Bambara, mandinka, dioula are the same people. They speak almost the same language and not need translator. Generally, mandinka is dedicated for the rulers of the Mali empire, theirs relatives and descents. Bamara are their eastern cousins. Dioula are the merchants cast of Mandinka. I do my best to put some light in confusion.
Even Bambara start as a clan just like jula. Kaabu nka or tiramanka see kurangko. Until you speak the language many people don't understand what these names simply means. All these names have history that is attached but the same people. For example English, Anglo Saxon are the same. A scousser is also English from Liverpool. But until one understands English or English history one may not know.
@@babasaho5787 I want to know about the name ( Koroba ) because its my last name please tell me anything, im from Saudi Arabia but my dad told me that we originally came from Mali.
Farafina = Africa in Bambara. It translates into "the land of the black people". Bambara and other Mande people were one of the first black people to possess race-consciousness, well before the Arab or the European came into the picture.
I am from Mali, Bamako and Bambara was one of my first languages including English. Farafina means “black people” Farafina dogu means “ the land of the black people”
Farafina indeed means Africa or land of black people. But farafin without the a means black people. The a at the end changes black people to land of black people
@@thekalamerchant exactly, I am half Mandinka from Guinea and that’s how we call black people by indicating the skin color. We call white people toubabou or farabgè
King Solomon 🤴🏿was a pure Black skin man 👨🏿 don’t doubt that. Thank you HomeTeam for briefing my family line. We are the Mandingo or Mandinka. Legitimate children of the Great Mali and Ghana empires
It’s very peculiar that certain biblical stories mirror the stories of the motherland so closely. The origin story featured here sounds like the source of the Noah and the Ark story of the Bible. 🤫 I’m not trying to bait anyone here. I’m not attempting to question anyone’s religion, as I grew up Catholic and Seventh Day Adventist. Although I grew up heavily religious, I’m now a spiritualist. I’m simply making an observation. **Side-note: nothing surprises me anymore. The fact that they prophesied that life started from an origin sound “Yo” is an example of synchronicity. We Black Folks made “Yo” popular in the hood. I grew up in BKLYN and to this day I still say “Yo.” Everything we think is new echos somewhere from the past. We are more connected to our ancestors than we realize. Love & Light brothers and sisters!
Neg Ste. Lucie even if I believe in coincidence (which I don’t), how exactly does this situation scream coincidence to you? There are well-documented studies that prove a lot (if not all) the stories in the Bible were stolen from other cultures. I tend to believe in cold hard facts. Africa is the origin of all mankind-it’s hard to argue against an established fact. Also the Bible and Christianity came about after civilization had already existed for thousands of years. So 🤷🏽♀️there’s that.
Neg Ste. Lucie Also I’m going to assume you called me bro by mistake. I’ll give you the benefit of the doubt because I refuse to believe that you would stoop as low as to call me bro as an insult. **I am a cisgendered female, who identifies as as such. I would prefer Mam, Miss, Ms. or Sister. My pronouns are she/her. Thank you sir!
I agree, for example the story of Moses was IN Egypt and reading the stories in their proper order could probably reveal more information about where the other stories come from. I don't believe that things 'just' happen, we don't see or understand the world around us enough to believe that. Goodness, we don't even know what dinosaurs really looked like!
I am happy =) , HomeTeam, you made a video of the bambara or bamana, who are my people and I apreciated that, well I am bambara but Jula or Dyula a mandinka caste etno-group =) that are in plenty western african countries.
@@isaacdiakite3264 yes true, bambara, maninka, jula, malinke, sussu or sosso, soninke etc. we are all brothers of the same family of the Mande family =).
@Heavenly Soundz Spiritual Beats Messiah Music In Maninka/Bamana/Julakan Tubabu specifically means white person(they were the ones who create division) babu in it's self sound baba when can refer to a beloved male elder.
@Heavenly Soundz Spiritual Beats Messiah Music tubabu is white european in the mande languege, the same like the people of senegal call white europeans with the name tubaab.
There are many similar stories dispersed throughout the world who has spoken about a great catastrophic flood. This does not discredit the Bible in anyway, but I think it rather eludes to an actual event that took place, heck even scientist today admit that there was once a great global flood although they leave out many details.
