Ghana and Jamaica must establish a cultural exchange program. It brings tears to see that these are our brothers and sisters who were separated from us. They found a way to still make Dokunu and Abodoo after the perilous middle passage.
Not all black was in slavery go to school to learn about other black no wonder you’ll still poor worry about something we never experienced ourself rich people don’t even care it’s always the poor people like you
@@adrean3693 Those left behind and those sold were all victims of the traders. Some of the African traders were also sold once they became prisoners of war. The narrative that it was the continental Africans who voluntarily sold their siblings in the diaspora is part of the colonial narrative to absolve the perpetrators. The collaborators were equally guilty but the finger pointing was such a clever ploy to deflect attention. Don’t buy into it. Thanks.
In Haiti Doukounou is made with corn but sweetened with molasses. Yes we call it doukounou. (Dookoonoo) . I didn’t know it was called same name else where. Wrapped in banana leafs amazing .
Dokuno is an original Ghanaian food. It’s also called kenkey recently. Tgere are two types of dokunu in Ghana. Fante dokunu is wrapped in plantain leaves while Ga dokuno is wrapped in corn husk. However they are all made with corn with slightly different processes .
Greetings, amazing to see how the connection is still there, also I want to tell you to go to Costa Rica central America, to limon city on the Atlantic side where Jamaicans who migrated to this country to build the railroad, like a hundred + years ago and never got to return, still makes dukuno , also . This video brought back memory of my grandmother days . Amazing. Appreciate your videos. Thank you. Ache.
@Crysia Wallfall. Costa Rica and especially the Eastern Coast, has been on my bucket list for a while. I am aware of the history and the Jamaican connection 🇯🇲.
I always love this growing up when my mother use to make a whole lot and we all get our own. My mother always grate some ginger in it and it tasted so good. In Canada we can get everything to make it even the banana leaves we get in the Asian supermarkets so sometimes I will make dukunoo or bake potato pudding but they are actually the same only that one is being cooked in boiling water while the other we bake.
Reminds me of our tamales from Mexico we wrap in banana leaves or corn husks, but we put a filling in the middle, sometimes chicken with mole sauce, beef or just sweet as these are!
Somethings never changes, no matter where you find the tribes. The folks in the Eastern regions of Suriname ( those who took to freedom, Maroons) do this exactly like in this clips. The grinder, the mixed ingredients wrapped in banana leaves. Delicious.
It's not only the people in the Eastern region of Suriname, it's in the whole country that it's done. I have seen my mother making it , while she is from Indian, Hindu, descent. The procedure is exactly the same, but with slightly different ingredients. These differences are because of the local influences.
Guyanese 🇬🇾call it CONKIE, This’s old lady in my country Guyana, South America shows the most traditional way we make conkie( with banana, coconut and cornmeal). Most Guyanese make it with pumpkin, coconut and cornmeal. th-cam.com/video/A6H9dv-Ph8s/w-d-xo.html She is also featured in another video about how she makes her famous foofoo.
@@Amatullah78 With fermented corn dough only. But there's another one made in my village with ripe banana and in all cases the principle and method of cooking are similar. 🤗
@@RASPUTINYWhen I was in Ghana and I described similar foods we had in the Caribbean, they would always say "that's how it's made in the villages" or in the north or in the Volta region.
Loving this one thanks for sharing very information blessed love to all knowledge is power hopefully everyone pays attention keep up the good work 🙏🏿🙏🏿🙏🏿🇯🇲🇯🇲🇯🇲
Wow, In ST Mary we call it blue draws/dookonu too. Thank you for making the connection my brother, about time for ALL black people to realize we are one.
respect Sindaco,these type of link should have been made years ago and certainly needs to continue…the children of the disperse needs to re-connect to the continent
Very proud of this!❤❤ We have a diverse Subsaharan background. It’s crazy that I just discovered thee word Abodo. I recently discovered the name calalloo is Congolese and salt fish is popular there.
