Sunn M'cheaux Teaches the Gullah Language

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  • Опубліковано 10 вер 2024
  • Geechie/Gullah expert Sunn M'Cheaux discusses how his class at Harvard came about. #Gullah #History #KarenHunterShow

КОМЕНТАРІ • 190

  • @DZImedia
    @DZImedia 2 роки тому +17

    I’m Gullah fum Fladda by wey Jaxyville n dem, my own mudda wak fo da bukra system abs she tell me say I clat too Geechee like my fadda peppo I’m now 32 and can speak three languages and I now understand they can’t stop us from being who webe

  • @micheleholley1070
    @micheleholley1070 2 роки тому +40

    Professor Karen, thank you so very much. Based on the way this gentleman speaks I believe my mother was Gullah Geechie . My mother would always say she and her people where from Jamaica. Jamaican people never embraced my mother, so it confused me. I was young and did not understand how the slave trade traveled and all the while until my mamma made transition she was so sure she and her people where from Jamaica. No one has ever taught the Gullah Geechie history. I have heard Black people use the word "Geechie" as a derogatory word. I will look up the Gullah Geechie people and perhaps I will see my mamma's face. Thank you Professor Karen for this segment.

  • @rudiannwildgoose-laing4629
    @rudiannwildgoose-laing4629 2 роки тому +15

    I am from Grand Bahama, Bahamas🇧🇸 and was told that slaves from South Carolina or the Carolinas were brought to some of the our islands.
    Professor your guest Sunn M'cheaux does sound like us.🤭

  • @Nisa1971
    @Nisa1971 2 роки тому +89

    I'm from south Louisiana. Is it strange that i understand him completely without explanation/definitions? What a wonderful dialogue! My sincerest thanks to you both!

    • @the7thdean1
      @the7thdean1 2 роки тому +5

      I'm from North Louisiana, I'll have to go back and watch. Had to jump off.

    • @rashnl7
      @rashnl7 2 роки тому +11

      Not at all. Same people, placed in different places.

    • @Nisa1971
      @Nisa1971 2 роки тому +6

      @@the7thdean1 hey sis we might be cousins!🥰
      It's amazing to have this channel, knarrative and black star network. The discussions give me life!

    • @Thelifeofaubreii
      @Thelifeofaubreii 2 роки тому +7

      I’m from Louisiana too. & sometimes my native language wanna come out & i don’t be understanding ; then i start over and speak English. However i wanna know know.

    • @mcolemanusc
      @mcolemanusc 2 роки тому +7

      Nah it's not strange at all. We the same folks bro. When I go to Louisiana they always love to hear me talk bc they immediately say we cousins

  • @ljett1849
    @ljett1849 2 роки тому +26

    I was an adult before I realized that my South Carolinian grandmother and her sisters spoke Gullah. In the family we called it that "mash up talk" As a child growing up in the northeast I learned to code switch after being sent to speech therapy for two years. As my older relatives passed, that way of speaking has diminshed in the family. Now, Its hard to remember much of it as I no longer use it. Sometimes If I concentrate without thinking too much I can recall it.

  • @technowey
    @technowey 2 роки тому +10

    Sunn m'Cheaux - Thank you for being who you are.

  • @jamaicanprincess87630
    @jamaicanprincess87630 2 роки тому +21

    I am from Jamaica and it was amazing hearing this conversation. When I came to the US for university, I was required to take College Writing 101 because I was from a foreign nation and had to learn how to “speak” and “write” properly. I am so glad to see that my native dialect is featured here. I hate having to switch my natural way of speaking off in order for people to understand me. But this segment has made me change my outlook. Just like they have to understand others, they will have to understand me.

  • @the7thdean1
    @the7thdean1 2 роки тому +20

    Yes, SC was the entry point. My grandmother on my father's side people came in through South Carolina.

    • @aquarianink5385
      @aquarianink5385 2 роки тому +2

      My family roots are based in another state. My Grandmother said her grand-parents were from SC.