@@zigzag1able right the fact that there were many different versions of a flood happening makes it more likely. We are all related after all. Regardless if we don't get along. I just thought about the tower of babel and the fact that Africa has so many different languages and tribes.
I love all of your quality content and videos about tribes and also their story of creations. It is so interesting and I enjoy it. Makes me want to go deeper in to African history and culture no matter how endless it will be. All your tribal videos have pictures of The tribe’s people and wow…not only are African Brown-Dark skinned people so physically attractive with amazing facial symmetry but they also aged so well. It’s quite impeccable how whiteness is the standard of beauty when African Men and Women are by far superior in looks. There is no debate. Know Thyself,Remember Your ancestors. ❤️
@Home Team History , I appreciate your great work . Have you done a indepth research on the Balanta people of Guienua Bissau? , if you did I would like to check. It out .
Here's another version of the story with some minor details changed. "The Bambara explain that the creation of the universe was an extremely complex process in which the world emerged from an original void in motion that gradually took on voice and vibration, created all the elements of the universe, and gave birth to sound, light, all creatures, all actions, and all sentiments, as well as to human consciousness. Pemba, the wood spirit, reigned first and spent his first seven years on earth as a whirlwind. He created Moussa Koroni, the first woman, who gave birth to all living creatures, including lower animals and vegetables. Thus, all living creatures, both animal and vegetable, are descended from the first woman and are thus blood relatives of humans. Reverence for all forms of life is therefore central to Bambara beliefs. The value of androgyny is also a fundamental theme. The conflict between the sexes, symbolized by the corporal separation of Pemba and Moussa Koroni, their conflicts and quarrels, became the source of cosmic discord, which was combated by the harmony established by the androgynous water spirit, Faro. Pemba, the first man, became promiscuous and abandoned Moussa Koroni, the first woman. In order to avoid starving, she created agriculture and taught its techniques. Pemba’s desertion drove Moussa Koroni mad. In her madness, called zvanzo, she traveled in all directions, spreading impurity wherever she went. Pemba pursued her in vain, finally seeking help from Faro. Faro found her, vanquished her, and tried to get her to submit, but she refused, declaring herself free and thus bringing evil, disorder, and death into the universe. Faro then established supremacy over Pemba, establishing the principle of androgyny, the vibration of duality that brings order to the universe. The androgynous water spirit’s triumph over the promiscuous male wood spirit represents the triumph of reason and moderation over blind force. Faro is the light, the master of the word, builder of the seven heavens, the representative of will and wisdom that control the demands of the sexual impulse." -Africans In Colonial Louisiana Gwendolyn Midlo-Hall
@@ivryparadise1488 Some of the first Louisiana and Haitian slaves were Bambara. Being from Louisiana I have a small bit of ancestry from that part of the world. Their belief system is a practical way of doing things.
This is so good. Henry Christophe who was one of the 4 major Haitian revolutionaries who fought and won the liberation of Haiti is said to have been of the Bambara ethnicity descending form the Igbo tribe. 🇭🇹🇭🇹
I was wondering if the Bambara People may be remotely akin to the Barabian people who were the forerunners of the ancient Egyptians. They used their real name Barabian instead of the name "Nubian" which was associated with slavery/bondage. They are the people who built the Great Sphinx and the Great Pyramid of Giza. Unfortunately, the Arabs together with the Europeans changed and/or inverted a few letters in the name of the Barabian people to Barbarian which became a scourge.
It is possible but Bambara are the same as the mandingo or Malinke or jula. The name changes depending on either occupation or proximity to Mali. For example the western mandingos called the Bambara people tilibonkos. And the Bambara referred to the west mandingo people as Tiramankang si.