@@Infinitybein waakye is waakye. Rice and peas may be slightly similar but it’s not the same. Don’t claim everything Jamaican is Ghanaian because it’s not! Jamaicans have developed their cuisine with bits borrowed from many different cultures - not just Ghanaian.
@@cleo63100 Thank you, that person wrote that all over the place. They don't taste the same or have the same ingredients. With that belief they might as well claim every rice and beans dish because there's tons in South America and Asia.
I loved this. How on Earth are you able to find people that share these experiences with you? I couldn’t find dukunu when I went, and believe me when I say I searched and searched. ✨
This is the mixture for sweet potato pudding where the mixture is placed in the Dutch pot, placed on the coal fire, then with the lid on more coal would be placed on it, hence it would be said "hell on top, he'll on the bottom, and HALLELUJAH in the middle. Get it.
Sidaco that means u need to visit Antigua next because we have the same food but we call it Ducana and we eat it with any type of fish and chop up on the side . Check it out 👍🏾
The baked one will be epitse in Ghana. The mixture of cocoyam, potato and coconut water is replaced in Ghana by the corn mixture aflatoxin without salt to make fante dokuno
I love this growing up, but I don't know anyone who can make it authentic, so I haven't eaten it in over 20 years. Man, I would go straight to St. Thomas just for this.
Waakye is also rice an peas🎉🎉🎉🎉🔴🟡🟢⚫️ Also Nanny of the Maroons is really Nana an honorific spiritual title of the Akan in Ghana. Cuffee is Kofi.. oneness
Newsflash nanny never existed. That's why they can't name shit after her. I know you wanna be stunning and brave but skip the feminist bullshit. Nanny is the same as Jesus Christ a myth. We are having real and grown up conversations here.
Wow this is awesome 👏🏾 Wish I could also taste it😊, I think this is another version of aboodoo😅 I make my tubani wrapped with the leaves but I don’t tie it
There is one that red plantain is used to make it sweet or to season it and the process is the same. It is called akankye3 in the Ashanti Region of Ghana. I tell you these are Ghanaians no doubt about that.
Fry dumplins in caribbean .jamaica .is puff puff in nigeria . Pattie is meat pie in nigeria, sorel is sobe in naija,....rice and peas is jauloff rice in west Africa.
Rice and peas is neither jollof nor waakye!! It’s rice and peas (gungo peas) or red peas (kidney beans). The tiny similarity doesn’t make it the same. Stop saying it’s the same. Let Jamaican take credit for their cuisine without saying it’s from here or there. It was developed in Jamaica and is Jamaican. Any similarity is just a coincidence.
Goes also for the other enslaved Caribbean Islands. Our ancestors took their culture to the whole of America, but the US which is very develop, this culture disapear long ago.
I went down a rabbit hole de otha day and found that the African heritage is just as strong in Suriname as it is here in Jamaica... If not stronger. It's amazing! I look forward to visiting Suriname.. but the flights intercaribbean is ridiculously high. But one day still.
@@truvico No other country outside Africa meets Suriname in African culture outside Africa. Only Haïti can come close to Suriname. Not because the languages have similarities, that makes the cultures come close to each other.
Stephen Kayenwee. There are changes probably because our ancestors couldn’t find corn when they got to that island. So they had to improvise with the available ingredients as at that time .
@@donamay1837 Corn is from North America it's Meso-American so we had access to corn before any African did. I wish people would research before they type.
@@slimthickaz. . Well from what I learnt they used corn initially but subsequent generations decided to experiment with other ingredients. So I think that explains it.
What you have here is abodoo, not dokuno, though in appearance they look the same. The dokuno in Ghana is made from corn whereas the abodoo is made from the ingredients shown in the video.