  • @sage-in742
    @sage-in742 2 роки тому +41

    My mom beamed with a knowing smile as she listen to this conversation. She was born and raised in Harlem but her father was from Charleston, South Carolina.. .what a wonderful discussion!

  • @paulinebryant6480
    @paulinebryant6480 2 роки тому +11

    I am from Savannah Ga, and I miss my language from childhood at the age of 11 years old I went to Atlanta for two years. I hate that I lost so much of my comfort language.

  • @MichiDavis09
    @MichiDavis09 2 роки тому +21

    Thank you for sharing our language and culture! 🥰 ~ Gullah/Geechee Descendant

  • @Ava-wc7mf
    @Ava-wc7mf 2 роки тому +6

    Man... i am from St Lucia my friend is from St Vincent and the first time we went to south carolina I asked the server in the restaurant where he was from.. We both thought he was from Antigua. Then he telling me he from SC.. boi.. my mind blow deh same time..

  • @faithmason9562
    @faithmason9562 2 роки тому +15

    Loving this conversation all the way from the SC lowcountry. Boonkey is a whole word!

  • @aprilallen2601
    @aprilallen2601 Рік тому +17

    My son currently attends SC State University. His dialect has changed, especially when he is at home with us. Listening to this, he's speaking a derivative of Gullah Geechee. My God, what a strong people we are. His roommates and best friends are from the low country. Further, I hear my grandmother when he speaks. I'm going to value his language and not correct him. He's majoring in English. Thank you!!!! Learning to love every piece of ourselves is such a beautiful thing.

  • @ViccyVale
    @ViccyVale Рік тому +10

    I figured it out very fast as well being raised by my great grand parents who were Gullah Geechie. ❤This warms my heart so much.

  • @NIJEECAPRICORN23
    @NIJEECAPRICORN23 2 роки тому +4

    Coastal islands of Georgia and South Carolinas are the home of the gullah geechee people 🙌🏾🙌🏾🙌🏾. I've been in love with the art of gullah and geechee people.

  • @urbanradionation
    @urbanradionation 2 роки тому +19

    Great interview. The Gullah Geechee culture is a culture that is very distinct from other African American cultures within the United States. It's more like Bahamian and Jamaican culture. The African influence is so apparent in the language along with the quilt and basket making. For generations the Black community up North looked down on Geechies who spoke too fast and used so-called broken English. Way too African for sure for some... So glad Gullah Geechee is finally being recognized for the rich culture it is. Also don't forget the influence of the dark skinned Guale and Yamessee (Yemassee) indigenous people from the SC and Georgia area that intermingled centuries ago. It's a shame to think of how many children were put into speech therapy or special education for expressing their culture. There is so much to learn...in all of our cultures.
    With that being said never had black eyed peas among my South Carolina folks. Red beans but not black eyed peas.

    • @gailbailey6945
      @gailbailey6945 Рік тому

      Black eyed peas and cornbread🙂👍🏽

    • @whoahna8438
      @whoahna8438 Рік тому +2

      The major difference is the accent and the baskets but everything else almost identical to any other Black American rural culture

    • @jermen5137
      @jermen5137 Рік тому +3

      @@whoahna8438 not technically. In America all things get blended over time but that wasn’t how it used to be. It’s not just “an accent” but a full blown Language. Most foodways were specifically Gullah but over time they spread and just became “southern.” There is Gullah art, architecture, rituals and specific spiritualities birth in the Gullah nation. Which is hoodoo. Similarities but not that closely the same

    • @whoahna8438
      @whoahna8438 Рік тому

      @@jermen5137
      Wait, are you suggesting that rural Black Americans outside The Low Country didn't have food ways until Gullah food got exported to them?
      Are you aware that from 1808 to 1865 most DEEP Southerners came from VA and MD not S.C or GA? Most were shipped through N.O but also Mobile, AL and other Gulf ports and that was well over 100k people so most Southerners would have more influences from VA and MD.
      Gullah's major migration is in the Northeast and FL.
      Have you not seen the amount of videos of Gullah speaking where people from all over comment about how their grandparents spoke in a similar fashion only with a different accent?
      Sure some different words choices but also some same word choices and of course different regions won't speak EXACTLY the same.
      Hoodoo is all over the South, there's no pin pointing it's origin in the South because we all came from the same places in Africa

