereotypes and what was taught in school as well as today was and is very limited. I have never traveled to Africa but have learned from reading and through my friends that are from different areas of the Continent . I’ve always had a strong connection with African people and have always felt welcomed. I do plan on visiting several areas where I have been given an open arm invitation from my friends in the future. I want to say thank you for the conversation on the subject. If you are African American and want no part being called African with the connection of being American then you are lost and do not understand the struggle of your ancestors or you are ashamed of them because they were sold into slavery. If you are in North America or Caribbean and Latin America and have melanin in your skin; your ancestors have a connection to Africa. Thank you and keep the conversation going.
AA women here w/ unfortunate yet true experience in "African" braid shops. The exclusion towards me was honestly no different than that from I got in Asian nail salon.
Khiaa Nolan, thank you very much. I only made attempt to support community but now braid my own hair and trim my own nails.
Then the hateful people who own the braid shop # 1 if they hate like that they won't do a good job . # 2 they can just do like they do in Japan - post a blue or red sticker outside the building or establishment - I have been in Japan and have seen it .# 3 If they are that cold , no way in hell I would go back in there . You only came to get braids it's not like your'e the Reverend Jim Jones or somebody .
That would have definitely set me off .I wouldn't go back in there if I were you . I would find another location . You owe them nothing . You show up in good spirits only to have a black mf from over seas screw up your day . A bad attitude leads to less money .
Its not you personally..its what you represent. The things you think are ok .. Is not ok everywhere else . for example African Americans love homosexuals
US Superprints, you're out of bounds. Please don't speak as if you know me. Where did homosexuality ever come into this discussion?
I only heard "African booty scratcher" twice, one during my junior year in high school and the other from the movie Boyz in tha Hood."
And what the hell does it even mean? Lol
Oh really? I was called "african booty scratcher" and "kunta" throughout elementary and junior high. Was not a good experience, grew up in D.C.
You shouldn’t generalize people for something done in grade school, middle school.
@@eggshell99 never generalized just stated my experience growing up in my neighborhood. I hv friends from all different backgrounds
Big up wuda myah one love from jamaica black ppl soon find them away home to moma Africa
U are welcome to Gambia
The smiling coast of west Africa
@@gorgainde1978 just be humble reggae music will free up black ppl one day
When people ask me , I say im African born in america. I dont like being called African American. I also like being called Black. Without the “american” part....
I feel the same .
you are a aghanian by name 😍😍😍
I feel the same way sistar. And to make it even more authentic I use the spelling of Afrakan that way to signify the "Ra" and "Ka" evoking the power of the ancestors. Ra=sun Ka=elevated. I love being Afrakan all day!
The tall women has a lot of knowledge. I want her to know even though we were slaves no matter our plight we made big strides (African Americans). As slaves and as freemen we built America. Imagine what we could do on the continent we came from.
I love these conversations but I do wish an "African-American" woman was a part of this. I truly believe that most African-Americans love learning about Africa. There's no continent that I want to travel to more. Just being human, we remember negative experiences more. For example, I've had biracial or light skin black people tell me that I look African. They say it as an insult and are surprised when I say, Thank you!" In Namibia, some African girls were assumed that I wouldn't know as much as I know about different African countries. However, the majority of my experiences with African people have been positive. We have to start there, from the positive. There's no continent I want to experience more.
Haiti is the only country in america who kept africain héritage.
Not Brazil?
Not true..maybe it's the closest,but they language and names have French ties.
Yes. Is true have been to Haiti?
And it shows.
Not completely true, they still French, but many Afro-latinos have kept a lot of their culture, the people of San Basilio de Plalenque in Columbia, have been isolated for 400 years, and have matained their African culture and their own language.
I prefer to be called Black American.
