Once you are away from your country, taken or voluntarily, culture and relatives may be all you have left.
Enslaved Africans kept African history and culture alive by telling stories.
Africans told stories because they had wanted to keep their culture alive. When they were enslaved, africans were forbidden to read or write. As a solution, they told stories to teach their children about their culture and life.
Wangaari Mathaai , Wole Soyinka and Julius Nyere
Enslaved Africans kept African history and culture alive by telling stories.
No. The pharaonic tradition essentially died out after the death of Cleopatra and the domination of Egypt by the Greeks and other subsequently dominant cultures.
Enslaved Africans kept African history and culture alive by telling stories.
Enslaved Africans kept African history and culture alive by telling stories.
their cultures, values, traditions, and beliefs were kept alive and spread in society
Enslaved Africans kept African history and culture alive by telling stories.
Enslaved Africans kept African history and culture alive by telling stories.
Africans told stories because they had wanted to keep their culture alive. When they were enslaved, africans were forbidden to read or write. As a solution, they told stories to teach their children about their culture and life.
no way man!
Many enslaved people cope with the miserable conditions they faced by keeping family traditions alive.
Many enslaved people cope with the miserable conditions they faced by keeping family traditions alive.
They kept family traditions alive
When the African Slaves were enslaved, they sang slave songs. Some were secret messages, and others helped to preserve their culture. They sang about several different things, and about loved ones or about things they loved, and the songs were passed down from generation to generation.
Wangaari Mathaai , Wole Soyinka and Julius Nyere