World created through speaking, two created humans rebelled and lost their connection with God, humans commanded to multiply and have dominion, a world-wide flood and a boat to rescue a few. It's amazing how many commonalities the Bambara account of creation has with Genesis in the Bible💜
Bambara is just a dialect of the Mande tribe , which is coined into Mande,-nka , when latinized it become Mandingo , or with dialect tonal come in a given respect becomes Mandinka , with the Mande and nka coming together , all of which translates as the people who speaks the mande language , Bambara is not an independent dialect, different from what is spoken in Guinea, Sierra Leone, Gambia , Liberia, Burkina Faso, Senegal, Mauritania, Gambia , Bissau and Mali , even though with tone changes in some of these regions or sub regions and some vocabularies have become obscure in used to some segments ,and new vocabs have entered into used through borrowing from neighboring languages but similarities in all the Mande languages or Latinized as Mandingo representing all of the brand of the nko language segment of the Mande language . Mandingo as commonly in its latinization , is mutually intelligible 7out 10 words , out of the daily speaking and interactions , the significant challenged last in the tonal expressions of words , there are different naming system as the language moved from one country or region to another : in Mali : Mandingo people are called Bambara for particular segment , Mandinka for particular segment , Guinea : Malinka , Koniaka , Julanka or others ,
This is the best explanation I have seen in these comments section. Even in Gambia there is different tones and word choices between western and Eastern part of the country.
A book written by Joseph Eidelberg; “Bambara, A new Approach for solving the puzzle of Exodus and the mystery of the Ten Lost Tribes of Israel”, he considered these people to be Israelites. This may very well be the case thus the similarities of their oral history & what is written in the Torah, they're the same people.
They truly hate speaking french tho, they usually yell at people for speaking it because most people can't understand and don't like it, really the only real reason it would be useful in mali is for translating with other ethnic groups, and government issues.
Bambara is also sort of a lingua franca in Mali, everyone regardless of ethnicity speaks Bambara in Mali, including non-bambarans. Bambara/Mande people's are about 50 percent of Mali's population, and the remaining 50 are various smaller ethnic groups, with fula people being dorminant
So many tribe sin East Africa are actually related to some tribes in West Africa, esp from the Mali, Burkina Furso, Gambia regions. History has it that just before the slave trade, some groups separeated from some tribes in East Africa and moved west wards, e.g the Akan of Ghana. That is why, if you do a research, you will see that some of these West and East African tribes (e.g Ateker group of tribes) are very identical in culture, and even words.
@@getoutofthematrix3757 pretty sure it was a long time before slave trade. West Africans are genetically very different to east Africans so it would have a be a gradual thing done over a very long period of time
this tribe got most of it right.they are a blessed peoples.everything they believe in is pretty much what the Hebrews wrote,just slightly out of sink with the holy bible.YHVH is nature he is a thought, he did send a flood to destroy the geeber giants, but saved 8 ademmic men, and 2 of every other kind of man and animal to preserve humankind..
Check out Slave Ship Troubadour 1841. A ship load of people intended to be enslaved in Cuba were shipwrecked of the coast of North Caicos in the BWI. The captain and crew were imprisoned and the enslaved were allowed to remain there as slavery was outlawed by the British. Those are my ancestors. The gave the location Bambara. There is even a liquor name Bambara Rum.
Great Video, Please explain the Bambara Jihad that aided in ending the Mali empire ? As it seems strange that non muslim peoples would want to fight a holy war.
ua-cam.com/video/SKkOYUDGfE8/v-deo.html i have a presentation in the works that will be a detailed look at the Bamileke, Bamum, and Tikar coming soon. Peace
@Your Handsome Step-Dad has a very good point, depending on what was going on during that time, we can't say for sure what the word meant for them back then, the is no such thing as direct translation.
The original Arabs The best way to get a true picture of what the original Arabs of the past looked like is to ask the original Arabs of the past themselves. So let's take a look at what the original, pure Arabs of 1400 years ago said about the appearance of the pure Arabs. Let's begin with Miskeen Al Darimi the well-known, pure-blooded Arab poet of the 7th century AD. Miskeen is his nickname, but his real name is Rabee' the son of 'Aamir the son of Unaif the son of Shaarih the son of 'Amru the son of Zaid the son of Abdellah the son of 'Uds the son of Darim the son of Malik the son of Handhala the son of Zaid Manah the son of Tamim the son of Murr the son of Udd the son of Taabikha the son of Yaas the son of Mudar the son of Nizar the son Ma'add the son of Adnan. It's a known fact that Miskeen was black-skinned. He once proposed to a girl and she rejected him because of his blackness and his poorness. The girl later married a rich man who was from a tribe not as pure Arab as Miskeen's tribe. Miskeen one day saw the the girl who rejected him because of his blackness and poorness sitting with her husband, who was from a tribe not as pure as Miskeen's tribe. Miskeen stopped and said to them: "I am Miskeen, for those who know me. My color is dark, the color of the Arabs."
