RABI-UL HAWAL BIRTHDAY OF PROPHET MOHAMMAD (S.A.W)
"Ah See Fire" 3CE - Foul Ah
Minitage #2 - Foul Ah
"Radioactive" OCE - Foul Ah
alpha blondy
Sekouba "Bambino" Diabate - Lanaya (1994)
Freetown Street Trading (The end) part 2
Peti Lasso Kamissoko (Amadou Foula)
Union pottal cheikh Ahmad & Cheikh Mouctar Diallo
Gambia Lifewater Project 2014-04-08 Fula Kunda Broken Handpump Water Charity
Kula daje fula
fulas video ♥
KAWRAL ET GOOLE A KOLDA
Fulas Eventos
RABI-UL HAWAL BIRTHDAY OF PROPHET MOHAMMAD (S.A.W)
"Ah See Fire" 3CE - Foul Ah
Minitage #2 - Foul Ah
"Radioactive" OCE - Foul Ah
alpha blondy
Sekouba "Bambino" Diabate - Lanaya (1994)
Freetown Street Trading (The end) part 2
Peti Lasso Kamissoko (Amadou Foula)
Union pottal cheikh Ahmad & Cheikh Mouctar Diallo
Gambia Lifewater Project 2014-04-08 Fula Kunda Broken Handpump Water Charity
Kula daje fula
fulas video ♥
KAWRAL ET GOOLE A KOLDA
Fulas Eventos
REEL - AMADOUS FILMS
Interview with yar fulani!
Lisa Rohrick - The Fulani People Group, West Africa
kakaaki 1st Interview: Conflicts With Fulani Herdsmen Part 1
kakaaki 1st Interview: Conflicts With Fulani Herdsmen Part 3
kakaaki 1st Interview: Conflicts With Fulani Herdsmen Part 4
The Fulani People
Lenora Fulani Interviews with a Black Independent: Roscoe Orman 6.3.11
Black people party entrance Vs West African Fulani party en
How to solve Fulani Herdsmen vs Farmers clashes in Nigeria - MIYETTI Allah Secretary
We Fulani are Not From Here: Race, Place, and Constructing Identity
Tiv, Fulani Clash: Most Marauding Herdsmen Are Not Fulani Prt1
WinkBall : Amkoullel The Fula Child Freestyle Rap Mali Stylee
Fulani 1 song
Papa Wemba - Cycle de verité - Fula Ngenge
A Brief History of Fulani in South Carolina. by Elijah Shabazz
Tiv, Fulani Clash: Soldiers May Be Involved
أول أغنية فلاتية سودانيةعلى-1st Sudanese Fulani Song on-youtube
ABSTRAKKNATION TV: FULANI MALIK JR "blakkmagikk" Exclusive
THE GAMBIA CULTURE : FULA SHOW PART 1
Mkasi - SO2E09 With Babu Sikare (Albino Fulani)
Baaba Maal "Dakar Moon" Live on Soundcheck
Who Killed Tupac Shakur and Biggie Smalls? Interview with Detective Greg Kading
Diffa; Les premiers matins du monde (Fulani - English subtitles)
Fula people or Fulani or Fulbe (Fula: Fulɓe; French: Peul; Hausa: Fulan; Portuguese: Fula; Wolof: Pël; Bambara: Fulaw) are an ethnic group spread over many countries, predominantly in West Africa, but found also in Central Africa and Sudanese North Africa. African countries where they are present include Mauritania, Ghana, Senegal, Guinea, The Gambia, Mali, Nigeria, Sierra Leone, Benin, Burkina Faso, Guinea Bissau, Cameroon, Côte d'Ivoire, Niger, Chad, Togo, the Central African Republic, Liberia, and as far as Sudan and Egypt in the East. Fula people form a minority in every country they inhabit, but in Guinea they represent a plurality of the population (40%).
