I didn't know there were any Falasha people still in Ethiopia. I am happy to see they are. Did you go to the church in Ethiopia that holds the Ark of the Covenant...You are a citizen of the world young lady...
Yes, i believe the Falasha people originated in Ethiopia and have moved to Israel as apart of their faith. I have not gone into the church that holds the Ark of the covenant. Would love to though, maybe on the next trip.
Where is this pottery? If it is just outside Gondar to the west then these are not Falashas women. I founded that pottery and the Falashas had all, bar one, left. We employed, in the main, prostitutes with children to give them a steady and regular income, to look after the children and, in some small way, help stem the spread of HI V. The pottery was founded under the auspices of 'Project Ploughshare' and I worked as a volunteer with that charity to put this pottery together.
Interesting. I believe this community was located south of Addis and upon entering there was a huge sign welcoming people to a traditional Falasha village. There were a number of independent female craftsman making things - it didn’t seem to be under the umbrella of a particular ngo. Sounds like you did some really awesome work in Ethiopia, I worked on something similar in Cambodia where we created capacity building programs to help women create a steady income for themselves.
Very informative. Thank you for the content.
You’re so kind! I’m happy to share
wow
Thank u for sharing
My pleasure
I did enjoy it
Thank you for posting
How sweet! Thank you so much for taking the time to watch and comment
How sweet! Thank you so much for taking the time to watch and comment
@@DaringDanielletravels I was entranced
especially when the man joined the process
በጣም አሪፍ ሥራ ነዉ
I didn't know there were any Falasha people still in Ethiopia. I am happy to see they are. Did you go to the church in Ethiopia that holds the Ark of the Covenant...You are a citizen of the world young lady...
Yes, i believe the Falasha people originated in Ethiopia and have moved to Israel as apart of their faith. I have not gone into the church that holds the Ark of the covenant. Would love to though, maybe on the next trip.
I am Falash born from Kechene living in UK.
የት ነው ይህ ማሽን የሚገኘው በእናትሽ ንገሪኝ
Please Falasha is a VERY derogatory word.
Is it? What makes it derogatory? What would these women prefer to be called?
@@DaringDanielletravels Beta Israel. I should know. Please say Beta Israel.
Where is this pottery? If it is just outside Gondar to the west then these are not Falashas women. I founded that pottery and the Falashas had all, bar one, left. We employed, in the main, prostitutes with children to give them a steady and regular income, to look after the children and, in some small way, help stem the spread of HI V. The pottery was founded under the auspices of 'Project Ploughshare' and I worked as a volunteer with that charity to put this pottery together.
Interesting. I believe this community was located south of Addis and upon entering there was a huge sign welcoming people to a traditional Falasha village. There were a number of independent female craftsman making things - it didn’t seem to be under the umbrella of a particular ngo. Sounds like you did some really awesome work in Ethiopia, I worked on something similar in Cambodia where we created capacity building programs to help women create a steady income for themselves.
My mom has that
Thanks for the clarification Phil - Louis