ADOS is a unique culture of our own. We are not African and Africans know this. This is why they seperate themselves when they come here to America. Our experiences are totally different. Even dark-skinned Black Americans can have White parents, grandparents and great-grandparents. We have helped build America and have invented so many inventions that have made America a world leader. ADOS have fought for rights that African immigrants dont even have in Africa. They come to America to get these benefits we fought for but look down on ADOS. ADOS need to work for our unity and goals. We are a force and we are tired of other groups benefitting off of our hard work without doing any of the work. I feel a change coming for ADOS people. We need to unite and do for us and only us.
Bro your stupidit is just on another level, I dont think itz curable.
There are about 300 Million Biracial AFRICANS which is way higher than in AMERICA.
So what's the point. Travel to AFRICA and you'll notice that the AFRICANS who live in the Coastal Cities tend to look ambiguous due to inter-marriages with Arabs, Europeans, Indians etc for hundreds of years ...
white don't make black
I'm proud of whom I am AFRICAN AMERICAN 💯💕
that loves my AFRICAN FAMILY ooo we are all brothers and sisters
we must UNITE 💞
How are you AFRICAN AMERICAN? We're you born there? Do you know any tribal languages? If not. You are not African American, or AFRICAN.
I was born and live in the US🇺🇸 and I am a African American 😀 I am a descendent from Africa where all Blacks are from ☺️
lol
@@WODEMAYA Can you explain what is funny about her comment?
Wasn't it an "African-American" who popularized the ethnonym, African American???
Mya Freeton Jesse Jackson I believe.
Lol yes but i dont think they know that
*if you are African, and someone calls you African American or Black American, does that offend you?* 🤔
Yes ...because black Americans don't like to be called African too...
Nah. It’ll be a privilege to be called African without anyone belittling or dismissing my truth.
@@Opinion_Box82 speaking in general or is this a monolithic statement from Black Americans presented at United Nations or something?
@@locojazz5770 peace and one love family ✌🏾❤️ 👑
Proud AFRICAN AMERICAN here. And I love all people of African descent globally. PERIOD
Most of us "African-Americans" been here only 300,000 came on slave ships about 85 to 90% been here
U sound stupid ever heard of populations growth ? Africa population during slavery in the 1600to1800s was 300 million now its 1.3 billion same could be said for Brazil during slavery the slave population was 5 million now its over 60 millions
Armed Ninja how can population grow when majority of the slaves were men and most women died before they got here? So out of 300k 100k died and most that died were women....we not african dumass
Yes, most the others were sent to Latin America and the Caribbean islands, after awhile the number of Africans increased naturally in usa, so they didn't have to keep bringing in "bossal" (new Africans) Slavery in places like Brazil, Haiti etc. mortality rate was much higher
Can we just throw this out there... African booty scratcher is not just reserved for Africans, I think almost ALL Darkskinned people in the black community grew up being called that, typically by other black ppl. Not tryna take away from anyones hurt, but I tend to hear alot of Africans use this and I don't think they realize how common (as bad as that is) that insult since colorism is such a problem.
Where do Africans get this hilarious idea that African Americans don't have culture??? We just don't have YOUR culture. I'm glad that the conversation started to turn to Africans learning about African Americans...yes, we (AA) indeed have a culture.
This Nigeran Lady Called Me an "Akata" yesterday. Can someone Tell me What that means?
@Blacks vs Everybody that shit aint coo , So african people have racist names for us just like white people?
@@californamacrich1679 My dear is not true she us joking
@@soccerhighlights724 so what does akata mean? because she didnt look like she was joking
@Blacks vs Everybody The Africans that Live next Door too me say rude Stuff To me on the regular. she told her son to Stop being around those Akatas . i didnt. say nun but i just knew it wasnt right
@@nanaflocka545 in Trouble How Tho...We ALL black in the eyes of the Opposition? i mean i aint perfect but her son does everything i do
Maya this is a good topic but next time I want u bring in a African American guy or a lady. They have a lot of African American in Ghana that live in places like east legon. I am Liberian nice video keep it up .