@@ChiefGodspeed For the one millionth time! Ghana did NOT name Jamaica! The Taino Indians who are the indigenous Jamaicans lived on the island for 2,500 years and named their island ‘Xyamaca’ meaning ‘land of wood and water’! In 1494 The Spanish landed and called it Jamica. Then the British fought and gained it from the Spanish and named it Jamaica. Africans were shipped in to the island many decades later. It already had a name when they were taken there! Do they teach you this in Ghana? So many Ghanaians keep on repeating this false information and they need to correct themselves!
Crazy I didn’t say anything about Ghana. If you can read I said group of Africans. Seems you guys have something against the people of Ghana if that was eager to leave your thoughts lol
Some were from the Ivory Coast in Africa . Indians were brought in to work as indentured servants,but they chose the strong Africans so that they could work in the cane fields..
The best boiled fish with Gari
th-cam.com/video/6f-rteiM3A0/w-d-xo.html
Ghana and Jamaica must establish a cultural exchange program. It brings tears to see that these are our brothers and sisters who were separated from us. They found a way to still make Dokunu and Abodoo after the perilous middle passage.
Some of them were never enslaved for long. The fought for freedom very early
Not all black was in slavery go to school to learn about other black no wonder you’ll still poor worry about something we never experienced ourself rich people don’t even care it’s always the poor people like you
But you sold them tho...
@@adrean3693 Those left behind and those sold were all victims of the traders. Some of the African traders were also sold once they became prisoners of war.
The narrative that it was the continental Africans who voluntarily sold their siblings in the diaspora is part of the colonial narrative to absolve the perpetrators. The collaborators were equally guilty but the finger pointing was such a clever ploy to deflect attention. Don’t buy into it. Thanks.
@@adrean3693 Get over your victim blaming mindset
Thank you for sharing this story from my island.
We are Africans fron Ghana and Nigeria.
They couldn't erase our culture.
In Haiti Doukounou is made with corn but sweetened with molasses. Yes we call it doukounou. (Dookoonoo) . I didn’t know it was called same name else where. Wrapped in banana leafs amazing .
We are all one ppl
That is abodo; a specialty of the Egun people of Benin, home of voodoo.
Everything in the Caribbean and the American south was sweetened. However the original from Africa was not. Slavery introduced sugar to our diet.
Dokuno is an original Ghanaian food. It’s also called kenkey recently. Tgere are two types of dokunu in Ghana. Fante dokunu is wrapped in plantain leaves while Ga dokuno is wrapped in corn husk. However they are all made with corn with slightly different processes .
@lola sobande have you watched High on the Hog on Netflix - African American chef visits Benin. Quite interesting food journey.
Oooooh Mine, this Food 🍲 will be very very delicious 😋. Ghana 🇬🇭 and Jamaica 🇯🇲 Same Grandmother. Blessings
We never stoped eating African and being African.
The Jamaicans are true Ghanaians and nothing to hide. Keep your culture and food my people.🇯🇲🇬🇭👍
Jamaicans are from many places so their food have influences from many cultures.
Not all mate, a lot have Nigerian lineage
@@cleo63100 yes while we are out of many one ppl.the majority of Jamaicans have sub-Saharan African roots.
They are majority igbos ,same as Haiti 🇭🇹.
@@caniceosuagwu2580 The majority are from Jamaica - over 500 years. They are Jamaicans! Stop telling Jamaicans what or who they are!
These places & culture in 🇯🇲 can easily be an extension of any region village in Ghana.
Hope you found out about the Bissy or Kola nut as it is called in Nigeria, we call it Bissy in Jamaica and you called it Bissy as well in Ghana
Wow astonishing
Ghana is Bese not Bissy.
@@myAfricanAffairsWe call it Obi seed in Trinidad
Antiguans cook this we call it Dookunah though. It is a traditional dish that we have. We cook it the same way to include wrapping it in fig leaf.
It shows how much the Akan culture has survived
You are 1 if the most joyful guys I have ever seen. This was great. You are a great person to invite anywhere. Nice video
Thank you sir ❤️😊🙏🏿 I appreciate
@@cookingwithsindaco where are you located? In Nigera? What city?
