@@King-vv9rf Google it. I just did. Google gave me the address, and even tried to find me directions.......from N.America, then gave up haha. I'm sure if you're in Nigeria, Google will map the directions for you.
Happy independence celebrations 🍾to us all. We are bound for greatness and success will come Nigerian way ....I trust God because He is in charge of our nation.
Excellent video ! My only problem is your constant reference to the dehumanising term “ slaves “ . Nobody is inherently a slave . People are enslaved by political , social and economic circumstances and institutions . So please stop talking about “ slaves “ and replace that term with “ enslaved people “ or “ enslaved Africans “ !
I bet you are wrong. Then it was dehumanising what about the one currently ongoing? (DEBT SLAVERY) Sure less dehumanizing as it was before. Probabaly the next millennials would see it as dehumanizing at some point. Many don't even know they are still enslaved, the morden day debt slavery. Do you have a debt to pay? If you dont, does your country where you live has a foreign debt? You are still a slave at some point. Yes, every NIgerian has a low debt though. My last calculation shows each Nigerian indirectly owes $200 which they must somehow pay.
@@jaybee4577 That is my point exactly. DO you know who we owe the debt to??? The 1%... So modern-day slavery is 99% of the masses being enslaved to the 1%... See a country like Nederland for example, 18million people and they owe $4trillion... Till I die I will never advise my enemy to live in Nederland. This is just an example oh. Africans are trying to fight the debt but it's growing by the day... European countries are far worse... My point is back in the day too, slavery was known all over the world, it was not only the Africans that were enslaved... It was widespread too but more Africans were sold into the slave trade. Back to why I tackled the first comment is this... Slavery is a kind of continuous process we humans do not really see it as it is until it's too late then the next generation begins to call it slavery... The fact is, we are still slaves to the 1%... Either primarily, or secondarily slaves to the 1%. Primarily I mean if you're into any kind of debt.. Secondary, if your country is owing any kind of debt(Just know that u are paying it even via buying food or just going to a restaurant) --- Via tax..
Badagary holds a wealth of history, countless African Americans would love the opportunity to learn more of this painful part of our history (The Slave Trade). The Nigerian government should fund Badagary's historical longevity.
Great collaboration between @Tayo Aina and @DW. Good views from above too taken by a flying drone. My 1st trip to Nigeria, 2019, all the way from Cape Town to Badagry, Nigeria. Congratulations Tayo. Light and love from South Africa.
This is why we need better trade with our family in Africa! I know way too many people that would love to buy all of those items in the shops here in America!
Just subscribed to DW. Feels good to watch real news from Africans about Africa. I grew up in Brooklyn believing that Africa and Africans are poor. News companies are evolving because influencers like Tayo are not hiding the truth
Nice you're proud of him. Perhaps you'd stop your xenophobic attacks on your fellow Africans. And your hatred of Nigerians who helped saved your a**es during apartheid.
@@imigbo3878 maybe you should get a life and stop being bitter.....and by the way there are countries who did more for SA during apartheid, and nigeria is not even the top 10.
@@mazwideamahle4091 that's serious cap. Nigeria was literally at the fore front of the fight and contributed the most due to them being far stronger than other African countries. Stfu and don't be an ingrate 💀☠️🤦🏾
African cities and nations are so much more complex and fascinating than many people around the world know. When I served in the Navy, there were many other Sailors I met from places like Lagos and Accra, and it was a privilege to hear their stories about how difficult life was back home, but how they still miss the places where they grew up. African perspectives deserve to be heard all over the world.