Bambara does not exist, they are mixtures of Soninkes and Mandes, it originated in Wes Africa, that is why the language is very close to Mande, and it also has many Soninke words. Most of their last names are Soninkes, the name itself Bambara, when Islam arrived, they refused to convert Islam, they called them. Bambara by this mixture of Soninke and Mande the Bamabara came into existence the language itself if you speak Mande you will not need to read Bambara just like Soninke if you speak Soninke you will understand them if they speak
Bambara, mandinka, dioula are the same people. They speak almost the same language and not need translator. Generally, mandinka is dedicated for the rulers of the Mali empire, theirs relatives and descents. Bamara are their eastern cousins. Dioula are the merchants cast of Mandinka. I do my best to put some light in confusion.
is there a village, city or tribe called Koroba in mali? and do they speak bambara language?
@@Makken-vg7up Yes there is a village like that. And as a malian i can tel you that everybody is speaking bambara in the south of the country
@@HammadiSonny
From which tribe Koroba are?
Are they mendi or yoroba or folani?
Even Bambara start as a clan just like jula. Kaabu nka or tiramanka see kurangko. Until you speak the language many people don't understand what these names simply means. All these names have history that is attached but the same people. For example English, Anglo Saxon are the same. A scousser is also English from Liverpool. But until one understands English or English history one may not know.
@@babasaho5787
I want to know about the name ( Koroba ) because its my last name please tell me anything, im from Saudi Arabia but my dad told me that we originally came from Mali.
My tribe 🖤
Farafina = Africa in Bambara. It translates into "the land of the black people".
Bambara and other Mande people were one of the first black people to possess race-consciousness, well before the Arab or the European came into the picture.
I am from Mali, Bamako and Bambara was one of my first languages including English. Farafina means “black people” Farafina dogu means “ the land of the black people”
Farafina indeed means Africa or land of black people. But farafin without the a means black people. The a at the end changes black people to land of black people
@@ai_ch8048 Yes, a soninke brother once told me that the word for "African" or "black person" was Farafin, without the 'a'.
@@thekalamerchant exactly, I am half Mandinka from Guinea and that’s how we call black people by indicating the skin color. We call white people toubabou or farabgè
What do you mean race consciousness ?
Sounds like Noah's ark with the flood.
MY PEOPLE . LOVE YOUR CHANNEL BRO. JUST KEEP ON TEACHING ABOUT US
Amazing. "Yo" , that's amazing.
I love your work brother great job‼️
Wow!! Thanks for the video hometeam
Home Team you are the Truth.,
great job I'm from Senegal please do the history of the Wolof empire
Thank You HomeTeam,for this content💪
Thank you for your research
King Solomon 🤴🏿was a pure Black skin man 👨🏿 don’t doubt that. Thank you HomeTeam for briefing my family line. We are the Mandingo or Mandinka. Legitimate children of the Great Mali and Ghana empires
EARS TO HEAR
That's a verse I dropped look for this comment by ONEKBABY it's the very last comment
That thread has some UNDENIABLE information
Y'all can write in google "Jews of the bilad al-Sudan" Arabs confirm that the Jews and Israelites are in Subsaharian Africa.
@@awareyah6146 the story sounds like the Buganda story of Kintu and Nambi
The woman in the thumbnail is gorgeous omg
And even wearing a Wig!
I wish u would drop videos everyday I like these
Many thanksgiving
It’s very peculiar that certain biblical stories mirror the stories of the motherland so closely. The origin story featured here sounds like the source of the Noah and the Ark story of the Bible. 🤫
I’m not trying to bait anyone here. I’m not attempting to question anyone’s religion, as I grew up Catholic and Seventh Day Adventist. Although I grew up heavily religious, I’m now a spiritualist. I’m simply making an observation.
**Side-note: nothing surprises me anymore. The fact that they prophesied that life started from an origin sound “Yo” is an example of synchronicity. We Black Folks made “Yo” popular in the hood. I grew up in BKLYN and to this day I still say “Yo.” Everything we think is new echos somewhere from the past. We are more connected to our ancestors than we realize. Love & Light brothers and sisters!