@@Sozo_inc I’m in Ghana 🇬🇭
In Suriname we have Bojo that is baked and doku in the banana leaf.
This could add riasin as well my mother use to make it .
Your program is a true "bridge builder".
I enjoyed the rural setting and soothing music, thank you (medasi).
You’re welcome ☺️ and
Greetings, amazing to see how the connection is still there, also I want to tell you to go to Costa Rica central America, to limon city on the Atlantic side where Jamaicans who migrated to this country to build the railroad, like a hundred + years ago and never got to return, still makes dukuno , also . This video brought back memory of my grandmother days . Amazing. Appreciate your videos. Thank you. Ache.
@Crysia Wallfall. Costa Rica and especially the Eastern Coast, has been on my bucket list for a while. I am aware of the history and the Jamaican connection 🇯🇲.
Wow Boss I salute your courage 👏 🙌 🙏 💪 👌 well done to you keep the coming 👏 👍
I always love this growing up when my mother use to make a whole lot and we all get our own. My mother always grate some ginger in it and it tasted so good. In Canada we can get everything to make it even the banana leaves we get in the Asian supermarkets so sometimes I will make dukunoo or bake potato pudding but they are actually the same only that one is being cooked in boiling water while the other we bake.
I smiled through this entire video. Just hearing that things are similar in Ghana. Real country life!
Exactly, I was also happy hearing that from the other side also
Reminds me of our tamales from Mexico we wrap in banana leaves or corn husks, but we put a filling in the middle, sometimes chicken with mole sauce, beef or just sweet as these are!
Sounds delicious.
I've had tamales. They are delicious!
My friend from Trinidad told me they make the same, filled with meat,
and call them pastelles.
Just went to mexico, had pineapple tamales for the first time. Check my channel.
Hallacas in Venezuela, was brought there by the black people there.
In Guadeloupe we add porc and fine herbs, cooked in banana leaves, called boulemille (boule mealis).
Somethings never changes, no matter where you find the tribes. The folks in the Eastern regions of Suriname ( those who took to freedom, Maroons) do this exactly like in this clips.
The grinder, the mixed ingredients wrapped in banana leaves. Delicious.
It's not only the people in the Eastern region of Suriname, it's in the whole country that it's done. I have seen my mother making it , while she is from Indian, Hindu, descent. The procedure is exactly the same, but with slightly different ingredients. These differences are because of the local influences.
In Barbados, a similar dish is called conkies
We're the same people, that's a fact and I am extremely proud of that!
In Haiti we call it doukounou one love ❤️
We do the same in st.lucia
Guyanese 🇬🇾call it CONKIE, This’s old lady in my country Guyana, South America shows the most traditional way we make conkie( with banana, coconut and cornmeal). Most Guyanese make it with pumpkin, coconut and cornmeal.
th-cam.com/video/A6H9dv-Ph8s/w-d-xo.html
She is also featured in another video about how she makes her famous foofoo.
Amazing.... Dokono is also called Kenkey here in Ghana.... 🤗
@@RASPUTINY is it made with the same ingredient like pumpkin or banana?
@@Amatullah78 With fermented corn dough only. But there's another one made in my village with ripe banana and in all cases the principle and method of cooking are similar. 🤗
@@RASPUTINYWhen I was in Ghana and I described similar foods we had in the Caribbean, they would always say "that's how it's made in the villages" or in the north or in the Volta region.
Wow am enjoying this travel Vlogs
Loving this one thanks for sharing very information blessed love to all knowledge is power hopefully everyone pays attention keep up the good work 🙏🏿🙏🏿🙏🏿🇯🇲🇯🇲🇯🇲
Wow, In ST Mary we call it blue draws/dookonu too. Thank you for making the connection my brother, about time for ALL black people to realize we are one.
respect Sindaco,these type of link should have been made years ago and certainly needs to continue…the children of the disperse needs to re-connect to the continent
We make the sweet kenkey in Ghana too, we call it Osino graphic.