    • @jermen5137
      @jermen5137 Рік тому +3

      @@whoahna8438 no I’m saying specific things. Of course everyone has their things. Soul food leans more towards most all other black rural communities. Gullah food is different from soul food. But overall the major isolation from Europeans is what made Gullah so strong. Of course we say similar things and have some similar foods but it’s still a difference. Of course back then we were more similar than different but over time the Lowcountry was the largest import in the continent for the slaved, with little integration. There are even statists that show people of Gullah descent have the highest percentage of Black ancestry in America. Probably in the entire continent.

  • @bishopjd2
    @bishopjd2 2 роки тому +10

    My former pastor's father was from Wadmala Island, SC and he sounded Caribbean

  • @nannettewhite1653
    @nannettewhite1653 2 роки тому +22

    Yes, I love this interview. We need more like this!!!!

  • @yvonnemurphy7506
    @yvonnemurphy7506 2 роки тому +23

    I love it!!!! I just ran across his segment recently - suddenly outta nowhere - and was like "where has this man beeeeen"??! Now I kno
    I LOVE ❤️ LOVE LOVE YOUR SHOW 🙏🏽

    • @the7thdean1
      @the7thdean1 2 роки тому +4

      We have so much Black Excellence we can't keep up with it all

  • @bigdre7120
    @bigdre7120 2 роки тому +8

    Yes, we developed a whole language in the face of brutality, genocide, cultural destruction and now appropriation. We were not valued and the treasure of The Gullah and Geechee straight from Mother Alkebulan. Long live the spirit of the ancestors and the culture.....

  • @edwinbrown4804
    @edwinbrown4804 Рік тому +4

    I'm from Creole and Cajun country in South Louisiana as well. Every word he speaks is clear to me. Bring him back again.😎

  • @riri-rose
    @riri-rose 2 роки тому +9

    Come on Dr M'cheaux!!!! WeOutchea

  • @jasoncallahan7817
    @jasoncallahan7817 10 місяців тому +1

    I don't know what I watched on youtube that caused Sunn M'cheaux to pop up in my recommendations, but I am so glad it happened. I love his videos and I love this interview.

  • @josedavid6203
    @josedavid6203 2 роки тому +12

    I have memories of this process .I was forced to take a speech class. A lot of similarities. This is amazing. Thanks to you both for this discussion.

  • @aquarianink5385
    @aquarianink5385 2 роки тому +6

    I must take his class. Wow, so many seeds were dropped in this segment.

  • @darmadusa
    @darmadusa 2 роки тому +7

    The first time I heard hints of this beautifully whimsical language was when I attended my son's father's family reunion in (I forget the city) South Carolina. There was a great aunt and younger cousin of theirs who were both just popping off this dialect that I never heard before, and I was intrigued enough to ask the aunt the origin of her dialect. Sadly, she was a bit annoyed by my question and stated that she was born and raised in South Carolina, and that was the way all of her family spoke.
    It was a later time that I took it upon myself to research some of the history of South Carolina's Gullah culture, and I was blown away at how little history is taught about the people of the Gullah Islands. I also went on to having a (past) friend who's family was from (I forget what part), Africa and the Gullah Islands, and this dude knew how to make BEAUTIFUL straw baskets and cornrowed the hell out of some hair! 🙂
    Great show!👍🏾

  • @sportminds1094
    @sportminds1094 2 роки тому +7

    I'm from west Columbia, SC and we use some of those words up here but we don't have the accent

  • @jermainegoss705
    @jermainegoss705 2 роки тому +6

    Where did he get those mask?! My goodness. I love African people

  • @tameikdubar
    @tameikdubar 2 роки тому +13

    Thank you both for this interview 😍

  • @amber.cartomancer
    @amber.cartomancer Рік тому +4

    PBS baby!!! I realized years later PBS in the 70s taught me how to speak and not just Seasme Street. Masterpiece Theatre was a jewel.