You can write in google "Jews of the bilad al-Sudan" Arabs confirm that the Jews and Israelites are in Subsaharian Africa.
Coincidence is a thing bro.
Neg Ste. Lucie even if I believe in coincidence (which I don’t), how exactly does this situation scream coincidence to you?
There are well-documented studies that prove a lot (if not all) the stories in the Bible were stolen from other cultures. I tend to believe in cold hard facts. Africa is the origin of all mankind-it’s hard to argue against an established fact.
Also the Bible and Christianity came about after civilization had already existed for thousands of years. So 🤷🏽♀️there’s that.
Neg Ste. Lucie Also I’m going to assume you called me bro by mistake. I’ll give you the benefit of the doubt because I refuse to believe that you would stoop as low as to call me bro as an insult.
**I am a cisgendered female, who identifies as as such. I would prefer Mam, Miss, Ms. or Sister. My pronouns are she/her. Thank you sir!
I agree, for example the story of Moses was IN Egypt and reading the stories in their proper order could probably reveal more information about where the other stories come from.
I don't believe that things 'just' happen, we don't see or understand the world around us enough to believe that. Goodness, we don't even know what dinosaurs really looked like!
Hello could you please do a video concerning the African People of North Sentinel Island ?
One has to go there to get info , not sure if anyone is allowed to go there , not sure of the outcome , that might be tricky one
@Rojav No not even them , the North Sentinelese people know who belongs and who doesn't. I think we should let them be.
VERY INTERESTING 🧐. Thanks for your research!
I see similar stories like in the bible
I am happy =) , HomeTeam, you made a video of the bambara or bamana, who are my people and I apreciated that, well I am bambara but Jula or Dyula a mandinka caste etno-group =) that are in plenty western african countries.
Thank you, I try tell people
Maninka, Bambara, Jula are the same people! It's Tubabu that separate us.
@@isaacdiakite3264 yes true, bambara, maninka, jula, malinke, sussu or sosso, soninke etc. we are all brothers of the same family of the Mande family =).
@Heavenly Soundz Spiritual Beats Messiah Music
In Maninka/Bamana/Julakan Tubabu specifically means white person(they were the ones who create division) babu in it's self sound baba when can refer to a beloved male elder.
@Heavenly Soundz Spiritual Beats Messiah Music tubabu is white european in the mande languege, the same like the people of senegal call white europeans with the name tubaab.
I’m glad Home Team made this video too. I am making plans to travel to Mali to learn more about my ancestors. Much Love
Great content 🔥
Thank you💚💜
Woah the Bambara creation story's flood sounds similar to the Abrahamic story of the flood with Noah's ark. Very interesting.
Bantus languages is hebrew
www.jstor.org/stable/715705?seq=1
You can write in google "Jews of the bilad al-Sudan" Arabs confirm that the Jews and Israelites are in Subsaharian Africa.
books.google.ca/books?id=lSwIBgAAQBAJ&pg=PA59&lpg=PA59&dq=the+negroid+type+of+Jew,+Assyrian+And+Syrian&source=bl&ots=ePC3AqQIUa&sig=ACfU3U3Hq3L_w-LDMXRoAxxHiU6IgR5ewA&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwiviLGArLjnAhVPWs0KHSFjA7IQ6AEwBHoECAcQAQ#v=onepage&q=the%20negroid%20type%20of%20Jew%2C%20Assyrian%20And%20Syrian&f=false
There are many similar stories dispersed throughout the world who has spoken about a great catastrophic flood. This does not discredit the Bible in anyway, but I think it rather eludes to an actual event that took place, heck even scientist today admit that there was once a great global flood although they leave out many details.
@@zigzag1able right the fact that there were many different versions of a flood happening makes it more likely. We are all related after all. Regardless if we don't get along. I just thought about the tower of babel and the fact that Africa has so many different languages and tribes.
I love all of your quality content and videos about tribes and also their story of creations. It is so interesting and I enjoy it. Makes me want to go deeper in to African history and culture no matter how endless it will be.