There are also many names (and spellings of the names) used in other languages to refer to the Fulɓe. Fulani in English is borrowed from the Hausa term, and it is also used by the Manding peoples, being the diminutive form of the word "Fula" in their language, essentially meaning "little Fula". Fula, from Manding languages, is also used in English, and sometimes spelled Fulah or Foulah. Fula and Fulani are commonly used in English, including within Africa. The French borrowed the Wolof term Pël, which is variously spelled: Peul, Peulh, and even Peuhl. More recently the Fulfulde / Pulaar term Fulɓe, which is a plural noun (singular, Pullo) has been Anglicised as Fulbe, which some people use. In Portuguese, the terms Fula or Futafula are used.
A town is a human settlement larger than a village but smaller than a city. The size definition for what constitutes a "town" varies considerably in different parts of the world, so that, for example, many "small towns" in the United States would be regarded as villages in the United Kingdom, while many British "small towns" would qualify as cities in the United States.
The word town shares an origin with the German word Zaun, the Dutch word tuin, and the Old Norse tun. The German word Zaun comes closest to the original meaning of the word: a fence of any material.
In English and Dutch, the meaning of the word took on the sense of the space which these fences enclosed. In English, it was a small city that could not afford or was not allowed to build walls or other larger fortifications, and built a palisade or stockade instead (many early English settlements in North America used stockades.) In the Netherlands, this space was a garden, more specifically those of the wealthy, which had a high fence or a wall around them (like the garden of palace 't Loo in Apeldoorn, which was the example for the privy garden of William and Mary at Hampton Court). In Old Norse tun means a (grassy) place between farmhouses, and is still used in a similar meaning in modern Norwegian.
Alpha Blondy (born January 1, 1953) is a reggae singer and international recording artist. Alpha Blondy was born Seydou Koné in Dimbokro, Côte d'Ivoire. He sings mainly in his native language of Dioula, in French and in English, and sometimes in Arabic or Hebrew. His lyrics convey serious political attitudes and a sense of humor.
First son of a family of 9 children, Seydou Kone was raised by his grandmother, growing up in what he described as "among elders", which later was to have a big impact on his career. In 1962, Alpha Blondy went to join his father in Odienné, where he spent ten years, attending the Sainte Elisabeth high school, and getting involved in the Ivory Coast students movement. Here he formed a band. But, this hobby affected his schooling and Alpha Blondy was expelled due to poor attendance. His parents then sent him to study English in Monrovia in the neighboring country of Liberia in 1973. He spent thirteen months there and then moved to the United States of America to improve his English.
Sekouba "Bambino" Diabaté is the stage name of Sekouba Diabaté, a singer and musician born in Guinea, West Africa in 1964.
Bambino was born and raised in the village of Kintinya, some 25 kilometers from the town of Siguiri, close to the border with Mali. He was born into a musical family, and is descended from a long line of griot people, known in some Mande languages as jeli. His mother died when he was three years old, but left behind a legacy in the songs she had recorded which her son later heard on the radio. Her music became one of his main influences. Her death left Bambino with his father, who did not encourage his musical aspirations, hoping he would follow him working in his transport company, but from age eight, Bambino Diabaté sang with local bands and began to achieve musical renown. When he was 16, then-President Sékou Touré, (a music lover) who had heard him sing with local bands, insisted that he join Bembeya Jazz, Guinea's best-known musical group.
Thus, in 1983, at the age of 19, Diabaté was asked to join Bembeya Jazz, Guinea's best-known musical group. He was given the nickname "Bambino" to distinguish him from one of the group's guitarists also named Sekou Diabaté (a.k.a. Sekou "Bembeya" a.k.a. "Diamond Fingers"). With Bembeya Jazz, the young vocalist undertook his first tour of Africa in 1985 and toured Europe the following year.
It seems that when I bleep,
I make love to my little clarinet...
See, Mignonne, hath not the Rose,
That this morning did unclose
Her purple mantle to the light,
Lost, before the day be dead,
The glory of her raiment red,
Her colour, bright as yours is bright?
And if you touch me I'll die, I'll die,