    • @karenl.forest7083
      @karenl.forest7083 Рік тому

      Facts. PBS was an entire education in my youth. And as an adult I actually binge on PBS content

  • @thedaokona5924
    @thedaokona5924 2 роки тому +5

    T'engkful fuh dis! Keep shining, Karen and Sunn M'Cheaux!

  • @thelaw6153
    @thelaw6153 2 роки тому +12

    Maaannnn I tellin ya I ain’t even kno my real name till elementary school when they put me in speech class #alabamagullah

  • @cyrus22999
    @cyrus22999 2 роки тому +10

    Bahamians especially from the untouched southern islands of The Bahamas 🇧🇸 are aware of their “Geeche “ heritage. The Professor sounds like how a Bahamian would sound speaking comfortably to another Bahamian.

  • @insaneoptimist5152
    @insaneoptimist5152 2 роки тому +4

    Excellent broadcast. I am from N.C. and have spent much time in Charleston on the West Side.

  • @karenm1965
    @karenm1965 2 роки тому +5

    Beautiful conversation. 💕

  • @ce_lice_li2474
    @ce_lice_li2474 2 роки тому +7

    This was awesome . Thank you

  • @lifestylewithamire
    @lifestylewithamire Рік тому +2

    Thank you for this.
    Learning about my self and culture is always refreshing.

  • @heathertea2704
    @heathertea2704 2 роки тому +9

    With my Father & both sets of my Grandparents from the South, I Hated hearing how they were Belittled & Demoralised because of their Speech.
    By many.😒

  • @rbeeydwan4479
    @rbeeydwan4479 2 роки тому +4

    Plzzzz!!! Plzzzz!!! Could U have Brother Man on again!! We need this True education 💯💥❤️‍🔥❤️‍🔥❤️‍🔥❤️‍🔥❤️‍🔥❤️‍🔥

  • @slimtrain
    @slimtrain 2 роки тому +2

    I so love this gentleman and how he tells the history of Gullah Geechee heritage. He reminds me of my Charleston SC relatives, my link to Charleston and it’s roots.

  • @rhondabarlow860
    @rhondabarlow860 Рік тому +5

    Short Story: My oldest son was watched, while I was at work, by his Jamaican paternal grandmother when he was an infant. As a toddler, one day his maternal American Southern grandmother kept him for a few days while I was at work because his other Grandma had something else to do. The first day I arrived to pick him up, my mother was both delighted and confused because her grandson kept asking her for "biscuits". Being the grandmother she was, she was more than happy to make her grandson Southern biscuits from scratch -- all he could eat. When she presented him with the plate of "biscuits", he told her that's not "biscuits" and he wanted "biscuits". She fed him other food for the day and they moved on. Yes, her feelings were hurt that he didn't want to eat her delicious "biscuits". She couldn't figure out why he kept asking for something he didn't want to eat. When I arrived to pick him up and heard the story, I burst out laughing as I told her "biscuits" was the Jamaican term for a small sweet cracker/cookie. The next day when I arrived to pick him up, they were both happy because she had made him Southern teacakes for his request for biscuits. Everything said was on point and relatable. That name thing is real. I appreciate the video. Now I think I know why he popped up in my feed several weeks ago to watch....he was on your show.

  • @MrSolonolo
    @MrSolonolo 2 роки тому +4

    Brilliant !!! Extremely useful and edifying information. As always. Much gratitude Prof. Hunter and Dr, Micheaux .

  • @evelynbourne2500
    @evelynbourne2500 2 роки тому +2

    OMG! Worlds colliding! I’m a Knubian, and Professor Hunter fan, and I follow brother M’cheaux on tik tok. I’m LOVING this conversation.🙌🏽❤️

  • @jonathanAdebowale4357
    @jonathanAdebowale4357 2 роки тому +3

    I am from Grenada 🇬🇩 .....I can relate

  • @famugrad98
    @famugrad98 Рік тому +2

    Hi Karen! I wish I had not missed this live. I just love him and of course I love you, neighbor-Beverly T

  • @bittersweet4149
    @bittersweet4149 2 роки тому +5

    That was dope as hell ♥️

  • @scroogemcduckrich9705
    @scroogemcduckrich9705 Рік тому +2

    I love Sunn. Very intelligent man

  • @brianthomas8254
    @brianthomas8254 2 роки тому +4

    Governance structure and social structure names. Thanks for the lesson.