Ahhh Tayo.....what you have just engaged on in collaboration with this great network DW is mind blowing. I fact you are marketing Lagos cum Nigeria to the Europe and the world at large via tourism. DW is one of my favourite channels here in Germany and trust me Germans are a very unique kind of people in the sense that they are not pretenders. If the love you, you see it and feel it but if the don't, they don't waste time in letting you know it. If DW decided to allow our story to be shown and talked about by an African shows how importance they attached to such a venture. Trust me Tayo ....in a couple of months, you will understand what this means to our image as a country and people. To DW.....you guys are awesome. Keep strengthening this new inspirational documentaries coming. 👏
@The Joke of Africa UK Germany, USA etc all have got bad imagine and deserved one as well so nothing new. Now do you want run with that or help change the narrative. Be optimistic for a few sec.
Congrats Mr. Tayo Aina. DW should feel privileged working with such a talented presenter, entrepreneur, and general advocate for all things Africa, especially Nigeria. I know I am privileged to consume Tayo's content, and for that I am grateful. Thank you Mr. Aina!
We are not any worse than then captors. Do you think shit like this didn't happen amongst white people? Bro it did pick up few books and read. We are humans with flaws after all.
I don't beleive it. From most other sources it was around £25 in 1800 to buy a slave in an African Market from an African. That is £2500 in todays money and I am sure that an umbrella cost significantly less than that. Africans who dealt in slaves would not have been so bad in sales to only achieve a price of 1 umbrella for 40 slaves. 😆😆😆
Tayo, thanks for your beautiful videos and your efforts to show us the nice face of Najia. I discovered Najia and Lagos in 2012, and from 2014 to 2019, I stayed there at least once a year. I come from Burkina, what I deplore is not having been able to really discover Lagos as I visit Abidjan, Accra or Cotonou. I only know 2 neighborhoods, Ojodu Berger and Ikotun Egbe.
Thank you so much bro for this video. I'm a believer for a better Nigeria, and I love your spirit for curiosity and diversity. Please let me know how I can get to The Tarkwa Bay. I do live in LEKKI phase 1
I said it months ago that you Tayo is gonna go places.....you have proved me right 100%. Imagine Tayo on DW Channel.....wonderful. I can't hold the tears bro....I wish you all the very best Tayo. Great content as usual.
Dhruv was there! We will upload his video very soon. It's awesome! Kenya seems to be a wonderful country! Thank you for the invitation and greetings to Kenya!
@@aframaco9491 It's mainly Ghanaians who always reject the notion. Very difficult for them to get over the Ghana-must-go Era. Forgetting that Ghana did the same thing to Nigeria before. Yes. Look at the word welcome. In Ghana, I don't know which dialect, but it's Akwaaba In Nigeria, Yoruba, it's Ękuabo or Ękaabo. Switching gears though. I wish Nigerians would find another name for those bags, Ghana-must-go is just too divisive a name. Maybe, 'West Africa United' bags.....😃
@@gardensteps I quite agree Joy! They never seem truly comfortable with us ! Yes they did evict us first from Ghana ( and under terrible circumstances too) bang in the middle of our civil war, but we don’t begrudge them that ! As for the Ghana-must- go bags, yes I too used to cringe when our Nigerians called those laundry bags that.., …that is until a Ghanaian friend told me , they had a popular saying in Ghanaian language which says “God is not a Nigerian”! That pissed me off, and then I also stopped being guilty about the Ghana-must- go bags ! But it’s all love ! Ghanaians need to accept our Nigerianism and be cool!
@@aframaco9491 With all the vitriol I've seen directed towards Nigerians and Nigeria by Ghanaians on UA-cam, I'm not surprised they would have a saying like that about Nigerians. I bet they say that with all the derision they can muster...."God is not a Nigerian". Well then, I too will forever stop being unhappy about that cheap local catch-all bag being called Ghana must go!!! I am still trying to find out if you are a sis or a bro, Aframaco.....😄 But I always enjoy your comments.
I enjoy the video until you got to the end about slavery to know that my ancestors was sold into slavery for umbrellas its painful. and just to think if i come to Nigeria today I would need a tourist visa very pathetic and shameful.
So touching about our ugly and painful historical past especially....brothers and sisters sold out for peanuts or for whatever reasons.....it makes me so sick but let the homecoming begin especially towards Nigeria from our disporian brethren and let's rewrite this ugly past.
