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born with the fate of being herbivores in the grasslands these animals always face dangerous predators not all herbivores are easily knocked over life is the great purpose that wild animals fight for foreign alive decode the wild world through the video terrifying moment when wild dogs Target and attack hippos what do the hippos do to survive famous in the wild world wild dogs are known for their unrelenting attacks you may not believe it but the truth is this small animal is extremely dangerous it is a success rate of up to 80 in each hunt together they can take down a prey many times larger than themselves usually they will chase their prey down and when the prey is exhausted and collapses that's when they will kill it because it is unable to fight back then they also have one of the strongest bindforce of any carnivorous mammal their jaws can produce a powerful bite the wild dog's teeth are much larger than that of a domestic dog and their molars have the function of peeling flesh from Bones they have a highly disciplined organization and the ability to coordinate extremely well within around 20 members of their hack foreign that helps them to become more arrogant in the grasslands competition makes prey increasingly scarce wild dogs need large amounts of food to nourish their young and other members of the pack foreign the power of the wild dogs is one of Africa's most ferocious this hippo was harassed and he got angry and attacked the wild dogs causing them to fall back despite their best efforts the wild dogs did not have a chance to attack but could only watch him fear the hippopotamus is the most aggressive animal in Africa when it comes to attacking crocodiles and lions and is not afraid of any opponent hippos stand out with a large and heavy bodies and they are ready to make anyone who steps into their territory hey Dilly even crocodiles will have to die right in the swamp the place that is called the crocodile's home hippos hate to be disturbed when they discovered wild dogs trying to hunt in their territory this hippopotamus got really angry it attacks the wild dogs but the wild dogs do not easily let go of the prey in front of them the noise caused the hippo to ruthlessly kill the baby Antelope and throw it ashore to the wild dogs foreign hippopotamus almost no Predator dares to confront them underwater wild nature does not allow predators to give up so easily wild dogs once again hunt prey causing it to flee into hippo territory a few wild dogs tried to quickly jump into the water to pull the antelope up before the hippo noticed but this noise has caught the hippo's attention and the Wild dog was almost killed by the hippo in the water even the line is helpless against the brutal attack of the hippos to survive in the animal world is a struggle and you have to battle according to the very harsh laws of nature not only in the wild world but in any situation animals have struggled to survive though this may seem unfair these struggles will always exist because that is the nature of development foreign no matter how much effort you make if you are unlucky the end is still death competition for survival takes place every second just let your guard down for one moment and any animal is at risk of becoming substitutes in the natural food chain leave your thoughts Below in the comment section foreign ature and large bodies keep African elephants away from lots of dangerous predators in the wild they have overwhelming power that makes any species terrified to confront them foreign however due to the habitat of the African continent there are still Fearless creatures ready to punish anyone who makes a mistake was a wild dog one of the most ruthless and cold-blooded apex predators to talk about the hunting level of the wild dogs scientists rate them as one of the top species with an almost perfect skill set the Predators such as lions and hyenas their hunting success rate is about 30 percent while the African wild dogs it can reach as high as 80 percent they are the strongest bite of any carnivorous mammal not only that each individual has extremely high personal skills discipline and cohesion the combination of all these factors has created a United strong wild dog community that is a threat to any animal in Africa the belligerents and the gentle Giants met by chance detecting signs of a threat at this time the elephants gathered around and quickly deployed a plan to defend themselves it can be seen that despite being a wild animal the elephants have trained their members to work together very well they divide the biggest and Strongest Ones into a first class to face the enemy directly the smaller weaker ones are placed in the middle to minimize the possibility of being attacked so the elephants are a team of both strength and discipline and the wild dogs have no choice but to run away foreign elephants are animals that hate hunting creatures and they had never been comfortable with wild dogs being near their active area in fact wild dogs are not usually seen as a threat to elephants in the wild even lions hyenas or crocodiles sometimes suffer catastrophic attacks from these huge elephants because of their large and extremely strong bodies few animals dared to confront them with ferocious animals like hippos elephants are aware to never stir up their territory rhinos went standing next to elephants also become small and scared apart from running away these animals have little other choice with their long horns and their weight of their bodies any mistake they make against an elephant could leave them to be traveled to death by said elephant however the baby elephants are different they have not yet had enough experience to survive and can only rely on their mother and her to protect them therefore many times the wild dogs attack them but under the street protection of the mother elephants wild dogs usually fail many times the wild dogs attacked the elephants but were in turn attacked back and chased away and the heads of flea to save their lives in a humiliating manner but you know Predators aren't cowards that give up easily in order to be able to provide food for The Young and The Herd the wild dogs did not give up the idea when they discovered a newborn baby elephant and its mother who seemed to be very weak from their birth they decided to attack seeing as things were going badly the mother elephant was forced to call for help from the rest of the hurt but when the other elephants came to help they discovered the baby elephant had already succumbed to death the elephant's helplessly washed as the wild dogs ate the newborn baby elephant leave your thoughts Below in the comments section foreign Buffalo cynicerus kapha is one of the largest animals in Africa classified in the big five the most dangerous group of animals in this land they possess a large body with horns fused at the corner pedestal forming a continuous bone Shield along with that is there power that can destroy even the strongest predators in Africa such as lions and leopards in particular it can be affirmed that the African Buffalo has very high Community needs they live in groups of more than 1 000 individuals when living in herds African buffaloes form two types of herds large mixed male female and multi-age herbs or reproductive herds and single herds of all males when forming such a herd they will form a strong Collective and the healthy will protect the old young and weak in these herds the leader usually holds his head high and observes this Behavior helps the African Buffalo avoid the threat of Predator attacks the African Buffalo has Keen senses to detect Predators through a combination of visual olfactory and auditory cues the animal is capable of detecting lions at a distance of one kilometer however in essence the Buffalo is still a peaceful animal compared to the notorious Hunters of the wild African land although they are herbivores buffaloes have an aggressive and fierce temperament and in many cases they are ready to fight off the most fierce predators once wounded the Buffalo will become agitated and attack anyone nearby class is still what makes the difference between the competitors here but sometimes strength is not the weapon that can defeat the enemy once that power is used inappropriately there may be no results a mistake in front of the enemy can be the cause of a fast death wild dogs are the most successful predators in Africa if animals such as lions and hyenas have a successful hunting rate of more than 20 percent they are called Adept Hunters but with a success rate of up to 80 percent wild dogs should be called Elite masters of the skilled hunt therefore it did not take long for the wild dogs to get their meal however it seems that the wild dogs did not want to stop there after devouring their meal they continued to keep an eye out on the nearby herd of wild buffalo foreign hunt soon broke out the young buffaloes are the target a spectacular Chase was carried out by a pack of elite wild dogs two young buffaloes made a mistake they tried to attack the wild dogs of course the young Buffalo is no match for these professional assassins foreign although he tried to fight back to run away it was too late while dogs will not easily ignore this stupid prey and in the end the young Buffalo paid a heavy price for his actions our dogs had a delicious meal at the scene it is not only young buffalos but sometimes even adult buffaloes have to accept death from these wild dogs wild nature is always so cruel we can't change it we can't intervene we can only accept it as the law of existence not all of the strong Will Survive and sometimes the weak Ones Will perish this is also a great lesson about belittling the opponent section oh oh thank you for watching till the end of the video was your experience here good it would be fantastic for us to meet you here every day swag what animal life will continue to update every day the best interesting stories dramatic battles in the wild animals World subscribe to our Channel and click the Bell button to see our newest videos goodbye for now and see you in the next video
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(cheerful music) - (Cheyney) When I started living history, everyone told me "black women wore what white women were wearing, but the poor version of it." And from the jump, I was like "That doesn't make sense at all." (exploratory piano music) My name is Cheyney McKnight. I run Not Your Momma's History channel and I specialize in telling the stories of black folks in North America in the 18th and 19th century.
So we started a new series, These Roots, where we do a day in the life of a black person, whether they're free, enslaved, wealthy, or working class. And so we follow them through an entire day and we've done three episodes so far and we're going to continue to do it. And then I also am a historical interpreter. So, I travel around teaching people about the stories of my people. - Cheyney's series is going to be linked all over this video because you need to check it out. But Cheyney is going to talk a little bit about, sort of give you a little bit of a taste of some of the stories of these women.
- Yes. Absolutely. - And people. - So when I got started in living history, I really wanted to learn about what black women were wearing. A little bit about my background, growing up, I had family members in New York and in South Carolina and so I had a very unique experience where I knew elderly people from the north and the south. And so I got a range of what black women were wearing in the 1940s and 30s. Going further back, I really wanted to learn the style of black women because I could distinctly see the difference in style between black women and other women in the 1990s and the 2000s. This was the same in the 19th and 18th century. When I started living history, everyone told me "black women wore what white women were wearing, but the poor version of it." And from the jump I was like, "that doesn't make sense at all." I had access to paintings and drawings and pictures, phot- photography of the style of black women and we had, have a huge amount of WPA narratives where black women were talking about clothing and the different styles they went through.
And then we also have firsthand accounts of people observing black people, which they really talk in depth about the style of black folks. What it comes down to is that black women always had this very peculiar style that is distinctly West African in origin. No matter how far removed they were for the continent, whether it was through enslavement, through time, through space, they held onto these very distinctly West African characteristics in clothing and also in culture.
And that this is what I really wanted to educate people on and make them aware on, of. I think people sometimes dismiss African-American culture as a distinct culture because it's kinda become mainstream culture in many ways with hip hop. A lot of that kind of gets lost in the wash, but I want to make sure people know the origins of black culture and style that is distinctly West African. - I mean, this is such a good segue - into what you're wearing, (laughs) but I want to talk also a little bit more about specifics. What is the style? Like where does it come from? What are the developments? - I don't know. - No, that's a great- - There's just like way too much.