We call it also Dokuno or kenkey in Ghana 🇬🇭we also have a river called Jamaica.
Where is the river call Jamaica in Ghana, which region ? I just want to know.
There's no river called Jamaica.. if so it must be new
There is a stream river in a suburb of aburi akwapim ..call Jamaica
@@elizabethbekoe381 ok dear thank you.
@@elizabethbekoe381 Then it's a modern construction, and bears no relevance to anything
Good job, wish to visit Jamaica one day
Jamaican dukunoo (blue drawers) is like a steamed sweet potato pudding. It’s eaten as a dessert.
Grow up in having blue draws for breakfast and lunch loves it still make it in plastic bags
This is more like what we call Akankyie or Abodoo as you said.
Exactly
Very proud of this!❤❤
We have a diverse Subsaharan background. It’s crazy that I just discovered thee word Abodo. I recently discovered the name calalloo is Congolese and salt fish is popular there.
This is pure west African
Waawo nice will try this one day and see when I do will send it to you kk 😅
We have dokung in Surinam!! I'm telling you we have a lot incoming. Because the English where first in Surinam!!!
Dokung is the same as dukunu in janaica is the same in west Africa ghana ..ect. its not english its original African
Right next-door to Suriname in Guyana we call it Conkey
Dokunu is a native Akan word alternative is kenkey
Enjoy Jamaica it’s a nice country food is good country is fruitful cool ice rivers
Waakye is also rice and peas🎉🎉🎉🎉 one destiny🔴🟡🟢⚫️
@@Infinitybein waakye is waakye. Rice and peas may be slightly similar but it’s not the same. Don’t claim everything Jamaican is Ghanaian because it’s not! Jamaicans have developed their cuisine with bits borrowed from many different cultures - not just Ghanaian.
@@cleo63100 Thank you, that person wrote that all over the place. They don't taste the same or have the same ingredients. With that belief they might as well claim every rice and beans dish because there's tons in South America and Asia.
@@cleo63100 it doesn’t have to taste the same. The idea most likely came from Waakye.
I loved this. How on Earth are you able to find people that share these experiences with you? I couldn’t find dukunu when I went, and believe me when I say I searched and searched. ✨
Cool thanks for sharing, what's the song you use in the background?
We are one people.
Insightful.
I love the fresh vegetables I have been seeing
Jamaican version of asikyire dokuno
This is called Paime in Trinidad and Tobago 🇹🇹.
Oh really wow
We are the same people.
@@leslynfiawoo4184 yes
We call koutian in north-east India
Hello my brother long time where have you been?
Hello Madam, yes it been a while I'm in Ghana creating content for you guys
Look like Tubaani from northern Ghana. Made with bean flour and steam in leaves. Interesting
This is the mixture for sweet potato pudding where the mixture is placed in the Dutch pot, placed on the coal fire, then with the lid on more coal would be placed on it, hence it would be said "hell on top, he'll on the bottom, and HALLELUJAH in the middle. Get it.
It seems like the bale version is called dukunoo and the boiled version aboyo
Sidaco that means u need to visit Antigua next because we have the same food but we call it Ducana and we eat it with any type of fish and chop up on the side . Check it out 👍🏾
Woow the name kept changing as it was transferred from generation to generation.
Big up brethren for the insight and what is the title of the background track used please?
madagascar have the same food like that too.
Africa
The baked one will be epitse in Ghana. The mixture of cocoyam, potato and coconut water is replaced in Ghana by the corn mixture aflatoxin without salt to make fante dokuno
My mom's used to make it with raisins.
I love this growing up, but I don't know anyone who can make it authentic, so I haven't eaten it in over 20 years. Man, I would go straight to St. Thomas just for this.