Thank you, Tayo! Amazing and a heartfelt history lesson. So sad to see the evil collaboration between Africans and all the countries that participated in the inhumane Slave trade. We need more history lessons to fully grasp the reasons why Africans were willing to sell their citizens and agreed to subject them to such cruelty. Thank you immensely for your brilliant content!
No ,some of us are bored of being pummeled with slavery narratives, let's start humanising Africans and go to Africa for fun and pleasure and to explore culture like one does when going anywhere else in the world.
This is a great film, but I'm a bit sad to see the dilapidated state of those important historical buildings in Badagry. It tells the story of negligence by the Nigerian authorities towards the maintenance of historical buildings in Lagos and in Nigeria generally. Growing up in Lagos in the 1960s and 1970s, I recall a panoply of beautiful buildings in Brazilian style that told of the story of returned former slaves from the South American country who became extremely wealthy, prosperous members of the upper echelons of Lagos and Nigerian society. Unfortunately, most of those buildings no longer exist, replaced by modern blocks of concrete, glass and steel. The relative few that do remain are mostly derelict. Such buildings are a national historical treasure, as are these slave trade structures at Badagry that are shown in this film. I think it is a pity that they have been allowed to fall into disrepair, important structures such as these ought to be carefully preserved.
What a wonderful video. I appreciate the places and subjects that you featured. The Slavery segment was very hard to watch. I am so proud and happy that Nigerians of today rightfully have their lives in their own hands.
Sis you are everywhere on UA-cam, keep supporting Nigeria we are the future, am blessed to see some so passionate about their country just like me, it's like a sprit the Nigeria sprit, we are gonna change the narrative.
Thanks for having me! 😁🙏🏾
Great work Tayo!!! I think Nike art gallery should be added to the list.
You doing well bro. 👍🏿
Good Job Tayo.👏
Tayo, o ma last!!!!!!!
Gbayi👊
@@King-vv9rf
Google it. I just did.
Google gave me the address, and even tried to find me directions.......from N.America, then gave up haha.
I'm sure if you're in Nigeria, Google will map the directions for you.
Great job on this one Tayo 👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾
Awesome collab with DW
Thanks Bro!
Thank you Tayo
Finally a Western media that features an African to show Africa to the world, and not bashing Africa as a backward, red zone
They are planning something. Just be watching, they can never change.
Excellent presentation about Lagos.
Well done Tayo,and congratulations on the collaboration with DW
We are happy to have Tayo here on our channel!
God bless Africa 🇨🇮🇨🇮,we love tayo aina
That's good you love him. Perhaps you'd stop spreading hate against Nigerians like you all do in Europe and wherever else you are
@@imigbo3878 Europeans should apologise for slavely and pay reparations to Nigeria and the continent at large .
DW travel made an excellent choice in choosing to work with Tayo Aino. Superb documentary 🔥🔥🔥🔥
We Wish All The Nigerians Across The World A Happy Independence Day 🇳🇬
Thank you!
Happy independence celebrations 🍾to us all. We are bound for greatness and success will come Nigerian way ....I trust God because He is in charge of our nation.
Thanks dear
Tayo Aina is an original person all the ways.
Amazing. Very informative. Great job Tayo! 🇰🇪
Loved every minute of this virtual tour. Great job DW, as it was very wise of you to collaborate with Tayo Aina! More please.
Good job Tayo ! I hope I’ll visit Nigeria one day and try Naija Jollof . Salute family from 🇸🇳
You're African, and very welcome to Naija as Naija is your home as well.
U are still the originals we can't compare love from naija
Excellent video !
My only problem is your constant reference to the dehumanising term “ slaves “ . Nobody is inherently a slave . People are enslaved by political , social and economic circumstances and institutions . So please stop talking about “ slaves “ and replace that term with “ enslaved people “ or “ enslaved Africans “ !