We did an Episode together!Will upload soon
@@WODEMAYA k bro thanks be safe god bless you.
Great conversation!!!African from Trinidad in the house ✊🏿
African Americans can be very ignorant,but we cant blame them,slavery was a hard pill to swallow.The internet is changing all that
ERIC BINEY big up
@Blacks vs Everybody I don't have time for baseless arguement.both sides have a lot to work on.Period
Really, are you serious , most of the inventions you enjoy today are from us. We are indeed the same people, but your people have let the whites corrupt you with their worthless money and dumb metal cars. The problem is your people have failed and allowed the enemy to take your own people across the waters. We literally built the dam world. So stop being stupid. Greed is the down fall of the people. People starving and you making dumb comments.
I am not African American I’m of Tuscarora and Cherokee Native American. May have African ancestry considering Africa is the birthplace of humanity. I love Africans,food etc. I don’t have a direct connection to Africa!!🙏🏾♥️
So why are you commenting and who cares..walk off a cliff so we can all smile :).
Then this conversation doesn't concern you , you can research on native Americans ancestors 🤗
@@aliciamomat7963 wtf are you talking about? It does concern me. We have been stripped of that part of our history, identity etc. what I’m saying is there’s no such thing as an African American. Maybe your headscarf wrapped around your head too tight.
I am Afrikan American and I can tell you that many so called Black Americans identify as Afrikan American.
I have been to Egypt, Ghana, and Nigeria. In fact, I lived in their homes, learned about my Afrikan Culture, and I adopted a Afrikan Name.
I identify as Afrikan American, Pan Afrikan and I know my roots. Throughout the United States Afrikan People are embracing Pan Afrikanism.
This is has been going on since the 1800 or before.
Black Americans have a very rich culture. I’m tired of hearing that. We are a strong people. Leave black Americans alone. We live day to day just like every one else on this planet.
I'm a Black man, living in the Americas. I love Africa, most vacations we always strive to visit Africa. It's the Throne, from the Throne we controlled the world. It always feels like I'm coming home. I have a deep respect for my people anywhere I find them in this world. It hurts when we meet & treat each other like enemies. Tribalism is the root & this European mindset is the killer. May Peace be our way & Brotherhood be our mindset.
African American culture is American culture...they have contribute so much to America.
Thanks to all the Ghanaians for not referring to us as Africans.
A lot of folks here never read a single history book apparently. Marvin Garvey, Frédérique Douglas, Malcolm X and many more would be ashamed.
It's Actually Marcus Garvey
We love yall in the motherland.From San Antonio TX USA we'll see yall soon.
Thanks for the internet, freedom of information, this has taken such a long time for this connection. It is so exciting. Black people, you have a special light or spirit, that brightens the atmosphere. It was great listening to you all.
I'm a black american and i am proud of my people.Even if many hate us i still respect all Africans and hope we can find peace among each other. But all the hating on each other is senseless. We black Americans been here for years, 100s of years, So we know nothing of Africa any more. We was force by slavery to forget our history and our land, 100s of years ago,So we created our own culture and we fought hard for our black brothers and sisters to be free in this country.They raped our mothers, worked or killed our fathers, They stole children from family's and sold them to slavery, Our mothers work the land, On hot days and cold winters they Cook the foods and took care the whole family even the whites. Our fathers suffer harsh terms, Hangings, Shootings , Cutting off the male parts, Jail for nothing. We fought back and raised up for our people. We also fought in all the wars in this country's history, we were helpers and were leaders in this country, We had black cities and were owners of that land we build churches we build our own schools, we had our own stores and ran our own towns and they burned it down in an air raid. They destroy our people in many ways, They destroyed black leaders who even thought to build up our people. And all we survive the bullshit. We as black Americans help shape this country, Reason why blacks in this country can live freely and get a good education. Just because the media show us like nobody"s as they would show us about how Africa is with war and burned villages, Doesn't mean we are. We help build this country even before it was known as the united states and before the 13 colonies, Our roots and our family blood is coated in this land, We are now rooted in this country's history as well as it's future. Peace to all the brothers and sisters.