  • @TyCorner24
    @TyCorner24 2 роки тому +3

    Wow... just wow. Being from Charleston I agree with him 100 percent.

  • @DaronPeterJones
    @DaronPeterJones 2 роки тому +4

    This is so crazy! I speak English well but when I write, I’m constantly having to proofread because I “think” similarly to what’s being discussed. But of course, when around the “Fam” we speak how we think or what comes naturally.

  • @kayannagibson5397
    @kayannagibson5397 8 місяців тому +2

    I buss out laughing when he say Boungie 😂 cause man they try to make us feel like it’s not polite to say!

  • @user-dm6jy5jr9o
    @user-dm6jy5jr9o Рік тому +1

    I love language so much. Language is the undeniable biography of a people. Those who try to suppress language are trying to suppress a truth they experience as a threat. We are all enriched by learning the story of the languages that surround us.

  • @paulinebryant6480
    @paulinebryant6480 2 роки тому +6

    I know them words

  • @ce_lice_li2474
    @ce_lice_li2474 2 роки тому +3

    This was awesome

  • @jamedraa8472
    @jamedraa8472 2 роки тому +2

    This my people. Listening to him makes me a little homesick. It will soon be a year since my Gramma passed.

  • @ellenmorris3243
    @ellenmorris3243 2 роки тому +1

    I have pleasant memories of spending summers with my paternal granmother who was Gullah Geechee from the sea island of Wadmalaw Island. All of our neighbors were cousins, aunts, uncles. My father could never get rid of his accent.

  • @victoryakubu5395
    @victoryakubu5395 2 роки тому +3

    Time Gullah language should be adopted for all Africans in the world. Prof he has to make his own Gullah intro on the institute web

  • @n.anderson5938
    @n.anderson5938 2 роки тому +2

    Thank you for sharing. 🙏 This was amazing. Sunn is a fantastic teacher. 💐

  • @angielu3273
    @angielu3273 Рік тому +1

    Thank you prof. for having this remarkable person on. Has sparked my interest .

  • @niashell8378
    @niashell8378 2 роки тому +2

    Speaking of connecting...Dr Hunter Dr M'cheaux...my family is from SC and 'scaped to NYC. Working on bring those melanin dots together. Hearing divine frequency calling us together. Nubian spaces.

  • @Hiltonliveparanormalnews79
    @Hiltonliveparanormalnews79 Рік тому +1

    As s kid i was in speech class, but in todays time people say to me i speak so well . But i learn to code switch. He telling the truth gow we wait to slip into the language. But in my mind im still thinking geechee

  • @shantelafia4462
    @shantelafia4462 Рік тому +1

    Love Karen Hunter

  • @tamarapickens1988
    @tamarapickens1988 2 роки тому +2

    Yayayay!!! #GullahProud

  • @crystalcoleman4706
    @crystalcoleman4706 2 роки тому +4

    Love this interview!! Thank you!!

  • @daryljarvis6080
    @daryljarvis6080 2 роки тому +1

    The history has been previously from us. I learned so much on a recent visit.

  • @amajors08
    @amajors08 2 роки тому +2

    This is LIFE. Feeling so affirmed

  • @joycebrown1413
    @joycebrown1413 Рік тому +1

    I love Sunn 's show I had lived on St Helena lsland, my boys( grown) born and raised there..

  • @Nghilifa
    @Nghilifa 2 роки тому +2

    25:00 Haha, that is so funny. Here in Namibia, there are family members of mine who I only know by their "traditional " names (ie, names derived from the language of our ethnic group). Often times, they have foreign given names that they're baptized with, but they never go by those names within the family at all. Some things never change I guess! 😂 Thanks for bringing Dr. M'Cheaux on Ms. Hunter!

  • @sadiewilliams
    @sadiewilliams 2 роки тому +3

    Thank you Karen!