Well said, bro!
I bet you are wrong. Then it was dehumanising what about the one currently ongoing? (DEBT SLAVERY) Sure less dehumanizing as it was before. Probabaly the next millennials would see it as dehumanizing at some point. Many don't even know they are still enslaved, the morden day debt slavery. Do you have a debt to pay? If you dont, does your country where you live has a foreign debt? You are still a slave at some point. Yes, every NIgerian has a low debt though. My last calculation shows each Nigerian indirectly owes $200 which they must somehow pay.
@@jaybee4577 That is my point exactly. DO you know who we owe the debt to??? The 1%... So modern-day slavery is 99% of the masses being enslaved to the 1%... See a country like Nederland for example, 18million people and they owe $4trillion... Till I die I will never advise my enemy to live in Nederland. This is just an example oh. Africans are trying to fight the debt but it's growing by the day... European countries are far worse... My point is back in the day too, slavery was known all over the world, it was not only the Africans that were enslaved... It was widespread too but more Africans were sold into the slave trade. Back to why I tackled the first comment is this... Slavery is a kind of continuous process we humans do not really see it as it is until it's too late then the next generation begins to call it slavery... The fact is, we are still slaves to the 1%... Either primarily, or secondarily slaves to the 1%. Primarily I mean if you're into any kind of debt.. Secondary, if your country is owing any kind of debt(Just know that u are paying it even via buying food or just going to a restaurant) --- Via tax..
Political correctness isn't our strong suit fam.
This is truly the reward of consistency. I have been following you since day 1. Congratulations 🎉 bro. Love from Ghana 🇬🇭
Tayo you understood the assignment, great job with this collab.
Congrats Tayo!!
So much talent! Let’s use our talents, gifts, knowledge and natural resources to make Africa great.
🤗👏🤩 congratulations!!!! Greetings from Brazil!
hey man , can you educate me about why afro Brazilian afrophobic
Dalu (Greetings in Igbo)
Badagary holds a wealth of history, countless African Americans would love the opportunity to learn more of this painful part of our history (The Slave Trade). The Nigerian government should fund Badagary's historical longevity.
LOVE NIGERIA FROM INDIA............
Bhai 😍🇮🇳
Love you too from Nigeria
So happy for you Tayo, this video was very educative.....
Great collaboration between @Tayo Aina and @DW. Good views from above too taken by a flying drone. My 1st trip to Nigeria, 2019, all the way from Cape Town to Badagry, Nigeria. Congratulations Tayo.
Light and love from South Africa.
Thanks. Must come back after the pandemic!
When TAYO AINA STILL GOT TIME FOR LAGOS.....
I HAVE BEEN WAITING FOR YOUR REPORT ON THE NEW LAGOS BLUE LINE
Have a wonderful time in Nigeria, from United States of America 🇺🇸
Wow.. great and insightful short documentary on Lagos Tayo. Many interesting places to see in Lagos 👍
Yesssss content creators taking over 🔥
This is why we need better trade with our family in Africa! I know way too many people that would love to buy all of those items in the shops here in America!
Great content.
Indeed
I also climb that tree in Lekki Conversation Center 😂
You could not get a better tour guide than Tayo Aina. This was an excellent choice.
Just subscribed to DW. Feels good to watch real news from Africans about Africa. I grew up in Brooklyn believing that Africa and Africans are poor. News companies are evolving because influencers like Tayo are not hiding the truth
DW, this is beautiful, could we have some more, much love from Uganda.
We are working on it 😉!
I'm proud of u bro, you've come a long way...Watching from South Africa💕
Nice you're proud of him. Perhaps you'd stop your xenophobic attacks on your fellow Africans.
And your hatred of Nigerians who helped saved your a**es during apartheid.
@@imigbo3878 maybe you should get a life and stop being bitter.....and by the way there are countries who did more for SA during apartheid, and nigeria is not even the top 10.