- No, no, no, that's a great question. So, I get my sources from a lot of different places. I get it from the WPA narratives, from accounts of enslavers, European travelers. But when looking at the WPA narratives, they talk about the necessity for things like mending and patchwork, which everyone was doing. But I find that the style, aesthetic choices of black folks were slightly different. There was one account from a missionary during the Civil War. They were teaching black children how to read and write. There were donations from New York City of dresses, beautiful plaid dresses, for the little girls and the, the children brought them home to their mothers.
And what happened was the mothers took contrasting colors and sewed it to the bottom. And so when the girls came back, the mothers were like, we fixed the dress you gave to our children. (Cheyney laughs) Like they could not tell them that this was a better dress because they added that fabric to the bottom. Obviously, the woman was horrified, but I like to think that they did fix those dresses. - You're welcome. (laughs) And so those are, you see, little anecdotes like that, where you would see white women who, whichever standing they are in society, would never have made that choice. Just like I think some French women who find themselves in America would makes distinctly different choices about their wardrobe, English women who had just recently migrated or Irish women are also, were also making distinctive choices that are different. So looking at someone, you could kind of tell this person is from a different place or culture.
And I find those little things unique when you find them in stories. Also, last one, one of my favorite stories. An enslaver's wife was observing enslaved persons going to church or what they call Sunday meeting. She said that the head wraps of the women were just so big and brightly colored that they could put one's eye out from a mile away. - Head wraps were a big deal. - Yes, absolutely. So you can find head wraps in the north and the south on women from enslaved women, free black women, and depending on where you were, it can inform if the person is enslaved or free or just simply black.
It was also a racial identifier. Some women, for example, Juliette Toussaint. There's a beautiful painting from the early 19th century. She and her husband lived and worked in New York City and they were quite wealthy. They were, I would call them upper middle class or upper, upper middling. And she is wearing this beautiful head wrap, flat head wrap. And it's distinctly different from the turbans that were worn in the early 19th century. But unfortunately, something that I am trying to break down is that it wasn't just black women and Creole women in Louisiana who were wearing head wraps or just in the south. Black women in the north and south were wearing head wraps, we have the evidence on up into the 19th century. I have a beautiful picture from a historical society in New York, that pictures a black woman who works for a household as a maid of all work. And she is wearing this huge, fabulous, like mid-century, mid-19th century printed cotton. And it is huge, it looks like a Gele. And she's just like in the painting with her employers just, not the painting, the picture, with her employers, just "hey :)".
It is so cool. - So. - Fantastic. - It's like, so we've done a collab, Cheyney and I, which you can find on her channel, about chatelaines and we were just talking about how a chatelaine makes noise and it announces your presence to the room. I feel like it has some of the similar, like, "I am here". - "Acknowledge me". - Absolutely. - And I spent quite a long time kind of hiding myself that now I want to announce to the world that this is who I am. This is where I'm from and I embrace my culture and my people. - Everything to say "I'm here!" (upbeat music) Head wraps and taking up space and- - You do literally bring your work into the way that you dress. As you call it? - Yeah, so Afro-Victorian was a term coined by the costume designer of Jingle Jangle. And when I first heard it, I was just like ooh.
- You've been doing that for years. - Exactly! This is my style. And then also I incorporate a lot of Afro-Futurism, which I think some of this - would incorporate. - Which you can go check out - on Cheyney's channel. - I think that I, more so, educate people about things that we lost, the knowledge that we lost, which you encounter a lot, for people. Because we didn't do some things since the 1920s or 30s, there's a whole generation of knowledge that we lost. And for, specifically for black women. There's a whole period of time where we lost how to, for example, stretch our natural hair. So when I say stretching, my hair is in a natural state, but if I want to do a updo, like you see those beautiful pictures that were taken of black women, they weren't using hot combs. They were able to pin their hair down into a European hairstyle with their hair like this. And so there were some things they did every day to stretch their hair.
And so kind of making those connections and educating people about that. And I'll be doing a lot more videos on black hairstyling in the 19th century. - So definitely, I mean we've said this a hundred times, but please go check out Cheyney's channel. - Me too. Thank you so much Bernadette. It's been so awesome to finally just hang out with you. I feel like every time we see each other, we're racing by one another. I'm like hi Bernadette, bye! (laughs) - Hello. Goodbye. - Right, right, right, right.
- And it's always an honor to listen to you talk and to watch your videos, of course, I cannot stress enough how much, not only is your channel informative but it's so well-produced, like it's exactly what the world needs. All the links down below, go and follow Cheyney. I mean, I'm sure all of you already do because, you know. Yeah, I have no idea how to end this video. - Yeah.
- This is like the worst part. - I know, it's always the worst part where you're like oh, I'll let you go. - So we're going to end this now. Go forth and be your most wonderful self and watch some videos. - Bye! - Bye! (laughs) - Okay, huzzah!.
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thank hi guys and welcome back to the channel my name is almost if you're new here or you're just joining us for the first time you're welcome please consider subscribing and remember to click on that bell notification icon that way you get notified every time i upload a new video alright so today we have a major sponsor in the house and i'll just like to say a huge shout out to lovelink um for sponsoring this segment of this video um lovelink is a friendship land company and they have reached out to me and they have sent me a couple of products they've sent me this amazing product and i will be reviewing them you see for all the lovely couples in the house for those who have especially for those who have long distance relationships or you are approaching the valentine's season in fact this people are supposed to have reached out to me in february you see so that's people who are in the lovely loving stage and phase of their life you know people who have partners who don't actually stay together or they spend time apart this is a great gift all right so i'll be leaving a link to their website in the description box of this video please go over there and check it out and if you use my promo code the promo code be on the screen as well as in the description box you also qualify for a discount all right so let's just unbox this and i'll show you how it works it's really simple so we are just going to be opening up the box this is not that just tell me a little about the brand and you know their information and contact details and all of that then you have the lamp this is the charging port and under here are just the information for this particular lamp and on here they have that logo i hope you can see that love link also you get the manual it just shows you how to set it up how to download the app and all of that you also get a usb cord and that's it all right so we're just going to be setting this up i'll show you a screenshot of how you do that you have to go online um on google play store app it's also available for ios devices so android users and ios users are covered in this particular master all right so we're just going to be plugging this in and then we will set this up so since i use an android phone i'm just going to be going to my google play store and i'm going to search for the lovelink app and download it create a new account by name email address and create a password then i get sent an email to verify my account and once i do that i go back to the love link app put in my email address and password and then i create a new account this is because i'm setting up the lamp for the first time and then that's how i'm able to install that so once that is installed i plug in my lamp and then i connect it to my wi-fi it turns a dim red light when it's time to connect to the wi-fi and then once it is set up it turns yellow and swirls green so once that is complete the lamp is set up and is ready to use all you have to do is tap on it for two seconds to turn it off or simply tap and hold to change the color and the intensity of the light you can do this either manually by pressing on the lamp and holding on the lamp or you can also do this on the app so that is a simple installation process all right guys so that is the quick demo um i hope you guys will go and get your own lamps these things are amazing and i think they make a great bedside piece as well so i'm really grateful for this collaboration um thank you so much lovelink friendship lamps you guys are amazing they also have a youtube channel you might want to check it out if you get stuck in the installation process is actually quite easy to set up and you know it's pretty straightforward also they have a helpline a 24-hour help helpline and you know it's just very um easy to use and you know it's very interactive as well they're also on facebook and instagram and you know also here on all right let's get back to the rest of the video i just got my blue light card guys i'm so excited he finally came with me this morning that means we can officially buy things on this council so this is what it looks like uh so yes we can officially be buying things on discounts now so shop smarter health care one of the health care worker perks so yes i'm actually very excited about this so yes all right guys so do you guys remember the last video i made when i took you to the town center where i buy food stuff in bulk yes that is where i was able to get this crate of red bell peppers for five pounds the smaller sweet peppers for three pounds and each top of tomato here was 50 something pens 59 pence and i got about six of those i also got this crate of oranges for about three pounds and a bag of potatoes for about three pounds as well so this is what i usually do with the pepper and just help me save space in my freezer and also help me to prep for the month so this is how i preserve my peppers and just you know keep everybody happy keep things moving faster and smoother for us in our household so um this is something i also want to consider we also stopped by um at pakistan shop or like an african food store it was actually all in comparison and then we got this items um things on course so people think some course and um it's just actually quite funny how much things have gotten in just a very short period of time so i'll be giving you a breakdown of all these things that we bought this block of sharky was four pounds 79 because they sell it according to weight so they weigh them these three are actually good size this alarm was three pound thirty one so this fish was cheaper than this one the okra was around three pound 93 and all these plantains these three planters actually very good size very big these three were around four pound 42 this top of the apricot on the tree now i can't i don't know this was two pound 49 and then this cassava this laven i don't know if you guys know laughing well this is cassava one pack was two pounds 49.
One pound of two pounds for tonight this garlic was two pounds 49 as well this will last me for months or months now you see milking powdered milk this is my first time buying powdered milk i don't know this brand but the price was okay it's 8.99 so i don't know how that would be though i kind of missed the taste of powdered milk and this one i bought at poundland it's just conditioner for my hair and the last thing we bought the last thing we bought was this bag of basmati rice this is my second time buying this particular brand and the my good thing about it was this was the last bag but i was so convinced that i was supposed to get it because the last time i bought it was 28 pounds and today it was 20 pounds and it is last bag so i don't know all right so everything came to about 57 pounds for all this obviously the rice took the chunk of the money so we are here again this thing has now become an everyday issue bring them at once and then they will not stop what's sweet i must be coming for damages okay exercise
that's what five gallons three gallons? bet you can't drink beer that fast! thank you very much guys for coming for each one of you guys and also.