This is a one-sided panel. Most of us, who were born in amerikkka are proud to claim our heritage, as African Americans.
No wonder why that can’t make it in their home countries, and come here to dismiss the very people whom ancestors build this country. It’s jealousy at its finest.
Wonder Boy Well I don’t do drugs, a person who moves to another country for better opportunities lack some sort of resource(s).
Micheal Vanderkorn Please dude, like I said your government fucked y’all over for some European fake ass coins. Now if it want for the African Americans you would not be here.
michael clayton facts, these Africans are bugging. If you don’t black Americans stay in your undeveloped countries. Most of the countries in Africa look like 19 century America. It’s the richest continent in the world, yet their Africa coming to the USA.
And thou shall not kiss thou ass . Put thee onto a ramp and return thou back to where they cameth .
You didn't build shit.
I'm American and you guys look just like my family. No matter rather Black Americans are African or not WE recognize WE are apart of your family although we are different. In America we almost blend in when WE hang out together. WE are only divided by legendary stories true and false narratives. Thanks for the good message beautiful people. Its up to us to help spread the unity of African Americans and true Africans.
Thank you sister ❤️❤️❤️
All branches of the same tree
I'm a black UK guy working in Brussels, Belgium. This city is probably the closest I have ever been to an African culture. I look just like them, well at least the Congolese and often I am mistaken by all races to be Congolese. However not once did I even think of myself as African. I'm black, but I'm not African. My cultural heritage is Jamaican with both parents being born on the island with a wider culture of being of the black Americas - the diaspora. I'm happy with this and proud of our cultural achievements. For me it is not a case of looking down on Africans at all. I enjoyed the company of the Africans I met here in Brussels and trust me, some of the black African women in Belgium are the most stunningly beautiful females I have ever seen - but I'm not African. Why should we call ourselves African? Being 'African' was never even a concept in black Africa until very recently. i.e. colonial times. Funnily enough I think it is only black people in America who describe themselves as 'African' American ... well some of them, many simply prefer 'black' or just 'American'. I have never heard a Jamaican say he is 'African Jamaican' nor a Trini, Badje or anyone else for that matter.
My question is why are you upset that we want to separate? Can someone answer this question please?
I'm not sorry for typing this but where not African Americans
Nor descendants of Africans
My people are in fact Israelites the true Israelites. We know who we are now.
First yall are Egyptians Romans Aboriginals and Moors and now this ?
As a race, we are all the same. As individuals, we are different. None is better, just different. Those who hate us, hate us and oppress us as a race. If we don’t defend each other, we will be doomed.
Once in my presence two educated West African men were talking, one proceeded to mock caribbean people, he assumed that I was West African, it sent a chill through me I will never forget.Whatever my ancesters may have been, although in my heart some part of me yearns for that "original" homeland, it feels lost to me & I wonder what the motives are of Africans wanting black peoples to go Africa. I wish well to anyone who makes the journey.
@C S There are no grounds for the 'everyone is against you comment', it says more about your mindset than mine.
@C S We already built this one country to what it is today. Are we supposed to build another country or entire continent next?
@@mediagoon6910 haha!!!
We had no choice in building this country and we were limited and controlled through both direct violence and physiological torture day after day,year after year and generation after generation until we only had these manipulations to hold on to when were finally free. Now we have a choice to not build there countries and continent for them but to build it together with them. We African American can contribute our experiences in these land and our shorter but very rich history of overcoming obstacles while carrying the weight of racism from all around the world. And the African peoples can help us find what was stolen from us (our original cultures, peoples, and ways). If this can be done successfully we African Americans can discuss what life we wish to pursue based on what we learned in the joint building up of the continent based on our individual beliefs preferences and experiences