@@mazwideamahle4091 that's serious cap. Nigeria was literally at the fore front of the fight and contributed the most due to them being far stronger than other African countries. Stfu and don't be an ingrate 💀☠️🤦🏾
Ur killing it tayp
African cities and nations are so much more complex and fascinating than many people around the world know. When I served in the Navy, there were many other Sailors I met from places like Lagos and Accra, and it was a privilege to hear their stories about how difficult life was back home, but how they still miss the places where they grew up. African perspectives deserve to be heard all over the world.
DW partnering with Tayo, oya na you’re going global. Congrats 🥳 more to come.
Atleast more than $10k sure die 😜😀
How about mosquitos and malaria experience??
Wow!! I can’t believe I’m seeing you on DW!
You see where diligence, consistency and passion can lead a person???
I remember Tayo’s first video vlogs!
He will go far !!
My homie is getting better and better everyday bravo👍☑️
Ahhh Tayo.....what you have just engaged on in collaboration with this great network DW is mind blowing. I fact you are marketing Lagos cum Nigeria to the Europe and the world at large via tourism. DW is one of my favourite channels here in Germany and trust me Germans are a very unique kind of people in the sense that they are not pretenders. If the love you, you see it and feel it but if the don't, they don't waste time in letting you know it. If DW decided to allow our story to be shown and talked about by an African shows how importance they attached to such a venture. Trust me Tayo ....in a couple of months, you will understand what this means to our image as a country and people. To DW.....you guys are awesome. Keep strengthening this new inspirational documentaries coming. 👏
@The Joke of Africa take your bitterness elsewhere
Thank you for watching and for your nice comment!
Thank you 🙏🏾. Appreciate you taking the time to write out these encouraging words!
@The Joke of Africa UK Germany, USA etc all have got bad imagine and deserved one as well so nothing new. Now do you want run with that or help change the narrative. Be optimistic for a few sec.
@@godwinejiofor8064 God bless you for that comment. Waste of space. He's a paid minion to sabotage.
Telling the African story ourselves, great content. It's been a long time coming. 🇸🇪🇿🇲
Thanks for watching!
@@DWTravel Thanks for giving African content creators an opportunity to show their continent. It's an improvement for a foreign media house.
Great content bro
@2:26 I like how that guy in the background just disappeared.
Congrats Mr. Tayo Aina. DW should feel privileged working with such a talented presenter, entrepreneur, and general advocate for all things Africa, especially Nigeria. I know I am privileged to consume Tayo's content, and for that I am grateful. Thank you Mr. Aina!
Thank you
I would like to visit Lagos
Well done Tayo. More higher heights
Imagine exchanging 40 human beings for an umbrella. This is why the world look down upon us. We placed very little value on ourselves.
We are not any worse than then captors. Do you think shit like this didn't happen amongst white people? Bro it did pick up few books and read.
We are humans with flaws after all.
I don't beleive it. From most other sources it was around £25 in 1800 to buy a slave in an African Market from an African. That is £2500 in todays money and I am sure that an umbrella cost significantly less than that.
Africans who dealt in slaves would not have been so bad in sales to only achieve a price of 1 umbrella for 40 slaves. 😆😆😆
Tayo, thanks for your beautiful videos and your efforts to show us the nice face of Najia. I discovered Najia and Lagos in 2012, and from 2014 to 2019, I stayed there at least once a year. I come from Burkina, what I deplore is not having been able to really discover Lagos as I visit Abidjan, Accra or Cotonou. I only know 2 neighborhoods, Ojodu Berger and Ikotun Egbe.
Emmanuel, God with us
I approve this message…Documentaries & Vlogs is ur thing Tayo…..well done 👌🏾
Excellent... Not surprised though.. Being following @tayo for a while ... Keep it rolling brother..
Jesus am distressed and crying after watching this to think that a human being did such wickedness to another human being
Very sad sis
Legend
Africa to the world
This is the same market "Tommy" (Sabbatical) visited today
Thank you so much bro for this video. I'm a believer for a better Nigeria, and I love your spirit for curiosity and diversity.