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NARRATOR: AND NOW IT'S TIME FOR SOME MORE "AMAZING ANIMALS"! NUMBER 333... THE AMAZING AFRICAN LION! AHH GOOD MORNING OR IS IT GOOD AFTERNOON? LION: WHO CARES? I'M LION-DOWN ANYWAY!! HA-HA-HA-OHHH THAT WAS TIRING. NARRATOR: THIS IS THE AFRICAN LION, "KING OF THE JUNGLE!" WHICH IS ODD BECAUSE THEY DON'T LIVE IN JUNGLES. LION: HUH? NARRATOR: TODAY YOU CAN FIND LIONS IN A SMALL REGION OF INDIA BUT MOSTLY IN AFRICA IN A FEW PLACES SOUTH OF THE SAHARA DESERT. LION: YEAH, 'KING OF THE DESERT' DOESN'T SOUND QUITE SO GOOD... NARRATOR: LIONS ARE THE ONLY CATS TO LIVE TOGETHER IN BIG FAMILY GROUPS CALLED PRIDES. LIONESS: HANK, HANK! LION: WHAT? LIONESS: WATCH THE KIDS, I'M GOING TO WORK! LION: KEEP YOUR TAIL ON! NARRATOR: MOST OF THE PRIDE IS MADE UP OF LIONESSES THEY DO MOST OF THE HUNTING... LIONESSES ARE EXCELLENT STEALTH PREDATORS. AND VERY LOVING MUMS. CUB: MUM, WHEN I GROW UP I WANT TO BE A CUB REPORTER... LIONESS: OHH... HE'S DEFINITELY YOUR SON! LION: STOP BEING SO CATTY! NARRATOR: AND WHAT DOES THE MALE LION DO? HE HAS A BIG HAIRY MANE! AND UH... UGH, THAT! LION: I GUESS YOU COULD SAY I HAVE THE UH...
"ROAR" TALENT? NARRATOR: PHEW, YES! THE ROAR IS VERY IMPORTANT, WARNING OFF OTHER LIONS IN THEIR TERRITORY AND IT KEEPS EVERYONE TOGETHER. LION: WHERE'D EVERYBODY GO? NARRATOR: DID YOU KNOW THAT LIONS LOVE "FAST FOOD?" LION: DON'T FORGET THE FRIES!! NARRATOR: THEY MIGHT BE BIG, FEROCIOUS PUSSYCAT PREDATORS BUT THE AFRICAN LION IS UNDOUBTEDLY AN AMAZING ANIMAL!.
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>>> MILLIONS AROUND THE WORLD, BRINGING THE SOUND OF THE EMERALD ISLE TO PERFORMING ARTS CENTERS NEAR YOU. AND THIS SUMMER, YOUR GIRLS ARE BACK WITH A BRAND NEW TOUR THAT WILL LEAVE YOU SPEECHLESS. IT'S CELTIC WOMAN. ♪♪ ♪♪ >> WITNESS THE CULTURAL EVENT YOUR GOD MOTHER DESCRIBED AS PERFECTION. ♪♪ ♪ WAIT UNTIL THE SAILOR COMES ♪ >> THESE FLAT IRON MAIDENS BRING YOU ONE THE SEXUAL EYE CONTENT JOURNEY OF A LIFETIME. >> WE LOVE IT. THE GIRLS DOING THE SONG, IF I HAD TO DESCRIBE IT IN ONE WORD, I WOULD SAY IRELAND. >> ABSOLUTELY GORGEOUS AND THE MUSIC WASN'T BAD EITHER. >> I'LL BE HONEST WITH YOU, I THOUGHT I HAD PURCHASED TICKETS TO A BOSTON CELTICS GAME.
I WAS VERY CONFUSED FOR THE FIRST COUPLE MINUTES BUT THEY WERE TWIRLING. I GOT TO SAY I LOVED THAT. >> WITNESS IRISH CULTURE THE WAY IT WAS MEANT TO BE ENJOYED, IN OHIO. >> TOP OF THE EVENING TO YOU. >> THANK YOU ALL FOR JOINING US. I'M SAOIRSE. >> I'M MARY. >> AND I'M FAITH. >> AND WE ARE CELTIC WOMEN. IF YOU LIKE RIVER DANCE BUT WISH THEY COULD MOVE THEIR ARMS, YOU'LL LOVE US. >> CAN EIGHT DEEP-CUT GAELIC BATTLE SONGS. ♪♪ >> SOME LOOSELY AUTHENTIC ORIGINALS. ♪ GO DOWN TO THE CASTLE, WE'LL SEE YOU AT THE CASTLE ♪ >> AND A RANDOM ASSORTMENT OF NOT GAELIC SONGS THAT THE AUDIENCE JUST KIND OF WANTS TO HEAR. ♪ SWEET HOME ALABAMA LORD I'M COMING HOME TO YOU ♪ >> GENUINELY THE MOST FUN I'VE EVER HAD IN MY LIFE.
I DON'T KNOW WHAT THAT SAYS ABOUT ME, BUT IT'S TRUE. >> WELL, IT SOUNDS TO ME LIKE THEY SANG THE SAME SONG 20 TIMES. YOU KNOW IT WAS A GREAT SONG. >> HORNY PONYTAIL DUDES. WHO PLAYS 100 GIANT DRUMS. AND WHO COULD FORGET THIS CHICK? KIND OF A RUNNING VIOLIN GIRL. LOOK AT HER GO! SHE'S DOING IT. YOU LOVE IT! ONE TINY ISLAND. BIG SOUND. FOUR IRISH ELSAS. TAKE YOUR GRANDMA AND WATCH THE POPULAR GIRLS FROM YOUR HIGH SCHOOL GET ABSOLUTELY RAILED BY THE IDEA OF IRELAND. ♪ I HEAR THE DRUMS ♪ ♪ I SIT ON THE BAGPIPES AND GIVE IT A BLOW ♪ ♪♪ >> CELTIC WOMAN, THE LION KING. TICKETS NOT AVAILABLE ONLINE. YOU HAVE TO COME. .
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ground control to major time ground control to major times your protein tablets and also put your headgear on ground control to major community beginning countdown engines on check ignition as well as might god'' s love be with you this is ground control to significant. tom you'' ve truly made the tomb and also the papers desire to recognize that tee shirts you use and now it'' s time to leave the capsule if you risk this is major tom to ground control. i'' m stepping through the door as well as i'' m drifting in the most strange means and also the stars look very different today for right here in my being in my tin can much above the world planet earth is blue as well as there'' s nothing i can do oh.
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https://howtoplaythedjembedrums.com/jnr-choi-sam-tompkins-to-the-moon-official-music-video-2/
TIM NOONAN: This is Tsavo, Kenya's largest national park, 11,000 square kilometres big, home to the largest land animals on earth. It's a privilege to see the herds of African elephants roaming free. But these baby elephants almost didn't make it. They're all orphans. And in this orphanage near Nairobi, they're being taught the skills they'll need if they're to have any chance of returning to the wild. Dame Daphne Sheldrick: Elephants have all the same emotions as humans and that we've learned over 50 years. They can read your heart and your mind, they really can. They can. TIM NOONAN: Some of these youngsters will soon be ready to be released into the national park. Thanks in no small way to the woman they call the 'Elephant Mother' - Dame Daphne Sheldrick. Dame Daphne Sheldrick: All the elephants that we've saved, not one of them would have lived without us. TIM NOONAN: Dame Daphne was born in Kenya to English parents.
She has raised two daughters and 130 orphaned elephants and counting. They really are like babies, aren't they? Dame Daphne Sheldrick: They really are, yes. But, you know, it's very important that they sleep soundly at night. And you know that there are no tummy aches, no problems. It's very important to keep tabs on what goes in the front end and what comes out of the back.
TIM NOONAN: Dame Daphne's love affair with elephants began when she worked as a warden with her husband, David, in Tsavo National Park. When David died of a heart attack in 1977 she opened a centre in his name to protect the baby elephants. TIM NOONAN: Why are these elephants being orphaned? Dame Daphne Sheldrick: Mainly it's poaching for ivory, it's the ivory trade. And as long as there is a demand for ivory, particularly in the Far East, there's going to be people in Africa that will be killing elephants for money. The wild animal trade is as big as the drugs trade and the arms trade now. TIM NOONAN: As many as 35,000 elephants every year, 100 a day, are killed for the ivory trade. This is the heartbreaking scene being played out all too often - a mother's leg has been shattered by a poacher's gun, and her baby refuses to leave her side.
She knows only that she has to protect her dying mother. The rescuers from Daphne's orphanage have come to try to save the baby. TIM NOONAN: If you didn't step in, how long would they survive? Dame Daphne Sheldrick: Probably two weeks, max. TIM NOONAN: The mother cannot be helped and will have to be euthanised. Her baby is starving and exhausted but still fights to stay with her mum. She's eventually flown back to Daphne's orphanage where for the first time since her mother was shot by poachers, she drinks milk. (SLURPS) Dame Daphne Sheldrick: The way to turn them around is to bring the other orphans that are already settled in the nursery around them, and they can see the reaction that the other orphans have with their keepers. TIM NOONAN: You become their father, you become their mother, you become their best friend.
Edwin: We become everything to them. TIM NOONAN: Head keeper Edwin leads a team of 50 elephant handlers. Edwin: If you don't love them, then you have a lot of problems with them. Especially elephants because elephants are very intelligent animals. They can reason like we do. They can figure what is in your mind and they can tell if you are thinking negative or positive about them and that can make them become your friends or your enemies.
So you need to have a positive heart, you need to love them so that you can become a keeper. That is the most important thing. TIM NOONAN: Caring for a baby elephant is a full-time job. The keepers sleep in the same shelter as the orphans. And before dawn, the day begins again. Good morning. Somebody's already awake. One by one, the little elephants rush to join the other kids. The morning routine starts with brekky in the bush. But one of the orphans is proving to be a handful for one of the keepers - Amos. Amos: That one.....is a very naughty one. TIM NOONAN: He's the troublemaker? Amos: The keepers give him a nickname. We call him 'al-Qaeda' because he's in trouble all the time, pushing others down. TIM NOONAN: You call him al-Qaeda? Amos: Yeah.