All your tribal videos have pictures of The tribe’s people and wow…not only are African Brown-Dark skinned people so physically attractive with amazing facial symmetry but they also aged so well. It’s quite impeccable how whiteness is the standard of beauty when African Men and Women are by far superior in looks. There is no debate.
Know Thyself,Remember Your ancestors. ❤️
@Home Team History , I appreciate your great work .
Have you done a indepth research on the Balanta people of Guienua Bissau? , if you did I would like to check. It out .
Here's another version of the story with some minor details changed.
"The Bambara explain that the creation of the universe was an extremely complex process in which the world emerged from an original void in motion that gradually took on voice and vibration, created all the elements of the universe, and gave birth to sound, light, all creatures, all actions, and all sentiments, as well as to human consciousness. Pemba, the wood spirit, reigned first and spent his first seven years on earth as a whirlwind. He created Moussa Koroni, the first woman, who gave birth to all living creatures, including lower animals and vegetables. Thus, all living creatures, both animal and vegetable, are descended from the first woman and are thus blood relatives of humans. Reverence for all forms of life is therefore central to Bambara beliefs. The value of androgyny is also a fundamental theme. The conflict between the sexes, symbolized by the corporal separation of Pemba and Moussa Koroni, their conflicts and quarrels, became the source of cosmic discord, which was combated by the harmony established by the androgynous water spirit, Faro. Pemba, the first man, became promiscuous and abandoned Moussa Koroni, the first woman. In order to avoid starving, she created agriculture and taught its techniques. Pemba’s desertion drove Moussa Koroni mad. In her madness, called zvanzo, she traveled in all directions, spreading impurity wherever she went. Pemba pursued her in vain, finally seeking help from Faro. Faro found her, vanquished her, and tried to get her to submit, but she refused, declaring herself free and thus bringing evil, disorder, and death into the universe. Faro then established supremacy over Pemba, establishing the principle of androgyny, the vibration of duality that brings order to the universe. The androgynous water spirit’s triumph over the promiscuous male wood spirit represents the triumph of reason and moderation over blind force. Faro is the light, the master of the word, builder of the seven heavens, the representative of will and wisdom that control the demands of the sexual impulse."
-Africans In Colonial Louisiana
Gwendolyn Midlo-Hall
I have Bambara lineage I never knew this sounds similar to Hinduism in some ways I love this creation story of my people thanks for sharing ❤️
@@ivryparadise1488 Some of the first Louisiana and Haitian slaves were Bambara. Being from Louisiana I have a small bit of ancestry from that part of the world. Their belief system is a practical way of doing things.
This is so good. Henry Christophe who was one of the 4 major Haitian revolutionaries who fought and won the liberation of Haiti is said to have been of the Bambara ethnicity descending form the Igbo tribe. 🇭🇹🇭🇹
Can you do all the mande tribes ? Ik its not only the madinka & bambara. Things on Sierra Leone would be dope as well
He has a video about them already
Can you do a video on some Eastern African history/culture/tribes? 🥺
My people 🙏
They are so beautiful.
I was wondering if the Bambara People may be remotely akin to the Barabian people who were the forerunners of the ancient Egyptians. They used their real name Barabian instead of the name "Nubian" which was associated with slavery/bondage. They are the people who built the Great Sphinx and the Great Pyramid of Giza. Unfortunately, the Arabs together with the Europeans changed and/or inverted a few letters in the name of the Barabian people to Barbarian which became a scourge.
It is possible but Bambara are the same as the mandingo or Malinke or jula. The name changes depending on either occupation or proximity to Mali. For example the western mandingos called the Bambara people tilibonkos. And the Bambara referred to the west mandingo people as Tiramankang si.
World created through speaking, two created humans rebelled and lost their connection with God, humans commanded to multiply and have dominion, a world-wide flood and a boat to rescue a few. It's amazing how many commonalities the Bambara account of creation has with Genesis in the Bible💜
Dude you need to make a documentary.
I am the first lol nice video they are good looking people.
I ni ce! Thank you in Bambara
Can you please do Somali people 🇸🇴🇸🇴🇸🇴🇸🇴🇸🇴🇸🇴
Great video!
