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Gullah

created by Svaha

(thing) by Svaha (6.6 y) (print)   ?   (I like it!) Sat Nov 13 1999 at 9:55:03

is a sub-culture within the larger African-American culture. Gullah people predominantly lived on the islands off the coast of the Carolinas. Many of the inhabitants of these islands escaped from slavery during the African Holocaust and maintained their African heritage and tradition. In fact, many African words have survived to this day in their "dialect". Julie Dash's film Daughters Of the Dust focused on a Gullah family on the eve of their migration north.

(thing) by goneaway (2.1 y) (print)   ?   (I like it!) 1 C! Fri Oct 06 2000 at 16:48:27

The preservation of African culture by Gullah people has a lot to do with the actual physical differences between Africans and Americans. The reason that the Gullah islands are so culturally intact was that white slaveowners didn't have the immune systems to stay on the islands with the slaves due to their carrying and being immune to malaria and other tropical diseases. Most labor supervision was done by other slaves.

Another important factor in keeping African tradition in Gullah culture has much to do with the reason that Africans were captured from the Rice Coast of Africa. They were being brought to North America to cultivate rice for the slavemasters. In order to grow rice as efficiently as they had in Africa they maintained much of the same methodology. Some of the primary tools used in harvesting rice are baskets and the traditional style of basket weaving was carried on. One of the ways that connections were established between the people of Sierra Leone and the Gullah were the nearly exact basketweaving styles of the two groups.

Another important cultural connection to Africa is the Gullah language. It was assumed by whites to be a bastardized version of English that the slaves resorted to because "their mouths couldn't assume the proper shapes" to speak proper English. It turns out that many words in Gullah are actually shared with an African language that is a common tongue for people from different regions who needed a common language to communicate at market and whatnot. It also served as a valuable tool to keep conversations between slaves secret because the slave master assumed that if they were speaking Gullah that they were not intelligent enough to conspire against him.


(thing) by SheThing (5 y) (print)   ?   (I like it!) 1 C! Thu Dec 07 2000 at 16:23:40

Nearly 24,000 West Africans were brought to the Sea Islands of South Carolina and Georgia as slaves in the years between 1804 and 1807. The meeting of these African people, each with their own dialects, and English speakers led to the language known as Gullah--similar in some respects to Creole English. Gullah is still spoken by many of the inhabitants of the Sea Islands. In fact much of the speech and social customs of these desendants remained remarkably intact due to the social islation and the Gullah people's strong sense of cultural heritage and communal life.

While the Gullah vocabulary is based in English the grammar and pronunciation derive from a host of African languages including Yoruba, Mandinka, Ewe and Twi. When the President of Sierra Leone visited the sea islands in 1980 and addressed crowds in his native language, many of the islanders had no problem understanding him.


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African Holocaust Geechee Daughters Of the Dust Stigmata
The Lord's Prayer: Pidgin English Rapid Uncontrollable Descent West African Pidgin English Creole
Black English Sierra Leone Epaminondas supply and demand
Twi Bottle tree Yoruba immune system
Preservation Ewe George W. Bush's 2005 State of the Union Address Jack Rabbit
Two-party system George W. Bush's 2004 State of the Union Address Xanth TiHKAL
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