What do you guys think he’s reading?
🐍🪜…. Maybe ? Lolll
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seen from United States
What do you guys think he’s reading?
🐍🪜…. Maybe ? Lolll
Nigerian Sovereignty, Fulani Herdsmen
In late December of 2025, the American government launched a series of airstrikes in Nigeria, citing religious terrorism. Mohammed Idris Malagi (Information Minister of Nigeria) explains his concern, “couching the situation as a deliberate, systematic attack on Christians is inaccurate and harmful. It oversimplifies a complex, multifaceted security environment and plays into the hands of terrorists and criminals who seek to divide Nigerians along religious or ethnic lines.”
Princess Grace Iye Adejoh (governorship aspirant) writes, “This moment must serve as a national reckoning. Security is everyone’s responsibility. If Nigeria fails to confront terror from within, others will continue to do it for us—at a far greater cost to our dignity and sovereignty.”
Fulani herdsmen have been largely scapegoated in this mass simplification, exacerbated by American involvement. Many are unaware of who the Fulɓe people are.
Kizito Ofoneta (documentarian) notes, “The Fulani are deeply misunderstood. The majority are simply herders trying to survive, yet are paying the price for the actions of a few. This has fueled widespread discrimination, not just in Nigeria, but across West Africa, seeing all Fulani through the lens of suspicion and fear.”
The clash between herders and farmers has been a longstanding issue in Nigeria, but the Zamfara mining crisis introduced automatic weaponry into the region and has since elevated conflicts through “rural banditry and criminality,” says Fola Aina (political scientist). After mining was banned, many of the hired groups refused to disarm.
Isaac Asabor (journalist) has this to say, “The erosion of trust between communities and herdsmen threatens national cohesion.” He continues, summarizing that “Nigeria's problem is not that herdsmen are part of the nation; is it that some herdsmen have forgotten how to be part of society responsibly.”
Aesthetic of the languages on earth : Fula
Fula is a Senegambian language spoken by 37 million people over western Africa. It is an official language in Mali and Burkina-Faso a recognized minority language in Cameroon and Niger.
Souleymane's Story (2024)
Dir. Boris Lojkine
Blues has evolved from the unaccompanied vocal music and oral traditions of slaves imported from West Africa and rural Africans into a wide variety of styles and subgenres, with regional variations across the United States. Although blues (as it is now known) can be seen as a musical style based on both European harmonic structure and the African call-and-response tradition that transformed into an interplay of voice and guitar, the blues form itself bears no resemblance to the melodic styles of the West African griots. Additionally, there are theories that the four-beats-per-measure structure of the blues might have its origins in the Native American tradition of pow wow drumming. Some scholars identify strong influences on the blues from the melodic structures of certain West African musical styles of the savanna and sahel. Lucy Durran finds similarities with the melodies of the Bambara people, and to a lesser degree, the Soninke people and Wolof people, but not as much of the Mandinka people. Gerard Kubik finds similarities to the melodic styles of both the west African savanna and central Africa, both of which were sources of enslaved people.
No specific African musical form can be identified as the single direct ancestor of the blues. However the call-and-response format can be traced back to the music of Africa. That blue notes predate their use in blues and have an African origin is attested to by "A Negro Love Song", by the English composer Samuel Coleridge-Taylor, from his African Suite for Piano, written in 1898, which contains blue third and seventh notes.
The Diddley bow (a homemade one-stringed instrument found in parts of the American South sometimes referred to as a jitterbug or a one-string in the early twentieth century) and the banjo are African-derived instruments that may have helped in the transfer of African performance techniques into the early blues instrumental vocabulary. The banjo seems to be directly imported from West African music. It is similar to the musical instrument that griots and other Africans such as the Igbo played (called halam or akonting by African peoples such as the Wolof, Fula and Mandinka). However, in the 1920s, when country blues began to be recorded, the use of the banjo in blues music was quite marginal and limited to individuals such as Papa Charlie Jackson and later Gus Cannon.
Blues music also adopted elements from the "Ethiopian airs", minstrel shows and Negro spirituals, including instrumental and harmonic accompaniment. The style also was closely related to ragtime, which developed at about the same time, though the blues better preserved "the original melodic patterns of African music"
Exalted, able to see the unseen, radiant.
— Nana Asmaʼu, Women of Sufism: A Hidden Treasure, on Rabi'a al-Adawiyya, (2003)
Some of the most memorable scenes from the 1987 Malian film Yeelen by Souleymane Cissé.
Yeelen means "brightness/light" in Bambara.
Set in the 13th century, the film tells the legend of Niankoro, the son of the sorceror Soma, and ultimately their fateful confrontation.
Soma, upon seeing a vision in which his son will be the death of him, deigns to slay his son. Niankoro leaves his mother and receives a prophecy from a hyena-man, then embarks on a mystical quest to defeat his father, who is tracking him via Kore magic post through Bambara, Fula and Dogon lands.
After impressing a Fula king with his magic, and helping his men win a war against some rivals, Niankoro receives his wife Attou (after "curing" "her" infertility and the 2 laying together).
The young couple journeys across the arid sun-scorched landscape into the peaceful escarpment where Niankoro's uncle dwells. The junior shaman receives his magic Kore's Wing (wooden sorceror's implement) from his uncle (Soma's benevolent twin), to evade capture, track his father, and ensure the fulfillment of the noble prophecy of he and Attou's descendents.
Fula woman of the Wodaabe tribe