TIM NOONAN: A vital ingredient in the healing process is milk. C'mon. For years, Daphne struggled to get the milk formula right. Dame Daphne Sheldrick: They cannot digest the fat of cow's milk. And actually, the nearest thing to the fat in elephant's milk - and it's not perfect - is coconut. And it took a long time to actually figure that out. TIM NOONAN: And if the milk feeding time at the orphanage is any guide... (GROWLS) ..Daphne's milk hits the spot. (ALL GROWL) (KEEPERS TALK) TIM NOONAN: You thirsty, mate? You're walking them into this truck here, disguised.
What's the purpose of it? Edwin: The purpose of this is to get them used to getting in the truck and feeding them from there. So that one morning, when they're ready, we take them in and we close the doors and we start our journey to Tsavo where we're introducing them back into the wild. TIM NOONAN: Today, three of Daphne's orphans are going to be released. It's a 4-hour drive to the Tsavo National Park. This is their new home - thousands of square kilometres of wilderness, a second chance at life.
And while there's no way of knowing whether or not they'll survive down there, this time, it's nature's call. But first, they arrive at a halfway house. A transition stop where they're introduced to a herd of other elephants who were also saved. (GROWLS) (TRUMPETS) This moment here is what it's all about. Every single one of these elephants were orphans rescued from almost certain death. (ALL GROWL AND TRUMPET) OK, bye-bye. Dame Daphne Sheldrick: We've had quite a lot of critics that say, "This is a bunny-hugging thing, "you're a lot of bunny huggers." You know, that's what they throw at you all the time.
And I say to them, "It's better to be a bunny hugger than a butcher." TIM NOONAN: The orphan elephants may be free but for the next few years they will rarely stray from the safety of this watering hole. The hope is that they'll eventually find wild elephants to live with. But incredibly, while we were there, nature pitched in to help. A wild herd - including several large bulls - finds the orphans. (GROWLS) The return to the wild is a step closer. At the end of the day, what's in it for you? Dame Daphne Sheldrick: The satisfaction of knowing that you've actually raised a herd of elephants. And to see them playing and happy and living their normal wild life again back where they rightfully belong, that's the joyful part of it. (TRUMPETS) You can't just abandon them, that's not an option. So for better or worse we'll be around.
https://howtoplaythedjembedrums.com/africas-elephant-queen-kenya-2/
- OK, y'all, these are the formations for the African dance. You do not know the intro, but you're about to learn it. The African dance showcases the versatility of the team. OK, everybody get down. You're going to be on your knees, hands in .. Step out with your left knee. hands up jazz. 1, 2, head, and head. Lean head, down hip, pop, 7, and 8. The African dance is a mixture of tribal movements. It has ballet style. It has passes. It has . It has pique turns. It has a lot of leaps and jumps.
Lean and head. Lean and head. Why are you up here-- you're up here rolling your neck. You dip your whole body. Get your booty out there. You're up like this. Sit down. Do it again. The Prancing Tigerettes are one of the Dancing Dolls' biggest rivalries, so I want them to dance as if President Obama is about to hit the building, and they're giving a million dollars away to the best dance team. Let's try it with music and see if you can do it. Get down. They need to always be on their toes and ready for whatever. Sometimes I'm having cuts, and I'm not even telling them that I'm having cuts. You don't know what I'm going to do. Make sure you're ready for whatever at any given time. OK, y'all ready? Here comes the music. Crystianna, I say that's too loud. I shouldn't be talking to you. Come on, Crystianna, where are you supposed to be? they hard or too soft. Come on, Sunjai, . It looks really awful. When you dance, you need to breathe, because as soon as you start to shut down, you can guarantee the judges are looking right in your face.
I mean, I scream, and I yell a lot. A lot. Anytime there are ever mistakes, that one person that makes a mistake, the judge is going to follow you around the floor the whole time to see, oh, she's going to mess up again. Oh, she's out of breath. Oh, she's on the wrong foot. And they're going to-- the whole squad loses points because of that one person. It has to be no mistakes on the floor. Name a football coach that doesn't yell. Name a basketball coach that doesn't yell. You know, I watch the Eagles coach all the time scream and go crazy from the sidelines. And I'm like, yeah, get their butt. That's right. Y'all can not get out there and just give it away. Y'all be pissed off about last week. I'm still mad. African dance is what we need to go ahead and have cuts on right now. Every time she has cuts, Miss Dianna yells.
So it's kind of like you've got to take what she giving you about it and be like, next time dance harder. When I call your name, these are the folks, the 20, to have made cuts for right now. Let me see Maya Hayes, ,, Kayla, Camryn, Makalah, Crystianna, Tamia, ,, Shakayla, Sydney, Caitlyn, Tiara, Ken'Janae, Makaya, Brianna Jones, Jayden, Brianna Williams, Shakira Gatlin, and Sunjai. Not everybody's doing African dance, so she made the cut for that, and I'm just being so proud, but I want to be even more prouder when Sunjai make cuts for stand battle. kill this .. Energy, energy, energy, energy the entire time. the Dancing Dolls. All right, y'all! Slow down. 4, 5, 6, 7, 8. I didn't make ,, but I am excited about the African dance. We're going to have probably one of the best creative dance routines, because I'm sure people down there are not expecting what we're going to do. All right, ladies! When all of them rush to stage with those red and white feathers, I was like, don't talk. You know, nobody speak, because right now the girls are ready to do it.
It was amazing. Everything was perfect. Sunjai was out there. You know, I couldn't take my eyes off her. She did an awesome job. I just felt like I was going to jump up and cry. I was happy that I got to get up there and do it with the rest of the girls, go up there and compete. With our creative dance, we actually did something different. You went back to African dance, mother land.
What you do? Pray for Tigerettes. Snap those heads, baby! That's what I'm talking about! The routine was just beautiful. Everything flowed perfectly. I mean, it was just great. .
https://www.youtube.com/embed/NVd8kuufBhM
You’ve been accused of a crime you did not commit. It’s impossible to prove your innocence. If you insist that you’re innocent anyway, you’ll likely be found guilty and executed. But if you confess, apologize, and implicate others for good measure, you’ll go free. Do you give a false confession— or risk a public hanging? This was the choice facing those accused of witchcraft in the village of Salem, Massachusetts between February 1692 and May 1693. They were the victims of paranoia about the supernatural, misdirected religious fervor— and a justice system that valued repentance over truth. Salem was settled in 1626 by Puritans, a group of English protestants. Life was strict and isolated for the people of Salem. Battles with their Native American neighbors and groups of French settlers were commonplace. People feared starvation and disease, and relations between villagers were strained. To make matters worse, 1692 brought one of the coldest winters on record. That winter, two cousins, 9 year old Betty Parris and 11 year old Abigail Williams started behaving very strangely. A physician found nothing physically wrong — but diagnosed the girls as under “an evil hand.” Puritans believed that the Devil wreaked havoc in the world through human agents, or witches, who blighted nature, conjured fiendish apparitions, and tormented children.
As news swept through the village, the symptoms appeared to spread. Accounts describe 12 so-called “afflicted” girls contorting their bodies, having fits, and complaining of prickling skin. Four of the girls soon accused three local women of tormenting them. All three of the accused were considered outsiders in some way. On February 29th, the authorities arrested Sarah Good, a poor pregnant mother of a young daughter, Sarah Osbourne, who had long been absent from church and was suing the family of one of her accusers, and Tituba, an enslaved woman in Betty Parris’s home known by her first name only. Tituba denied harming the girls at first.
But then she confessed to practicing witchcraft on the Devil’s orders, and charged Good and Osbourne with having forced her. Osbourne and Good both maintained their innocence. Osbourne died in prison, while Good’s husband turned against her in court, testifying that she "was a witch or would be one very quickly." Good’s 4 year old daughter was imprisoned and eventually gave testimony against her mother. Meanwhile, Good gave birth in jail. Her baby died, and she was convicted and hanged shortly thereafter. Tituba was held in custody until May, and then released.
These three victims were just the beginning. As accusations multiplied, others, like Tituba, made false confession to save themselves. The authorities even reportedly told one accused witch that she would be hanged if she did not confess, and freed if she did. They were not particularly interested in thoroughly investigating the charges— in keeping with their Church’s teachings, they preferred that the accused confessed, asked for forgiveness, and promised not to engage in more witchcraft.
The court accepted all kinds of dubious evidence, including so-called “spectral evidence” in which the girls began raving when supposedly touched by invisible ghosts. Complicating matters further, many of the jurors in the trials were relatives of the accusers, compromising their objectivity. Those who dared to speak out, such as Judge Nathanial Saltonstall, came under suspicion. By the spring of 1693, over a hundred people had been imprisoned, and 14 women and 6 men had been executed. By this time, accusations were starting to spread beyond Salem to neighboring communities, and even the most powerful figures were targets.