Please let me know how I can get to The Tarkwa Bay. I do live in LEKKI phase 1
💚🌻🐳🙏😊ธรรมชาติที่สวย😍😘😗👌👌👌👍👍👍👈👈👈
I was born and brought up in Lagos, but I have not visited any of the places in this video. Thanks for this video
This video was so informative. Very informative!
Thank you and loving you totally, Stephanie Zion Abubakari AL 💚💚💚
Thanks for watching!
I said it months ago that you Tayo is gonna go places.....you have proved me right 100%. Imagine Tayo on DW Channel.....wonderful. I can't hold the tears bro....I wish you all the very best Tayo. Great content as usual.
When is DW travel coming to Kenya? I’d love to show you guys around
Dhruv was there! We will upload his video very soon. It's awesome! Kenya seems to be a wonderful country! Thank you for the invitation and greetings to Kenya!
One day 🥰🥰🥰
Tayo aina we are super proud of you
There is much more to Lagos than this!
I am a Nigerian but better informed. Thank you for showing us around.
I'm here brother
I really like your content
Thank you for your awesome work! You are a rare and formidable talent. Never change.
Congratulations Tayo. So happy when I saw your picture on the Thumbnail. I clicked the 'like' botton even before watching the video.😀
This was an EXCELLENT VIDEO!!!…. Thank You 🙏🏽
@fonefred1 Thannks an stay tuned! 😘
Whenever I visit the islands and buy stuff it says made in China on the bottom. Are these things authentic?
Tarkwa bay? Tarkwa is a township located in the western region of Ghana. It is the mining capital of Ghana. What a coincidence!
When I say you Ghanaians and us Nigerians are linked, you people would say No!!!
I think you dey see am !
@@aframaco9491
It's mainly Ghanaians who always reject the notion. Very difficult for them to get over the Ghana-must-go Era. Forgetting that Ghana did the same thing to Nigeria before.
Yes. Look at the word welcome.
In Ghana, I don't know which dialect, but it's
Akwaaba
In Nigeria, Yoruba, it's
Ękuabo or Ękaabo.
Switching gears though.
I wish Nigerians would find another name for those bags, Ghana-must-go is just too divisive a name.
Maybe, 'West Africa United' bags.....😃
@@gardensteps I quite agree Joy!
They never seem truly comfortable with us !
Yes they did evict us first from Ghana ( and under terrible circumstances too) bang in the middle of our civil war, but we don’t begrudge them that !
As for the Ghana-must- go bags, yes I too used to cringe when our Nigerians called those laundry bags that..,
…that is until a Ghanaian friend told me , they had a popular saying in Ghanaian language which says “God is not a Nigerian”!
That pissed me off, and then I also stopped being guilty about the Ghana-must- go bags !
But it’s all love ! Ghanaians need to accept our Nigerianism and be cool!
@@aframaco9491
With all the vitriol I've seen directed towards Nigerians and Nigeria by Ghanaians on UA-cam, I'm not surprised they would have a saying like that about Nigerians. I bet they say that with all the derision they can muster...."God is not a Nigerian".
Well then, I too will forever stop being unhappy about that cheap local catch-all bag being called Ghana must go!!!
I am still trying to find out if you are a sis or a bro, Aframaco.....😄
But I always enjoy your comments.
@@gardensteps Oh I am a Bruvah ( Man ) !
Can’t help it,😂😂😂😂 I was born that way !!!
I enjoy the video until you got to the end about slavery to know that my ancestors was sold into slavery for umbrellas its painful. and just to think if i come to Nigeria today I would need a tourist visa very pathetic and shameful.
So touching about our ugly and painful historical past especially....brothers and sisters sold out for peanuts or for whatever reasons.....it makes me so sick but let the homecoming begin especially towards Nigeria from our disporian brethren and let's rewrite this ugly past.