Bambara is just a dialect of the Mande tribe , which is coined into Mande,-nka , when latinized it become Mandingo , or with dialect tonal come in a given respect becomes Mandinka , with the Mande and nka coming together , all of which translates as the people who speaks the mande language , Bambara is not an independent dialect, different from what is spoken in Guinea, Sierra Leone, Gambia , Liberia, Burkina Faso, Senegal, Mauritania, Gambia , Bissau and Mali , even though with tone changes in some of these regions or sub regions and some vocabularies have become obscure in used to some segments ,and new vocabs have entered into used through borrowing from neighboring languages but similarities in all the Mande languages or Latinized as Mandingo representing all of the brand of the nko language segment of the Mande language .
Mandingo as commonly in its latinization , is mutually intelligible 7out 10 words , out of the daily speaking and interactions , the significant challenged last in the tonal expressions of words , there are different naming system as the language moved from one country or region to another : in Mali : Mandingo people are called Bambara for particular segment , Mandinka for particular segment , Guinea : Malinka , Koniaka , Julanka or others ,
This is the best explanation I have seen in these comments section. Even in Gambia there is different tones and word choices between western and Eastern part of the country.
A book written by Joseph Eidelberg; “Bambara, A new Approach for solving the puzzle of Exodus and the mystery of the Ten Lost Tribes of Israel”, he considered these people to be Israelites. This may very well be the case thus the similarities of their oral history & what is written in the Torah, they're the same people.
Could you do the Balanta people?
The word Balanta is mandingo word. Great people.
Spent a year in bamako, mali. although french is the national language they still speak their native tongue bambara.
That's a facts they always love speaking their native language.
They truly hate speaking french tho, they usually yell at people for speaking it because most people can't understand and don't like it, really the only real reason it would be useful in mali is for translating with other ethnic groups, and government issues.
Bambara is also sort of a lingua franca in Mali, everyone regardless of ethnicity speaks Bambara in Mali, including non-bambarans. Bambara/Mande people's are about 50 percent of Mali's population, and the remaining 50 are various smaller ethnic groups, with fula people being dorminant
Could you do the Lorma people of Guinea and Liberia?
my tribe love it🥰
What about the east Africa history. I would like to hear please
So many tribe sin East Africa are actually related to some tribes in West Africa, esp from the Mali, Burkina Furso, Gambia regions. History has it that just before the slave trade, some groups separeated from some tribes in East Africa and moved west wards, e.g the Akan of Ghana. That is why, if you do a research, you will see that some of these West and East African tribes (e.g Ateker group of tribes) are very identical in culture, and even words.
@@getoutofthematrix3757 Thanks
@@getoutofthematrix3757 pretty sure it was a long time before slave trade. West Africans are genetically very different to east Africans so it would have a be a gradual thing done over a very long period of time
0:39 - Burkini?
Burkina 🇧🇫
Land of the upright people
Love learning more about black history.
this tribe got most of it right.they are a blessed peoples.everything they believe in is pretty much what the Hebrews wrote,just slightly out of sink with the holy bible.YHVH is nature he is a thought, he did send a flood to destroy the geeber giants, but saved 8 ademmic men, and 2 of every other kind of man and animal to preserve humankind..
Bantus languages is hebrew
www.jstor.org/stable/715705?seq=1
Lol gtfoh
@@seanmikaeel90s50 lol ygtfoh
@@seanmikaeel90s50 no you get the@@#%$# out of here.
Can you do the Soninke people!
Doesn't bemba means ancestors?
Yes that is what it means.
They are also in northern ivory coast!
My mother's tribe their language is wonderful. Unfortunately I only understand wolof
Check out Slave Ship Troubadour 1841. A ship load of people intended to be enslaved in Cuba were shipwrecked of the coast of North Caicos in the BWI. The captain and crew were imprisoned and the enslaved were allowed to remain there as slavery was outlawed by the British. Those are my ancestors. The gave the location Bambara. There is even a liquor name Bambara Rum.
Peace Hometeam You Should do one about the Soninke people
I think he already did a video about the Soninke people. If I’m not mistaken, I will search for it and post the link
m.ua-cam.com/video/0_LiZOmqRUg/v-deo.html
This is about the Ghana empire + Soninke (the founders)
Give this comment a like if you all desire to be in communication with HomeTeam through Patreon or the community chatting platform here on UA-cam?