When his own wife was accused, the governor of Massachusetts colony suspended the trials. Sentences were amended, prisoners released, and arrests stopped. Some have speculated that the girls were suffering from hallucinations caused by fungus; or a condition that caused swelling of the brain. But ultimately, the reason for their behavior is unknown. What we do know is that adults accepted wild accusations by children as hard evidence. Today, the Salem Witch Trials remain a cautionary tale of the dangers of groupthink and scapegoating, and the power of fear to manipulate human perception..
https://www.youtube.com/embed/mSOzdD5GuUc
What does it take to save a child in Africa? To save them from the violence? To save them from becoming a child soldier? What if I told you that all it took was just one beard? For the price of one costume beard, you can save a child from becoming another statistic, another warlord's pawn. Be safe. That's right. Just one beard. And for a little more, you can get him a cane. We are here for the children! ♪ ♪ These are all old people. We are wasting our time. Wait! ♪ ♪ Go, go! ♪ ♪ Call today. ♪ ♪.
https://howtoplaythedjembedrums.com/these-fake-beards-will-save-an-african-childs-life-key-peele/
(gentle R&B music) - I don't understand why. See, it's burning me to hold onto this. (sighs) I know this is something I gotta do, but that don't mean I want to. What I'm trying to say is that I love you, I just feel like this is coming to an end and it's better for me to let it go now than hold on and hurt you. I gotta let it burn. ♪ It's gonna burn for me to say this ♪ ♪ But it's coming from my heart ♪ ♪ It's been a long time coming ♪ ♪ But we done been fell apart ♪ ♪ Really wanna work this out ♪ ♪ But I don't think you're gonna change ♪ ♪ I do but you don't think it's best we go our separate ways ♪ ♪ Tell me why I should stay in this relationship ♪ ♪ When I'm hurting, baby ♪ ♪ I ain't happy, baby ♪ ♪ Plus there's so many other things I gotta deal with ♪ ♪ I think that you should let it burn ♪ ♪ When your feeling ain't the same ♪ ♪ And your body don't want to ♪ ♪ But you know gotta let it go ♪ ♪ Because the party ain't jumping like it used to ♪ ♪ Even though this might bruise you ♪ ♪ Let it burn ♪ ♪ Let it burn ♪ ♪ Gotta let it burn ♪ ♪ Deep down you know it's best for yourself ♪ ♪ But you hate the thought of her being with someone else ♪ ♪ But you know that it's over ♪ ♪ We know that's it through ♪ ♪ Let it burn, let it burn ♪ ♪ Let it burn, let it burn ♪ ♪ Gotta let it burn ♪ ♪ Sending pages I ain't supposed to ♪ ♪ Got somebody here but I want you ♪ ♪ Because the feeling ain't the same ♪ ♪ Find myself calling her your name ♪ ♪ Ladies tell me do you understand ♪ ♪ Now all my fellas, do you feel my pain ♪ ♪ It's the way I feel ♪ ♪ I know I made a mistake ♪ ♪ Now it's too late ♪ ♪ I know she ain't coming back ♪ ♪ What I gotta do now to get my shorty back ♪ ♪ Oh, oh, oh, oh ♪ ♪ Man, I don't know what I'm gonna do without my boo ♪ ♪ You've been gone for too long ♪ ♪ It's been fifty-leven days, umpteen hours ♪ ♪ I'ma be burning until you return ♪ ♪ When your feeling ain't the same ♪ ♪ And your body don't want to ♪ ♪ But you know gotta let it go ♪ ♪ Because the party ain't jumping like it used to ♪ ♪ Even though this might bruise you ♪ ♪ Let it burn, let it burn ♪ ♪ You gonna learn, let it burn ♪ ♪ Gotta let it burn, oh ♪ ♪ Deep down you know it's best for yourself ♪ ♪ But you hate the thought of her being with someone else ♪ ♪ But you know that it's over ♪ ♪ We know that it's through ♪ ♪ Let it burn ♪ ♪ Let it burn ♪ ♪ Gotta let it burn ♪ ♪ I'm twisted because one side of me ♪ ♪ Is telling me that I need to move on ♪ ♪ On the other side I wanna break down and cry, oh ♪ ♪ I'm twisted because one side of me ♪ ♪ Is telling me that I need to move on ♪ ♪ On the other side I wanna break down and cry ♪ ♪ Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh ♪ ♪ Oh, oh, oh ♪ ♪ Can you feel me burning ♪ ♪ Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh ♪ ♪ Oh, oh, oh ♪ ♪ Can you feel me burning ♪ ♪ Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh ♪ ♪ Oh, oh, oh ♪ ♪ Can you feel me burning ♪ ♪ Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh ♪ ♪ So many days, so many hours ♪ ♪ I'm still burning until you return ♪ ♪ When your feeling ain't the same ♪ ♪ And your body don't want to ♪ ♪ But you know gotta let it go ♪ ♪ Because the party ain't jumping like it used to ♪ ♪ Even though this might bruise you ♪ ♪ Let it burn, let it burn ♪ ♪ Let it burn ♪ ♪ Gotta let it burn ♪ ♪ Deep down you know it's best for yourself ♪ ♪ But you hate the thought of her being with someone else ♪ ♪ But you know that it's over ♪ ♪ We know that it's through ♪ ♪ Let it burn, let it burn ♪ ♪ Let it burn, let it burn ♪ ♪ Gotta let it burn ♪ (gentle R&B music)
https://howtoplaythedjembedrums.com/usher-burn-official-music-video/
Watch two of Africa’s Big 5 come face to face in an ancient rival standoff… Captured by 34-year-old Joe Gregory, while on a safari vacation. Joe gives his account to LatestSightings.com: “We embarked on our afternoon game drive and were driving around the marshy wetlands.” “We encountered a herd of elephant and a crash of rhinos – it was here where the standoff began.” “It was amazing to see & be a part of the standoff where a young elephant bull in musth showed this male white rhino who was boss.” “We could all physically feel the testosterone aura which surrounded the battlefield of these 2 ancient rivals.” “The sighting ended in a stalemate with no winner.” “I would, however, say, the balancing act of the branch and the elephant “throwing” the branch at the rhino was a somewhat cheeky ending to the tussle.”
https://howtoplaythedjembedrums.com/elephant-shows-rhino-whos-boss-2/
https://www.youtube.com/embed/_lb_TCa4aQM
Valentina do you love the dodo? I love dodo You love it! I love it! Hi my friends, I just made this lovely Nigerian party jollof rice with grilled chicken and plantains. I fried the plantains and it came out perfectly fine. This dish is really sensational and my wife is gonna try it now She's Romanian and I'm a Nigerian So let's get started yeah so I'm gonna try it with dodo it's called dodo or plantain very nice It's really nice. It's really nice my friends My friends you can check out my playlist you'll find how I made Nigerian party jollof rice This is simple and easy to make check it out just your normal rice you know you make your tomato sauce and use it to cook your jollof rice simple and easy add your favorite spices and that's it.
Thanks for watching my friends see you next time don't forget to subscribe to this lovely channel support our channel and keep watching every day bye bye.
https://www.youtube.com/embed/840XWjnt9wc
Are Americans prejudiced in their opinions about Africa? They most certainly are. How could they be objective about African Negroes, when they are prejudiced against American Negroes? I disagree with you completely. I think Americans are prejudiced FOR African natives, and are very prejudiced against white people in Africa Well I'm getting confused. How can Americans be FOR and AGAINST Africans at the same time? Then I will confuse you even more. As an Ethiopian, I'm prejudiced against both white people and Negroes In our discussion are four high school students, from four different countries in Africa. Let me introduce them to you now Here is Amelia Addae from the Gold Coast (Ghana), Amelia is 18 years old Here is Susan Renny from the Union of South Africa, Susan is 17 Susan, those school uniforms, are they always that short? No, this is actually a dispensation. I'm a senior, but the other girls have to have them 3 inches above the knee Very interesting study in native costumes, thank you. Now let me introduce the boys Here is our baby for the night, 15 year old Mesfin Binega from Ethiopia And 16 year old Boniface Offokaja from Nigeria Now lets start out by asking you what some of your own prejudices are.
How about you Amelia, have you got any prejudices, say against the Nigerians? Yes, I have my own personal prejudice against the Nigerians. Coming from the Gold Coast, where there are many Nigerians, I think that I sometimes look down on the Nigerians as somewhat inferior to us Because you see, the Nigerians who come to the Gold Coast are mostly beggars, so that's my opinion about Nigerians That's funny I don't see how you have a case for your proposition Personally, I look to the Gold Coast not as inferiors, but perhaps as people that are individualistic...Who are not working towards a communal effort or toward the wealth of all nations They have of course made great strides, because they have a very small country, and yet they have all these differences in their country Mesfin, how about your prejudices, you admitted to several at the beginning Well, as I told you before we have our own prejudices against the African Negroes- we consider them as inferiors, of course we have our reasons for saying so What are they Mesfin? First, we consider ourselves to be of the lost tribe of Israel and not Negroes.
It's only because our faces are burned that we look like Negroes Also, we've been ruling parts of Africa for hundreds of years During the 16th century, we ruled parts of Egypt, Sudan, and as far down as Mozambique What about your prejudices against white men? Well back home, if a woman marries a white man she is considered mean. And when she dies the priest will not pray for her as he would for anyone else. It's considered like suicide Why do you think they look down on the white people so much? Well, the first reason is that religiously they consider them unclean because they eat pork, and that's prohibited in our religion Susan, have you got any prejudices? Oh, I think I've got some pretty large prejudices I think I'm very prejudiced against the foreign press, particularly the American press, because I've come up against a lot of discrimination myself while I've been here As a South Africaneverywhere I go, particularly in schools, the moment I mention I'm from South Africa...I'm discriminated against In the sense that the picture of South Africa, the situation has been so badly distorted, and so exaggerated - because racial news is sensational news and so journalists have so badly distorted the picture in South Africa, that when I come over here I'm looked down upon and I've really felt this discrimination.
I haven't been treated as just an individual and a human being, and I feel that the press is responsible for this I've been wanting to ask you a question for a long time when we all came here, you just took to me, you liked me very much and I like you, and I know you are a South African, and I'm an African so why is it that out here you are very friendly towards me, but in South Africa you won't do the same to the Negroes that are living there. can you tell me? well, it's the whole set up. In South Africa we have a pattern of life which is different to any other country in the world because you have the white population, which came to the country in 1652, and they are much more highly developed, coming from Europe, with European backgrounds and traditions and they have developed the country, and developed a highly civilized community whereas the Negroes, the Bantu as we call them in South Africa is on a very primitive level and the barrier in South Africa isn't so much colour, as civilization, and economically excuse me, on that point...we get into a very, very tense ground you talked about this question of it not being a racial struggle, but a struggle of civilization personally, you see, I quite sympathize with your situation because you live in a country where your economic position, and perhaps your future well being as a nation might be in danger if you allow the strong hearted, strident Africans to take over the government that is of course what will happen if they are given the vote nonetheless, let us come now to that basic issue of racial segregation I hear this honorable gentleman from Ethiopia...I think it's far time, it's high time Ethiopians come to decide where exactly they are i really wonder.