  • @karenl7786
    @karenl7786 2 роки тому +2

    Two things: 1.stop calling them Karens, Bonnie! and don't forget Connie! and 2. If this is some of what's on TikTok, I'm going to have to reverse my absolute refusal to engage with it at all because this brother here is righteous!

  • @timlewis232
    @timlewis232 2 роки тому +2

    Somebody please get this King on The Breakfast Club with Charlemagne!!! I would love to hear them interact with each other.

    • @KarenHunterShow
      @KarenHunterShow  2 роки тому +3

      really?

    • @timlewis232
      @timlewis232 2 роки тому

      Yes. It would be interesting to see what Charlemagne's take would be on code switching, because he's also Geechie Gullah.

  • @lovesyah4618
    @lovesyah4618 3 місяці тому

    Hilton Head Island S.C, Charleston,.St Helena Island, Beaufort and surroundings areas. Born and raised Gullah Geechie gal here😁❤ Weoutchea ✌🏾💯

  • @Everything_Ju
    @Everything_Ju 2 роки тому +2

    I love this conversation

  • @adwoamedusausi2233
    @adwoamedusausi2233 2 роки тому +1

    In my Grandfather's lineage, South Carolina was indeed the entry point. I needed this interview 💞

  • @tamwash
    @tamwash 2 роки тому +1

    This is bringing up some many memories. SC always!!!

  • @NkemOnyeka12
    @NkemOnyeka12 Рік тому

    It’s the same here in Nigeria where most have never left the Country! Being born in America, my family is from St. Thomas VI, now married to a Nigerian, they sound like island folk, to me.

  • @quentellawilliams544
    @quentellawilliams544 2 роки тому +2

    Love this. I’m from close to that area!! Greeleyville in the house!!!!

  • @deejones6431
    @deejones6431 2 роки тому +5

    "Dat him"
    "Dat ain't him"
    "This s'evening"
    Many black Americans spoke like this in Alabama in the 60's

    • @heathertea2704
      @heathertea2704 2 роки тому +1

      & STILL speak it 2day.

    • @deejones6431
      @deejones6431 2 роки тому +1

      @@heathertea2704 Very True....there are still remandts but, not like when I was growing up in the 60's.
      There are words the Elders used that I no longer hear today.
      I had forgotten the word "s'even" until he said it in this video.

    • @heathertea2704
      @heathertea2704 2 роки тому +1

      @@deejones6431 I'm blessed to STILL have elders in their 80s & 90s that held on to a lot of their customs.

    • @deejones6431
      @deejones6431 2 роки тому +1

      @@heathertea2704 Definitely a blessing.

    • @Gullahbae-xm6ms
      @Gullahbae-xm6ms Рік тому

      That’s not Gullah lol

  • @rbeeydwan4479
    @rbeeydwan4479 2 роки тому +2

    This is my Peeples!!! I love my folk..🥲🖤🖤🖤💕💥💫

  • @Gullahgriot
    @Gullahgriot 5 місяців тому

    great great show...georgetown sc checking in

  • @meganw6007
    @meganw6007 Рік тому +1

    Damn, this part at ~9:20 about the MORAL component makes it just so much more powerful, that one could even lie, but be lying speaking the white man's English and yet be trusted as the truth-teller. Dang.
    That anecdote contains so much importance

  • @shaypink40
    @shaypink40 Рік тому +3

    Hi, may I add something, Gullah & Geechee is 2 different peoples. Gullah is from African Sierra Leone 🇸🇱were majority of the African slave was bought to South & Central America. Geechee is North American 🇺🇸, my grandfather is Geechee NC.

    • @PurplePixi1
      @PurplePixi1 Рік тому

      I was always taught Gullah is the language and Geechee is the people.

    • @shaypink40
      @shaypink40 Рік тому

      @@PurplePixi1 not true love, you can’t find anything online about the real Geechee people. They keep mixing us with the Gullah people.

  • @tamaracharese
    @tamaracharese 2 роки тому +2

    Yay!!! You connected!!!