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Great Video, Please explain the Bambara Jihad that aided in ending the Mali empire ? As it seems strange that non muslim peoples would want to fight a holy war.
Can you do Bamileke?
Bamileke the tribe.
ua-cam.com/video/SKkOYUDGfE8/v-deo.html i have a presentation in the works that will be a detailed look at the Bamileke, Bamum, and Tikar coming soon. Peace
@@ngang1957 What do the Bamileke & Tikar people call God ?
How about a video about the maniq people of thailand? A piece of history most never heard about and should.
Your story if you can translate that into French it would be nice I'm Bambara but I didn't understand what you said
they have perfect symmetrical faces
Wooow you do a wonderful job.
Can i have you email?
I have many many questions....
Jihad doesn't mean holy war.( Jihad means to strive and struggle.) There is no word in Arabic for holywar
Kush Zulu Nothing is a direct translation, best interpretation would be holy war given the context.
@@yourhandsomestep-dad2669 no sir, not correct
@Your Handsome Step-Dad has a very good point, depending on what was going on during that time, we can't say for sure what the word meant for them back then, the is no such thing as direct translation.
I started learning this language by accident
1:40 Giving me Beyonce vibes. Anyone see it?
Yess she’s beautiful 🙌🏾
Wowey
Speaking of the fallen angels and the ark. the Bible is all African based with addition of world and spiritual history.
The original Arabs
The best way to get a true picture of what the original Arabs of the past looked like is to ask the original Arabs of the past themselves. So let's take a look at what the original, pure Arabs of 1400 years ago said about the appearance of the pure Arabs.
Let's begin with Miskeen Al Darimi the well-known, pure-blooded Arab poet of the 7th century AD. Miskeen is his nickname, but his real name is Rabee' the son of 'Aamir the son of Unaif the son of Shaarih the son of 'Amru the son of Zaid the son of Abdellah the son of 'Uds the son of Darim the son of Malik the son of Handhala the son of Zaid Manah the son of Tamim the son of Murr the son of Udd the son of Taabikha the son of Yaas the son of Mudar the son of Nizar the son Ma'add the son of Adnan.
It's a known fact that Miskeen was black-skinned. He once proposed to a girl and she rejected him because of his blackness and his poorness. The girl later married a rich man who was from a tribe not as pure Arab as Miskeen's tribe. Miskeen one day saw the the girl who rejected him because of his blackness and poorness sitting with her husband, who was from a tribe not as pure as Miskeen's tribe. Miskeen stopped and said to them:
"I am Miskeen, for those who know me. My color is dark, the color of the Arabs."
Hotep b
Segou Sikoro. The mask is called Kômô
Aren’t you guys tired of not finding that much resources about the Bambara people?
Yes these are my mothers people and I want to learn about them.
Yasharahla
Stop with that hebrew nonsense. Hebrews are a made up race. If they did exist and they didn't, they would have been a Nomadic African race.
@@emmanuelervin5035 EARS TO HEAR
@@emmanuelervin5035 That's a verse I dropped look for this comment by ONEKBABY it's the very last comment
@@emmanuelervin5035 TRY to disprove that information
@@emmanuelervin5035 LEAVE YOUR COMMENT ON THAT THREAD...I'LL WAIT
Sounds like Noah flood. I knew it must be plagiarised from somewhere.
Vive 223🇲🇱🇲🇱🇲🇱💪💪
Dogon people, please 🙏
#HomeTeamHistory
Moors
Lol from this pictures,they have some resemblances to Yorubas.
It reminds me of bambara nuts.
No 🧢, ain’t them African women beautiful 😍?
Bambara does not exist, they are mixtures of Soninkes and Mandes, it originated in Wes Africa, that is why the language is very close to Mande, and it also has many Soninke words. Most of their last names are Soninkes, the name itself Bambara, when Islam arrived, they refused to convert Islam, they called them. Bambara by this mixture of Soninke and Mande the Bamabara came into existence the language itself if you speak Mande you will not need to read Bambara just like Soninke if you speak Soninke you will understand them if they speak
first
Sounds like Noah flood. I knew it must be plagiarised from somewhere.
Greeks did the same, also alot of asian mythology as well
Once you realize these are the people of the Book, it will make sense.