Are you negroes? you say you are not negroes. are you whites? you're not whites. what are you? well I told you the answer, we are not negroes, we are one of the lost tribes of Israel, it's just because our faces are burned that we look like this yes, yes, I got the point that you are "lost", i think that makes a conclusive end to it I'm wondering if Susan and Mesfin have something very much in common. neither one of you admit you're African, and yet both of you live in Africa and have for generations and generations I would say not actually, because we're a different ethnic group we're not Africans in the same sense as the negroes and other groups that actually originated in Africa but I consider South Africa my homeland and my fatherland, and I always will and there is a misconception that exists, most people think that the white settlers came to South Africa and took the land from people who...
It was so! oh no it was not, and I'll prove it to you! ...they think we came to South Africa and took it away, like the whites came to America and took it away from the indigenous occupants in 1652 when the first white settlers arrived at the cape, the Bantu, as they are now known - the negroes in South Africa were still coming down from equatorial Africa, migrating, and it is a fact they had not yet entered what is now known as South Africa, the borders of South Africa the only indigenous occupants in South Africa at that time were the Bushmen, and they were exterminated by the Bantu coming down excuse me Susan, on that point...I think you've read your history upside down how come? yes, you see what happened is that these Dutch, I think these were Dutch men, they didn't have a place in their homeland - no means of living let me finish...
Then I can prove to you how wrong your historical facts are no, you see your history is the South African history. mine is a bi-partisan history ...well these men came without any means of livelihood in their own country, with an economic background that had no meaning at all they came to South Africa and the real fact is that as they came, and there was an influx of these Dutch people from their unwanted homes there was this influx, the Bantus tended to push their boundaries up into the country, until came the Zulu war in which the Zulus were finally defeated, in the most bitter and agonizing struggle they had against these Afrikaaners...is that what you call them? I don't know where you get your historical facts from I got my historical facts from, I think is it...Mr. Trebilian , British historian Mr. George Trebilian knows nothing, and I'll say that Because it so happens that these penniless whites as you call them, didn't come up because they didn't have homes or any kind of persecution they were sent out as officials of the Dutch East India company to establish a refreshment station for ships passing around the bottom of the Cape just as the Dutch settlers were sent out to America by the Dutch West India company, to settle and to make a refreshment station here ...said that the settlers came up because they were penniless, they'd be just as indignant as I am and as you say that the white settlers came and pushed the Bantu back...
Yes it's a fact, that the whites went into the interior of Africa and didn't come into contact even, never even saw a Bantu until 1795 which is more than 100 years after they had arrived in South Africa how did you have the Zulu war, what brought it about? the Zulus had already...I think you need to have a look at a map Zululand is very far from the Cape where these people arrived a hundred years after the arrival of the white settlers, the Zulus, who are a part of the Bantu group, had already come down to Natal and then you had the two groups, one coming from the north, one coming from the south, and they mixed. and that's where you get the Zulu war it was not even a clash in the sense you are taking it, it was the British... it was a clash! ...the British, in their benevolence... because they had seen the facts that this is not good they were exercising their tempering force upon the people Boniface, just to make things more complicated for you and Susan, I've heard a third interpretation of this which just might settle it that was the fact that the Bantu were a migratory people, and it may be true that at some point when the whites came there were no Bantu there because they were migrating somewhere else but this is all past history now, I'd like to hear something from Mesfin and Amelia on their interpretation of South African history or rather, lets bring it up to the present, can't we? yes, yes, we'll bring it up lets come back Sue to your violent prejudices against the press, because they're misrepresenting what goes on in South Africa, do you want to clarify that a bit? yes I would.
I know one outstanding example of misrepresentation we read in an American magazine, i won't say the name although I could very easily this journalist quoted Dr. DF Malan who is an ex-prime minister of South Africa as saying, and I quote "the negro does not need a home, he can sleep under a tree" well not only is this absolutely fictitious, but he forgot to mention the fact that brick and concrete trees - known to most people as *houses* are costing thousands, millions of dollars of the white taxpayers money annually what did you say? i didn't get the point, what houses? well, you see this journalist said that Dr.
Malan... yes, I got that point, but what houses are costing the government millions of dollars? concrete, brick, and cement houses for who? for the Bantu people but this if for the Bantus that are working for you in the factories! and how did you get the money? they mine the gold, got the gold, and you sell the gold outside. you get the money and you say the money is yours of course it is! you can't do that, that's a contradiction, please look, we came along, we bought the machinery, we developed the mines where did you get the machinery for the mines in Johannesburg, do you work the mines? who works the mines? we got our machinery from Great Britain...from the money that was got for the diamonds, and...
How did you get the diamonds out of the ground? no native labour there, Boniface how did you get the diamonds out of the ground? they weren't dug out of the ground, they were luvel diamonds, no native labour there my boy Oh, what did the natives do then? You know Susan, there is one point you must get that gets right down to the crux of the matter which is that in this country, the Africans are really the backbone of your economy and it is one of those places where you get to the question of man's inhumanity to man and yet you come here to complain about misrepresentation in the American press when as a matter of fact, the American press has given a fairly good view of the situation, because they have the coloured problem themselves have you been to South Africa? I wouldn't even pay a penny to go there well then how can you talk? because I have the facts.
People have no means of living there, how can I go there? I want a house, I want a home, I want a position in society well look, they are getting it, they're getting exactly what they want I'd love to hear from Amelia and Mesfin, if their picture of South Africa is the same as Bonifaces? it should be the same way coming from Africa myself, naturally I would be a little embittered against the whites in South Africa because from what we hear, they are mistreating the Africans there but personally, I have no preconceived ideas against the whites, because frankly I haven't been there and you can't always trust what you hear from people, or what you read from the press so I have no solid facts about the South African problem Actually, I myself am against the (white) South African.
Because how can you come to someones house and take away their property? they haven't taken it away! because what they are doing now, the white people are mining and taking the property for themselves they shouldn't do this. the native people who are living there should have the right to their property actually, before I came from Ethiopia I was reading about this in the press, and they were pretty harsh about this, they were against the white people the same thing could happen to them of course on this oppression business...if you say the Bantu in South Africa are oppressed, how do you account for this fact - that every year, regularly, hundreds of thousands of Bantu, and Negroes from other territories adjoining South Africa such as Portugese East Africa etc. are invading our country illegally, in spite of the laws. Are they coming for oppression? They know what goes on in South Africa, yet they come back year and year again those who've worked in South Africa and have been sent back, come back. are they coming back to seek oppression? your query does not answer what I am driving at the Africans have the land, they were there before you, they mine the gold oh no, they do not have the land, and they were not there before us! wait a minute Susan, let me get my point straight before you go they mine the land, they get the diamonds, you sell the diamonds outside.
And when you get the diamonds you say they are not to be given their own fair share of the quota have you read "cry, the beloved country"? yes I have. It's a one sided view one sided view, yet it was written by a European, how can a European have a one sided view about his own kith and kin? there are radicals in every nation radicals? ah, you are radicals in South Africa then oh no we're not look, Mesfin was just talking about..and as were all of you, about the importance of news about South Africa in the Gold Coast, Nigeria and Ethipia I'm wondering whether news about racial problems in the United States also takes up a good deal of space in your countries? Does it in the Gold Coast? Yes, very much, because after all the Negroes come from the Gold Coast and we feel very badly about what the Americans are doing to our Negroes and I know that one of my ancestors probably came here too, and from what I hear in the Gold Coast, the Americans don't give the Negroes a fair chance of activities here For instance, they don't give the Negroes the same education as they give the white Americans And also for instance, a Negro wouldn't be permitted to ride on the same bus with a white man As for me, I don't think that color - which is purely a natural thing, can be such a great bar to human understanding And I think America is a democratic nation, as it calls itself, but this one thing really doesn't show that all's well as in a democratic country Amelia, you've been in the New York area for about a month now.
Does the picture you had of America that you've just described correspond to what you've seen here, in the schools and the communities you've been in? Well, when I came up here, most of the people in New York told me that segregation is only practiced in the south, and in the north they have now began to have integration I didn't think much about it, but one day after school I went to a restaurant with a friend of mine, and she's an English girl And we sat there and we waited to be served by the waiter Well the waiter just came around, looked at us and passed us, and went around serving others who came in after us I knew at once what he was doing, but my friend didn't know it so she walked up to the waiter and said, "Well, we've been waiting here so long, won't you serve us?" The waiter just looked at her hard, and then looked back at me Then I told her that we'd better leave the restaurant, because I understood it.
The girl was shocked, but I wasn't surprised because that was what I was expecting to find How about you, Mesfin? Well in my country... No, I mean your experience with segregation here, have you had any? When I came to America, I was in Dwightmoral , are there any Negro students there? Well there are quite a lot of them, in fact about 3/4 Negroes in the school, and they are well treated as much as the other white people, and I'm happy about it In fact one of the vice presidents of the school is a Negro himself, Lincoln Marsh How about you, Boniface, have you met segregation at all here? I have not met it, I think I must have been pretty lucky because I've been looking forward to getting the segregation against me, but I have not got it yet It's an irony that the South African would get it, and I wouldn't get it myself Well Susan really has felt some here, it's interesting that you're the only one who has not ...yes? what are we up to now, I think we've come to that question of United States racial problems Well, I feel of course that the outlook here has continued to be better you do? I do But on the other hand, this racial segregation, which of course - and I'll always make that point clear, is an outcrop of insecurity in economic conditions and also somehow of low point of opinions and that sort of thing ...it provides other people a pretext by which they can criticise the United States Asians and Africans can't understand why a country devoted to the greatest ideals of freedom and democratic government should discriminate among their citizens We didn't get to ask Sue whether in South Africa her newspapers play up racial news in America too? Oh yes, they play it up a great deal Naturally we get all these stories about the riots in Clinton, Tennessee And how they had to escort these people to school, to bring out the national guard and so on and so forth Mrs.