  • @daphnecollier9264
    @daphnecollier9264 Рік тому +1

    As a Trinidadian in the 70’s in the USA ARMY. Everyone said I spoke Geechee from the Carolina the people that ate a lot of rice

  • @donesecarr3570
    @donesecarr3570 2 роки тому +2

    This is good word!

  • @reneebunn9279
    @reneebunn9279 2 роки тому +3

    Born in New York grew up around the country. My family hails from Selma AL. Butt was a bad word so we used boo-nanny

  • @shawnuchenna3503
    @shawnuchenna3503 2 роки тому +1

    Karen! Thank you for this rare segment!!

  • @kosajenkins7963
    @kosajenkins7963 2 роки тому +1

    He sounds like all of my Aunties, Uncles and cousins from St. Helena Islans, SC! It is such a wonderful culture and heritage!

  • @rbeeydwan4479
    @rbeeydwan4479 Рік тому +1

    I'm still thoroughly enjoying this 😌 😎 🥳🎉🎈🎁🌹🌹🌹🖤🖤🖤🖤🎊❤️‍🔥🔥🔥🔥

  • @josedavid6203
    @josedavid6203 2 роки тому +1

    WOW!!! Aha!!! My father, grandpa immigrated from Philippines to San Francisco, CA. I was born 1st generation.

  • @ahkeekaba9735
    @ahkeekaba9735 Рік тому +2

    Self determination

  • @meganw6007
    @meganw6007 Рік тому +1

    Great point about the names (~22:00-27:00)
    My grandpa -- legally born Bobby, but changed it to simply Bob after catching grief in the military -- always knew when it was marketers or bill collectors when they'd try to ask for "Robert" (not a legal name he had ever had or used)

  • @2headeddoctuh
    @2headeddoctuh 11 місяців тому

    It is so close to how we speak here in deep east tx. We callednit country talk. And my granny and em man. Uh stil talk like that

  • @danacooper6723
    @danacooper6723 2 роки тому +4

    Great Interview! I first heard the Gullah language(geechie) in 1989. I was siting in a car with a high school friend and on our way to dinner after graduation ceremony. His aunt and uncles were from South Carolina and begin conversing in the car
    I listened and couldnt pick up the accent. I told my mother that they must be from the islands because they spoke (I begin trying to speak like them). My mother smiled, laughed and said they were speaking geechie. She didn't go any further to explain where this language came from. Im not sure she knew but this should have been a teachable moment and it wasnt. I dont blame her but this should have been researched.

    • @thenaturalgemini
      @thenaturalgemini 2 роки тому +4

      Dana, we were always referred to as Geechie. We were not told Gullah/ Geechie was language. When most people would say "you Geechie" it was more of an insult. There was not much of an emphasize on studying the language, thus the reason kids got thrown into speech classes.

    • @danacooper6723
      @danacooper6723 2 роки тому +1

      @@thenaturalgemini I wish my parents was able to expand their k knowledge in "Geechie" as Gullah is the language and that calling someone Geechie is offensive.

  • @chantillylace1369
    @chantillylace1369 2 роки тому +1

    So dope! Amazing guest!

  • @patrickwhite4151
    @patrickwhite4151 Рік тому +2

    I am Irish from Northern Ireland who lived in South London for 40 years. Gullah sounds so much like those peoples from the West Indies.
    I have a question about the current political situation in the States. I am surprised by the numbers of podcasts hosted by young black people who are buying into Candace Owen and Clarence Thomas rhetoric. Unquestioningly so. What's going on over there.

    • @Gullahbae-xm6ms
      @Gullahbae-xm6ms Рік тому

      They’re brainwashed and ignorant. That’s all I can say.

  • @brianwilliams938
    @brianwilliams938 2 роки тому +1

    Thank you I’ve been waiting on this interview

  • @daphnecollier9264
    @daphnecollier9264 Рік тому +1

    Their is still in the South of Trinidad a sign that showed the exchange of what was called Company from Carolina to Trinidad in our History

  • @mikec5641
    @mikec5641 2 роки тому +3

    I SAW THAT TIKTOK!!!!