Fiji seems to be the only country so far away from India that has kept Hindi/Hindustani culture alive since 150 years. Next is Suriname. Other countries, Mauritius, Trinidad and Tobago, Guyana, Jamaica Indians lost their native language and thus the precise connection with their ancestral culture, traditions & heritage. In Fiji, the atmosphere looks as if one is in India, the main reason is that Hindustani language is still alive.
I think only fiji is only country who is keeping our culture and language stand.. I has friends from Central American even though they say they r Indian still their culture is mixed
Bihari aur UP ke log he yeh,,Bandhu mazdoor Fiji, Mauritius , Guyana aur Trinidad meh British Empire le ke gayi the...India meh hotte to Majdoori kar rahe hotte..
This is basically Hindi Creole. Hindi grammar simplified to be adopted by a multilingual overseas community of Indians. To a native speaker from the mainland, it might sound like broken Hindi spoken by a non-native speaker
Fiji Hindi is primarily based on Awadhi with some influence from Bhojpuri, as well as other languages. It makes sense that a mainlander may not understand it as much.
@@sashamellon822 I'm not, lol. I didn't say it's not understandable to me. Just that its grammar is a very simplified version of ours, which is objectively true. Ironically, this dialect started in UP
I've met Indian"s from Mauritius . We are the same people so naturally we speak the same lingo .When people were taken by the British , they were taken to Fiji , SouthAfrica , Mauritius , Suriname , Guyana etc . So we speak the same language with a bit of mixture of the language of the native people of the land we all settled in as time moved on . Nevertheless , some Indians have lost the Hindi we speak ( Known as Hindustani ) I think that Fiji and Suriname are the one's who have actually kept the tradition going .
Dude you guys lost your identity of Fiji baat which is mixture of Awadhi and Bhojpuri, the language you are speaking is not the real language of your ancestors
Bihari, I am proud of you that even today you people have kept your culture alive inside Fiji!
Love to Fiji from 🇮🇳
This was amazing.
Thanks for sharing.
One love from Guyana 🇬🇾
Nisa Bula !!!! You look beautiful my dear sister. Thanks for the amazing update. Fiji our Paradise may God bless Fiji !!! Moce.... 💕
I love Fiji , Fijian are our brothers and sisters
toh apne saath rakh lo
Lover the song in the end. Very beautiful. Love frm India.
I am from India bihar your ancestors land
I am also live in bihar
@Fatima Khan kha ho up me
Me too
L mera 🤣
I'm from bihar
Fiji seems to be the only country so far away from India that has kept Hindi/Hindustani culture alive since 150 years. Next is Suriname. Other countries, Mauritius, Trinidad and Tobago, Guyana, Jamaica Indians lost their native language and thus the precise connection with their ancestral culture, traditions & heritage. In Fiji, the atmosphere looks as if one is in India, the main reason is that Hindustani language is still alive.
love form india
अति सुंदर हिंदी
super sir aap achha news karte hai
Love from India❤️❤️
😂
Can Indian from India get hr job as fresher in Fiji?
I'm from Bihar.
I think only fiji is only country who is keeping our culture and language stand.. I has friends from Central American even though they say they r Indian still their culture is mixed
No! Mauritius suriname trinidad and tobago fiji guyana etc are also countries with same story and they still speak hindi
Not really. Only in Fiji and Suriname, Hindustani language has been kept alive. In other countries Indians speak Creole language@@popcornshow7653
यह तो हिंदी ही है। फिजी हिंदी कैसी होती है।
Bihari aur UP ke log he yeh,,Bandhu mazdoor Fiji, Mauritius , Guyana aur Trinidad meh British Empire le ke gayi the...India meh hotte to Majdoori kar rahe hotte..
And this news is not broadcasted from fiji
Please ANNOUNCEMENTS
AUDIO BIBLE APP
NEWS CHANNEL STUDIO
This is basically Hindi Creole. Hindi grammar simplified to be adopted by a multilingual overseas community of Indians.
To a native speaker from the mainland, it might sound like broken Hindi spoken by a non-native speaker
Fiji Hindi is primarily based on Awadhi with some influence from Bhojpuri, as well as other languages. It makes sense that a mainlander may not understand it as much.
You do sound like from UP and bihar. It’s totally understandable.
@@sashamellon822
I'm not, lol. I didn't say it's not understandable to me.
Just that its grammar is a very simplified version of ours, which is objectively true.
Ironically, this dialect started in UP
I've met Indian"s from Mauritius . We are the same people so naturally we speak the same lingo .When people were taken by the British , they were taken to Fiji , SouthAfrica , Mauritius , Suriname , Guyana etc . So we speak the same language with a bit of mixture of the language of the native people of the land we all settled in as time moved on . Nevertheless , some Indians have lost the Hindi we speak ( Known as Hindustani ) I think that Fiji and Suriname are the one's who have actually kept the tradition going .
@@thearcanum6983 My friend is a mainlander from India and understands every single word hahahaha quite funny actually
हिंदी में बात करिए, ज्यादा अच्छा लगेगा
Ye to ap hindi bol rahe ho sir ..
English hindi
Afrikaans Russian
Spanish INSTALL
Dude you guys lost your identity of Fiji baat which is mixture of Awadhi and Bhojpuri, the language you are speaking is not the real language of your ancestors
ARABIC bible APP
Ki bolche re
Aap ka host nahi !! Aap ki host
fiji hindi has no gender related verbs
Hellow main pakistan say hu kya muje fiji main job mil sakti hay
What kind of job you want.....
@@alexchand827 spreading terror
@@alexchand827 bam fodhne ka 😜😜😜😂🤣🤣🤣🤣
Nahi
@@alexchand827
Im laundryman kisi ache 4* ya 5 sttar hotel main
i am from jhansi city india i am a hindu rajput can i get married in fiji i want to get married in fiji
Kaluti