Waller if I may interrupt, I think there are more riots in the Johannesburg area, the Negro area, than there are in Tennessee Am I right, Susan? Oh, well...there are a couple of... Riots, yes No, I wouldn't say riots And wait a minute, in the Johannesburg area you have only one telephone for the whole Negro population Oh rubbish! Yes! Where do you get your facts from? Facts, facts, facts from books, books, books written uncountable times on South Africa That is absolutely ridiculous! Absolutely true! I'll get this for you afterwards, I can guarantee you... Let me finish my statement please ...so much ignorance One telephone in the whole Johannesburg district. Why? that's not true! They don't want them to have a means of communication by which they could rebel against the people.
I'm speaking from facts, John Gunther wrote that that's absolutely ridiculous! ridiculous? you didn't say it was wrong... it is ridiculous but it's not wrong! It is wrong! You could've gotten your facts from a one sided source It's not one sided, Mesfin It could be, because what you've got is almost all... I can give you four concurrent sources: John Gunther wrote that. An African newspaper in Nigeria wrote that. A British paper wrote that. A Lebanese paper wrote that. Is all the world prejudiced against South Africa? Well you can't criticize the country so much without actually going there and seeing what is happening, you see? I don't need to go there, I told you I wouldn't pay a penny to go there. How can I go there? You should. Here we come to America, and we see what they are doing in America.
Otherwise we might have had false ideas about America In America the outlook has continued to be better. In South Africa, the outlook has continued to be worse And that exactly, Mesfin... Wait a minute, Susan That exactly, Mesfin... And Susan you should better think about this, when the (native) South Africans come to learn that they are really being discriminated against... And they are learning now And when they realize what has been imposed upon their people by law, what you'll get when the people realize they really are suppressed... When they realize this, they will throw away this same government Look, you've had your speech, I'm going to have mine now It so happens, that this apartheid, which you most probably have misinterpreted already...
No, you have Just a minute, let me speak... Is working towards a solution in South Africa, and it so happens that there will be no riots, nothing like that This apartheid policy, which I will speak to you about after, seeing how now there is very little time left, is working towards getting self-realization and self-rights for the black people within their own areas And I think if you make a careful study of apartheid you will see this. Already they've started legislating in South Africa and spending vast sums of money Within the next 20 years we're going to have a solution to our problems I've spent 15 years learning it, and every day I become more prejudiced against South Africa, I don't need to spend a day more I think you're getting your facts from the wrong source is all I can say Not from the wrong source, please, you're getting your facts from the government which led principles and practices of segregation and discrimination Well, I live there, I ought to know, you live 7000 miles away, how can you know? That's much better, I have a home, I have a hous, I can walk anywhere I want You're reading propaganda Unfortunately, our time is running out I wonder if anyone has got a final word to say on this subject of prejudices, and where they come from.
Mesfin? Of course I understand I'm becoming an African, I suppose Well, I think Susan that government policies sometimes conflict Because, you and I get on so well together, and I'm sure this time our governments are in the wrong So if they get on together, I'm sure that in the future they will try to understand each other better too Boniface? I think that the important thing to consider, is to whether on the balance the direction in which a nation is going is the right one If two different, even contradictory opinions or points of view, can exist in hospitality in the US... You're talking about Amelia's point at the beginning now? Yes When she said that Americans were confused because they could be pro and anti at the same time Yes. have hospitality in the US, this is progress - it is not weakness The dynamism that gives hospitality to the two points of view. I'm sorry, that's all the time we've got, we'll be back again next week.
https://www.youtube.com/embed/n65_ZOh7jag
We wan na show you some great patterns there are for beginners, for the djembe drums, from West Africa. For me, my preferred one is to play 3 tones and 5 slaps, however rather than playing them right I'' m gon na swing the rhythm and also this is gon na. help me discover the feeling of the West Africa songs as well as adjustment my strategy from. I play 3 tones, after that I play 5 slaps. Tone, put. of the West Africa music. When I'' m comfy I can go quicker. I can play quicker. Even faster. That'' s my preferred hand pattern. So my, I have a various one, different concept. Exactly how to help you extremely pleading, how to do the. point you get it.So my, I can start with the tone, after that I can. go the put, then I can most likely to bass. So if I do all that together, I can do, then. I most likely to slap, after that one bass. If I want to go slow-moving, if an intend to go a little. extra faster I can go. If I wish to go quick. This is it, djembe power for the novices. I play 3 tones, then I play 5 puts. Tone, put. I can play much faster. If I desire to go fast.
https://howtoplaythedjembedrums.com/djembe-drumming-patterns-for-beginners-african-drums/
https://www.youtube.com/embed/2WJ96CiRQeo
FALSE:: MISTAKE: UNSUPPORTED ENCODING
https://howtoplaythedjembedrums.com/shenseea-rvssian-youre-the-one-i-love-official-music-video-2/
https://www.youtube.com/embed/g6AGQcO69go
https://howtoplaythedjembedrums.com/top-10-hottest-nigerian-musicians-world-wide-2022/
foreign for me for me for me his house okay I don't know I'm going to walk her out of this real house now it's fine excuse me excuse me excuse me can I hear myself okay now back to business like I was saying all we need to do is practice and dedication okay we're ready now the first step is I needed to do it very subtle in a very subtle way okay one two one two one two one two smile while you're doing it beautiful she's getting it foreign one two years that day we will tell yeah foreign oh look at you she commended all of us what I mean I won't try I won't miss it again I won't try it let me go home to go because I am exhausted I'm hungry I'm tired everything so where are you going from here I'm going to my friend's place now which of your friend I'm going to come Accra Sports you and this your friend I'm not your friend Abby no no go no problem go baby and what do you want what and Nancy you know what I want now listen I don't have any time to spare wow I'm not interested in you now what is it I want the only beautiful girl in this Village why are you doing this Nancy don't you want to get married I want to get my but not to a papa like you who was by your name again UT or whatever you're called I've been nothing like you am I the one that will feed you or are you the one that will feed me I don't understand who I hustle like your fellow man now at least we are designing now we are good sleeper guys I wear bedroom sleepers all these things are material things just to love you my brother don't be deceived material things rule the world foreign you better be careful don't even come close to me to me again welcome back look at you hungry boys my friends you are missing more I know it's not about your mother who is she she's home we didn't have enough Accra today yeah that means I will have some apparel you have to make me for my car because this guy is rich kid because of akara be like you when I grow up for you want to eat akara for dinner I should go my bring a carafe it's not about that thing look at you that if people make a sign you should have been kind of yes now you don't even know what you're saying see you see this art color that's your calling now me that sells it me that makes and sells it it's only the crumbs I used to do huh you should even be tired of eating it now my friend okay see I learned so many new dance steps I want to teach you there's nobody like foreign hey finally they have paid your father his pension yes yes at least I will stop stressing myself too much oh this this is a very good in stepped out let me drop this bag you know my name everybody I'm coming I'm coming let me drop this bag go ahead I'm coming back so that we will dance you know I like westerns yes back to dance today oh my God okay no problem no problem beans won your son won your son tell him to leave me alone why should I leave you alone why why oh you have collected the pension we all have been waiting for for years and you have refused you have refused to provide for us yet oh this was the excuse you've been giving all along oh I have not been paid off and you have not to prepared upon all that you have been paid to come not that you have been pettico did you walk for it you should be ashamed of yourself I wear you I should be sure to make myself really listen don't go out there and make money go and make money like every other young man and stop disturbing my house Papa yeah yes you hate me you hate me right okay that one talk to your son talk to him did I work for the money papa it's okay it's okay oh bees how many cups mama um okay Papa you're going out yes oh okay we don't have food okay as old as you are you are telling me you don't have food in the house papa is that what is shocking you we don't have food in the house now listen anybody in this house who is hungry should go and look for food and eat what kind of problem is this one that place that you're going to is it not food that that you money that you're gonna spend there you go and sit down there and eat your own when you come back you tell us you don't have money for food you can chica who are you doing inside I was folding our clothes are we not going to eat okay this is the only money I have here 250 naira how can we cook with this bye guys my grandmas sugar okay all right remain small for your brother you might come back okay cannot finish this one because you know he went to war it's working this one will be above the oriented hey my stomach is biting me what is that Sugar our money was not enough for sugar let's drink it like that oh thank you please let something away I like that one hey thank you very much for making this the impossible one foreign I always pray God will bless you as you're managing with me I saw suffering with me because don't worry it will be well someday very soon Mama I'm not complaining just eat you're my mother I'm not complaining on them foreign somebody changes where are you coming from wait yo nonsense you come from and you want to hit me okay you have gone to that from one joint to go and eat and drink to stop and you come here start staggering like like somebody that wants to bother and die you are stupid for asking me that question the whole of you are stupid wait my son did not allow me to go out now my brother is blocking the roof wow let me go inside yes idiots no sense yes you see your father you see papaya okay what is wrong with Papa what is wrong with Papa suddenly that man has started misbehaving all of a sudden Papa has money now all of his sudden the Beer Parlor have become his home so which means that is what he has been using his money for you can imagine goes out and comes back every day drunk so actually papa is now a drunkard oh you know the funniest part is that I have been fetching all the rooms in the house even under the carpet do you expect them to keep the money where you see it's as corny as you are now in fact you are even cornea than your father me maduka Connie is not meal I'm not ah I cannot look like your father ogre you look at me in fact per person is even better he has money to drink to drink beer your own do you have anything do you have hmm okay I'm a big boy you know how you talk to me you see in this life in this life I will make all of you proud well me please leave me another one I want to talk about you know the one that annoys me the most is when you are talking to Papa you put your path he'll be he'll be walking like this would you like this as if he's carrying Thriller I would have called him a useless man but he's my father drinking from why do you do you even have she do you have I'm a big boy okay I'm a big boy so thank you I need money for food what's that supposed to mean Kim we are cooking soup today I need money Papa came I said we are cooking soup today I need money why are you doing this when was the last time you provided for our family nobody is a baby in this house what do you mean by that hey papa came what do you mean when that money has not come we have been waiting I've been the one suffering working so hard to make sure nobody stops in our house now this money has come you're now telling me that no one is a baby in this family why why listen I don't have your time this morning I have somewhere very important where I'm supposed