Point of correction, abode is either baked or boiled in Ghana. ❤
This is called BROODO in FANTE which we use ripe plantain and seasoning to make and not Kenkey or Dokono, .............
In surinaam we call it dokung we like it very must
And brazil columbia ,central americas .breadfruit ,akee ,puna .yam .yam festivals jonkunoo parades .the same as in Africa ,
Wow
Waakye is also rice an peas🎉🎉🎉🎉🔴🟡🟢⚫️
Also Nanny of the Maroons is really Nana an honorific spiritual title of the Akan in Ghana. Cuffee is Kofi.. oneness
Newsflash nanny never existed. That's why they can't name shit after her. I know you wanna be stunning and brave but skip the feminist bullshit. Nanny is the same as Jesus Christ a myth. We are having real and grown up conversations here.
No it's not, they don't taste the same and have completely different ingredients.
@@douglagyal4364What are the different ingredients??? Waakye is rice and peas
That looks like a popular Nigerian dish called moi moi. The main ingredients are black eye peas and corn beef.
Lovely kanki
Dukunu means 'help you people' in one of the African languages.
Wow classic 👍🏾
St thomas my place. Happy to see
Awesome video
Wow this is awesome 👏🏾
Wish I could also taste it😊, I think this is another version of aboodoo😅
I make my tubani wrapped with the leaves but I don’t tie it
We used to put it in the ground with fire on top to bake it.
Yes my parents used to make that way in Jamaica, with corn meal,!
Fire a bottom, fire a top and hallelujah in the middle 🇯🇲🇯🇲
@@WCSJAM you know the thing father!
This is called Dokun in Surinam .
There is one that red plantain is used to make it sweet or to season it and the process is the same. It is called akankye3 in the Ashanti Region of Ghana. I tell you these are Ghanaians no doubt about that.
I’m Caribbean too from Guyana, South America. We call it Conkie(con.key)
Ghanaians need to travel and discover that you find these same foods all across WEST Africa not just Ghana.
@@tvs9978 its in naija
Fry dumplins in caribbean .jamaica .is puff puff in nigeria .
Pattie is meat pie in nigeria, sorel is sobe in naija,....rice and peas is jauloff rice in west Africa.
I believe rice and peas are waakye in Ghana not Jollof
Oh you are talking about the fried dumplings- Jonny cakes. It’s similar to your harder version of puff puff. And our festival is similar too
@@shinelikethesun3147 That's buns in Nigeria
Puff puff, meat pie, buns, chin chin, mosa, shook shook etc are not native to Nigeria. They were introduced by enslaved Brazilian returnees to Lagos.
Rice and peas is neither jollof nor waakye!! It’s rice and peas (gungo peas) or red peas (kidney beans). The tiny similarity doesn’t make it the same. Stop saying it’s the same. Let Jamaican take credit for their cuisine without saying it’s from here or there. It was developed in Jamaica and is Jamaican. Any similarity is just a coincidence.
If this man from Ghanaian, give him one year in Jamaica 🇯🇲 and he forget his language. I love blue dras
🤩🤩🤩😁
Barbados 🇧🇧 make this and call it conkie to recognize our independence from the British during the month of Nov
We also kenkey in Ghana
Dukuno!! Lol 😆 yet some of them talk as if they are not us and we are not them lol
In Africa Ghana they called the food tubani
Is did bojo like from suriname????
No
Most black people food in caribbean are African origin. Most.
Mix of cultures*
No it's not its mixed cultures as Slim says.
The brother just blends in
Goes also for the other enslaved Caribbean Islands. Our ancestors took their culture to the whole of America, but the US which is very develop, this culture disapear long ago.
Can’t believe what I am seeing!!! Look more of Ghana than the great Jamaica.
So now we Jamaicans know where the name boyo comes from.
Definitely from Ghana
@@dreskidreskia1 yeah
Alot Guyanese name boyo
This is dokun, as we call it in Suriname. The ingredients are slightly different.