Some slave were kidnap and force but we are very sorry for the past, as a Nigerian am sad about our government concerning the tourists visa
Tayo don blow ooooo 💃🏽💃🏽💃🏽💃🏽💃🏽. Happy for your growth. Watching from Australia
Lagos is Yorubaland and also has migrants from other ethnic groups
Gotta Love NIgerians.. such smart people
from Somalia
Tayo delivers every time! Clear concise and panoramic capture of Lagos. Its great a production.
well done tayo
Taiyo Aina this your video and editing is dope! I know the making of this video only will literally takes u one week ✅👍🏿
Nigeria is a beautiful country and Lagos is a beautiful cosmopolitan city !
Well done TA💕
Tayo! DW chose the right man for the job!
You call us slaves but we are still Nigerians. It’s time to change the way you speak of us
They were NOT slaves. They were enslaved. Beautiful Africans/Nigerians who were "enslaved".
Planning a trip to Lagos soon, so this was fascinating and gave me many points of interest ideas. Thank you.
Thank you, Tayo! Amazing and a heartfelt history lesson. So sad to see the evil collaboration between Africans and all the countries that participated in the inhumane Slave trade. We need more history lessons to fully grasp the reasons why Africans were willing to sell their citizens and agreed to subject them to such cruelty. Thank you immensely for your brilliant content!
No ,some of us are bored of being pummeled with slavery narratives, let's start humanising Africans and go to Africa for fun and pleasure and to explore culture like one does when going anywhere else in the world.
Israel has got over their genocide, lets move forward
Those cowries are still used in northern Ghana for paying bride pride and exchange by the locals.
That's interesting!
Love that he included stories of the “Trans Atlantic Slave Trade”
Well done, brother. You're making us proud.
This is a great film, but I'm a bit sad to see the dilapidated state of those important historical buildings in Badagry. It tells the story of negligence by the Nigerian authorities towards the maintenance of historical buildings in Lagos and in Nigeria generally. Growing up in Lagos in the 1960s and 1970s, I recall a panoply of beautiful buildings in Brazilian style that told of the story of returned former slaves from the South American country who became extremely wealthy, prosperous members of the upper echelons of Lagos and Nigerian society. Unfortunately, most of those buildings no longer exist, replaced by modern blocks of concrete, glass and steel. The relative few that do remain are mostly derelict. Such buildings are a national historical treasure, as are these slave trade structures at Badagry that are shown in this film. I think it is a pity that they have been allowed to fall into disrepair, important structures such as these ought to be carefully preserved.
That sounds sad. Things like that should really be preserved. They are part of the culture of remembrance. Thanks for watching!
Thanks DW. Thanks Tayo!
Good Job Tayo
I always find myself rooting so much for Tayo. Great job!
Very informative. Thanks for the tour.
I’ve been watching Tayo for a while, so nice to see him here! Love the Lekki Conservation Center. One of the coolest things to do in Lagos.
Congrats Tayo! ✌🏾💙🇳🇬
Thank you Tayo. I felt my ancestors with this one...🥲
Tayo ur just too good
What a wonderful video. I appreciate the places and subjects that you featured. The Slavery segment was very hard to watch. I am so proud and happy that Nigerians of today rightfully have their lives in their own hands.
Dope Content Tayo ✅
I LOVE😍 this, we need more content in & around Lagos, Nigeria, like this, thanks 🙏 ❤️
Sis you are everywhere on UA-cam, keep supporting Nigeria we are the future, am blessed to see some so passionate about their country just like me, it's like a sprit the Nigeria sprit, we are gonna change the narrative.
@@tomiwaisaac8556 Absolutely 🙏 & thanks! Just subbed your channel ✌️💚💯
I've been to Lagos, the air is so polluted is actually burns your nostrils. There is NO law and order on any level.
Great job Tayo 🔥🔥 video editing always on point 💯