to be you can have this egg or not I don't have your time this morning I am supposed to be somewhere you're supposed to be somewhere where else if not to go and drink come and carry your grandma come and carry it mix it with the drink useless man I just do not want to insult you but you're forcing me to call you a useless man nonsense are you doing this to me okay cool so if he has almost finished it we judge you God we judge slightly George you're doing he's not just good at all I have been enjoying with my husband when he had nothing I made sure I provided for our home about his money at school he has forgotten me he has forgotten that person who did not disgrace him when he had nothing she knew men and their lifestyle I would advise you keep managing because it doesn't look like one who is ready to change hey Google what wrong did I do to it because I will see you through and if it becomes so difficult please don't forget to reach out at least I can be of Health y you have tried for me each time he hooks me around to you but I know God is watching God is watching papa he sees animals and I believe he will see you soon it's okay because it's really watching I'm tired what is it again now are you still crying listen I've told you that everything is going to be all right I know that and over everything's going to be okay oh look I cannotize my emotions I'm human my heart is heavy it's okay all this will end someday trust me they will all end what's going on it's okay it's okay it's not icing peace where are you going out this early morning are you questioning me when did that one start sister Nancy you know what you're doing is not right you know it's not right you know we've not eaten anything in this house you you went out before and you're about going out again the second time to monitoring Spirit right no that is what you have done to listen if you know that you are back to this Village to come and stress me just carry your wahala back to Grandma's place did you hear me and by the time I'm back make sure you watch those dirty clothes that I sucked in the pocket no sense Mr Nancy I'm hungry oh oh yes for me yeah but let's see I I thought he was supposed to cook in the house yes that's what you better eat anyway I Know Who You Are better not be enough for me let's see your eyes oh hey nice I don't understand though the way you have been avoiding us these days I don't understand me avoid you people how I'm not avoiding you people but you see almost every day hey but you don't used to come to your house like we used to do now uh that one is true but the thing is that my younger sister is around and I don't want her to misunderstand the whole visit of a thing I just want to respect and give her privacy you know and you're free to come to the house but I don't want you to be as frequent as other times you know you understand what I'm trying to say now really yes okay well it's okay now you get house yes it's fine exactly it's okay so tell me how about your new man by the time I'm done with all the rich men in this Village everybody including you all of whom are gonna say I don't arrive D from that that's the spirits my dear but you should exclude me I'm here again now I know just go and die with yourself 3500 was my last card home and I brought why would everybody take it am I it's okay please oh what is okay the fact that my business capital is no more or the fact that we are not even sure of our food again eh what I know is that everything will be okay that's the only thing I know hmm I am very sure yes I am very sure that papa took that one but why would Papa do a thing like that why would Papa take her money when he knows that she doesn't have any other money in this house I thought he has his own money now can't he focus on himself and yeah and his money why he took the money is what I don't know but my mind tells me he's the one how Papa has changed ever since he got his pension is what baffles me Papa now works with shoulder pad so that Papa I'll be walking he'll be walking like this like this sorry because of money so money can change the money hey Papa it's okay mama don't worry don't worry mama let's just wait till he comes back say oh my baby I am going away cause all my mind baby I am going away to this island plus only if I don't come back stay on my mind baby brows can go stay on my mind baby I am going away and if I don't come back if I went there wait why did you steal Mama's money why did you steal our money Madoka do you know you are an idiot able idiot complete idioms so that is the reason you have to stop me from entering my house the house I built with my heart and money everybody idiot my party met here please stay here you will not leave this place until you provide the money you stole ah now for your information Madoka I did not steal your mother's money the money you are talking about is part of the money I give to your mother even before you were born I can see that you are gradually losing it please bring the money so it's not hey ah wrongs can go I hope you like this appointment what kind of man is this Papa do I disgrace Mr Nancy you cannot greet welcome thank you sister Nancy what is it I can't believe you're just coming back since yesterday you left this house meaning sister Nancy what you're doing is not good what are you doing all this why are you wasting away we are orphans yes but we shouldn't allow the situation to Define us life coach and what are you insinuating what I'm insinuating is that sister nurse you don't work but you leave this house every morning and night sometimes you don't even return home at all at all this life you're living is not good it's meaningless it can only lead you to regrets look at her stupid girl look at that big nose I don't even know where you got that from if Mama were alive she would have explained how she got you stupid girl no sense excuse me push me next time my beautiful lady you see her in this Village it will be very difficult for any other single girl I mean any other girl to get married you know why because all the single men in this Village wants and prefer us to everybody you guys said that again if you are to be a man would you do the same oh I mean we are The Happening girls in this Village and all the men want us he just starts we are not in the same level with us exactly low life not in the same class see my darling I am okay with making any mistake in his life if I wake up and I wake up with one hand like this I'm fine like this I'm okay but you see the mistake of getting married to a poor man oh wow poor man God forbid what is a poor man doing with us ask me what is a poor man doing around love listen my mother if I repeat it wow God forbid it should not happen May God forbid that I will make a mistake of marrying a poor man a low life a low budget a low class man a popper no level don't work now take a look at me now oh beautiful Hey listen if you say you are the second most beautiful girl in this Village it is understandable look at Beauty now Beauty they cry baby look at me who is this this one okay okay hold on so where do where do I fall thank you yes said this before I will say it again allow your father be leave him alone okay I can never I will never allow Papa to wrestle I will not have you not seen the way Papa has been treating us in this house okay have you not seen that is Mama's owner as for me maduka I will not allow him to rest I will not he has not done his duties now you know one thing that waffles maze the way you challenge your father when did you start challenging your father like this since the day he forgot that he's our father and he's supposed to treat us as one yes let me ask you a question are you not a man are you not supposed to assist your father eh you want to shout in Echo in Echo are you not the man I am a man but I'm not up to Papa's age when I'm his age I will do what if no I will not do what he does I will I will be a good father you have to wait to get up to Papa's age before you can show that responsibilities acquire you see all these things you are doing don't go and push your father one day and he will fall down and die you you're on your own Papa die let papa die I am here am I not a man yes I am here what is hey what kind of man now you can please just allow me to think allow me to think straight just allow me allow me let me think of the next thing to do please whoa yeah let me even check if he has something living with nobody car okay just stay out of this stay out of this one some kind of pigment this one that you are doing I did not send you I did not send you one guy I did not send you this one I did not he must bring the money today look at him but God this is Moon okay okay if you were not my thought I would just I'll just go look at him if you were not my father come on Kim this is take this money I took it from Papa take thank you this month ah mama oh I got the money is not supposed to be an issue the most important thing is that we have had this money now so use it to buy some of your goods that is beans and use the rest to cook for us plenty of beautiful and he came back drunk as usual that's how maduka was able to deep hands in his pocket and forcefully take the money mama my appetite is calling for offense alarm plenty of Morocco this is what I want to eat right now if you finish the money today what will you eat tomorrow how about come back drunk again and we will take more we will take more thank you maduka why didn't you open today oh why my mother just said you should rest for something hey people are observing a public holiday in this your business when I grew up I want to be like you hey checking off who will nowhere right hey hmm when I was coming to your house the spoon I just came back notice I just came back I just came back that stopped me and told me hello baby I want to know your name it's not my space I'm sure you have brown seeds brownies Nancy you know I care so much about you you know it you know I love you so much you doing this to me I am a graduate engine of it yes you know it I am I am taking care of myself I I'm struggling every day and night so make sure I I I'm okay not like I'm lucky you know I'm starving or something I'm just asking you to to be with me I promise I will take care of you I'll provide all you need please Nancy please hi Beauty and take care of well let me ask you you're working hard like you said but your hard work is not good enough for me it's not enough for me now let me ask you do you have a mirror in your house yes I do do you take a look at yourself in the dressing mirror did you see how tattered I'm hungry you look I I know your plan your plan is for for you to make these Village People to laugh at me okay but it will not work what do I look like to disappoint you how do I look how oh you don't know ah let me tell you you are sick and the sickness is poverty you have financial problem you know what when you solve that you cannot come back to me put Nancy I just told you a while ago that I am not lacking I'm fine I'm okay I just told you a while ago yeah okay where is your car where is your mansion huh okay they use format is well for me from frying pan to fire are you okay when you hustle you can come back to me when you have made money you can come back to me but to see you in this your state listen I have told you that all those things are material things just just love me and I would have to take good care of you you will take good care of me with what material things ruled the world go and make money when you make money you can come back that is if I have chance so I can manage you please don't talk to me because I'm nonsense is that yellow purple because it's fine but I want to eat no money please I still love you Nancy thank you you won't leave me I'm not eating which one do you want me to carry you what's that oh sorry that you're playing with me this memo is Mr Nancy please you know that all this life you're living in you need to change small if not to lead you to destruction it's not good that one starts what's wrong with you why did that one oh okay foreign or not um Amina let me tell you something that has been bothering me um since you came into my life my life has never remained the same again you see I am tired of all these hide and seek games we are playing it's high time we made it official see Amina are you done with that number to calm down let me first settle my family we are going to take this wall after the order you know oh so do you think your family will like me they don't have options because they will like you yeah this is my love my sweet potato foreign I knew I knew I knew that something was wrong when Papa started misbehaving let me go home it is not really good to draw conclusion yet foreign foreign foreign foreign and night I'm always thinking about you you see no other girl can make me feel that way in this Village except you are you serious yes hmm see let me tell you I would like us to have a private conversation yes I wouldn't want my sister to hear what we would be talking about okay so um just give me some time let me just go in and change into something good oh that would be so nice I'll be waiting don't be long okay I will not be long yellow all right foreign is she the blessings for me for me because my roommate is for me for me foreign