Wow the Fantes in Ghana call it dokun too
I went down a rabbit hole de otha day and found that the African heritage is just as strong in Suriname as it is here in Jamaica... If not stronger. It's amazing! I look forward to visiting Suriname.. but the flights intercaribbean is ridiculously high. But one day still.
@@truvico No other country outside Africa meets Suriname in African culture outside Africa. Only Haïti can come close to Suriname. Not because the languages have similarities, that makes the cultures come close to each other.
Dokun heritage of African diaspora
@@clemensclemoroos4353😂 Jamaica is the most African country outside of Africa. Suriname can’t even be found close to us in that aspect
Its means countryside, EVERY WHERE U GOOOO U SEEE THE SAAME maan 🙏☝️🌏
Enjoy yourself brother
Why is it called Blue drawers?
The name is probably the same but you can see they're absolutely different foods.
We don't make dokono with coconut and cocoyam in Ghana
Stephen Kayenwee. There are changes probably because our ancestors couldn’t find corn when they got to that island. So they had to improvise with the available ingredients as at that time .
@@donamay1837 Buy yall have coconut so what happened lol.
@@donamay1837 Corn is from North America it's Meso-American so we had access to corn before any African did. I wish people would research before they type.
@@slimthickaz. . Well from what I learnt they used corn initially but subsequent generations decided to experiment with other ingredients. So I think that explains it.
@@donamay1837 Interesting, if possible can you direct me to where you found that? I am willing to learn.
Dukunoo, blue draws
No plastic wrappers strictly organic ital is vital
I think they have something similar in Montserrat. Not sure what they call it cause me ah english pickney. 😅
This is Ghanian food ooo
We eat it with pepper and fried things
The looks like Pasteles De Masa the Puerto Ricans make.
What you have here is abodoo, not dokuno, though in appearance they look the same. The dokuno in Ghana is made from corn whereas the abodoo is made from the ingredients shown in the video.
It's the same thing. Abodoo is a varient of dokuno
The Mexicans have something similar too.
We also make it with cornmeal 🇯🇲
Not all Jamaicans and /or AfroCaribes are from Ghana. We are from all over West Africa with some from Sudan and other areas..
Yes hence the term maroons. To describe the group of Africans lost on the island they would name Jamaica.
@@ChiefGodspeed For the one millionth time! Ghana did NOT name Jamaica! The Taino Indians who are the indigenous Jamaicans lived on the island for 2,500 years and named their island ‘Xyamaca’ meaning ‘land of wood and water’! In 1494 The Spanish landed and called it Jamica. Then the British fought and gained it from the Spanish and named it Jamaica. Africans were shipped in to the island many decades later. It already had a name when they were taken there! Do they teach you this in Ghana? So many Ghanaians keep on repeating this false information and they need to correct themselves!
@@cleo63100 Ghanaians couldn't even name Ghana what makes you think they'd be allowed to name a whole island😂
Crazy I didn’t say anything about Ghana. If you can read I said group of Africans. Seems you guys have something against the people of Ghana if that was eager to leave your thoughts lol
Some were from the Ivory Coast in Africa . Indians were brought in to work as indentured servants,but they chose the strong Africans so that they could work in the cane fields..
I love dukuno🇯🇲. Always knew it was Ghanian.
Ducana 🇦🇬Antigua 🇲🇸🇲🇸 Montserrat
Buyo
Visit Trinidad and Tobago 🇹🇹
This is tubani is not kenke, they ues beans to do it.
Mfanti dokono upgrade
It is called BLUE DRAWS not BLUE DRAWER
Looking at Jamaicans, u could easily mistake them for Ghanaians.
I've never seen a Jamaican that looks Ghanaian. We aren't heavy set people and we don't have that round forehead.
@@douglagyal4364 Round forehead? Don't confuse Ghanaians with East Africans