What on Earth Happened to the Acadians/Cajuns?

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  • čas přidán 25. 08. 2024
  • What on Earth happened to the Acadians, better known in most of the United States as the Cajuns? Hundreds of years ago, there was a distinct territory and culture that developed in North America that was a product of French imperialism, located in what is now modern day Canada. However, after conflicts with the British, their descendants had one of the most dramatic and interesting tales of trials and tribulations seen in any community in the US or Canada.
    In today's video we're going to be discussing the history of the Acadians and what happened to their modern day descendants, such as the Cajuns, and how and why they ended up where they did, with many of these Acadian refugees ending up all across the globe. Thanks for watching!
    Sources:
    davenkathy.blo... www.acadian-caj... www.louisianafo... www.britannica... www.thecanadia... www.census.gov...

Komentáře • 1K

  • @christianlandgrave5796
    @christianlandgrave5796 Před 4 lety +253

    Here’s a fun fact: Boudreaux and Thibodeaux jokes exist in both south Louisiana and in Nova Scotia suggesting that the jokes are a centuries old tradition.

    • @Werebat
      @Werebat Před 3 lety +18

      New England Acadian here. Heard my firest Thibodeaux joke from a Cajun I met at a crawfish boil in New Orleans a couple years ago!

    • @christianlandgrave5796
      @christianlandgrave5796 Před 3 lety +4

      T Landry According to a couple nova scotians, yeah. Pretty interesting.

    • @shesaidyousaid6181
      @shesaidyousaid6181 Před 3 lety +8

      I’m glad my dad left me. Now I get to keep my moms maiden name , boudreaux.

    • @tylerdordon99
      @tylerdordon99 Před 3 lety +1

      The only boudreau I know is called Chance. He has an epic mullet and loves pumching snakes in the face.

    • @marquesloving620
      @marquesloving620 Před 3 lety +3

      We wrote a stage play titled: Boudreaux and Thibodeaux's Wedding

  • @Demographiaanthropology
    @Demographiaanthropology Před 4 lety +480

    it's interesting how most of the French in Louisiana are actually originally from Nova Scotia rather than france

    • @StandWatie1862
      @StandWatie1862 Před 4 lety +68

      Via France

    • @theephraimite
      @theephraimite Před 4 lety +56

      Andre Cailloux, I know, but it’s not like French Canadians popped up out of thin air in America. They had an origin in Europe. I had their origins in mind when I said what I said. Yes, I understand they are now separate from France politically.

    • @kamikazes03
      @kamikazes03 Před 4 lety +11

      More specifically from Nantes, on seven ships in 1785.

    • @fduranthesee
      @fduranthesee Před 4 lety +24

      we're still french
      viva la france
      et vive le republique du francais
      (my french is kinda sloppy, i'm still learning but still)

    • @Ghostrider-vo6dl
      @Ghostrider-vo6dl Před 4 lety +20

      Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and PEI actually. We lived throughout L'Acadie

  • @uydagcusdgfughfgsfggsifg753
    @uydagcusdgfughfgsfggsifg753 Před 4 lety +242

    We’re still out here!

    • @mlgdigimon
      @mlgdigimon Před 4 lety +33

      Nick Lorraine yeah people seem to think we disappeared or something

    • @brand0able
      @brand0able Před 4 lety +32

      Still here but slowly dying out. When the language dies I think the culture dies. Everything that we have here is in French, music, art, entertainment and I think if that goes, so does the rest of it. Lâchez pas

    • @Etienne4201
      @Etienne4201 Před 4 lety +16

      Le bonjour de France, mes amis!

    • @brand0able
      @brand0able Před 4 lety +11

      Etienne4201 bonjour de Lousiane!

    • @purplespeckledappleeater8738
      @purplespeckledappleeater8738 Před 4 lety +4

      Still here too. We no longer speak French though

  • @Me2Lancer
    @Me2Lancer Před 4 lety +77

    Thank you for this excellent post. I live in the Fort Worth, Texas area. In the 1980s I worked for a company that employed a large number of Cajuns from south Louisiana. They continued to speak their French dialect between themselves and much of the time called themselves French. They made it very clear they were not Creoles. These Cajuns made excellent employees.

    • @xanimationsyt7423
      @xanimationsyt7423 Před 2 lety +4

      Very kind words ☺️

    • @jessecerasus9621
      @jessecerasus9621 Před 2 lety +2

      Thank you for sharing this experience.

    • @denistardif6650
      @denistardif6650 Před rokem +4

      acadian where i live would throw logs in the water and would roll them down to the wood mill by jumping and riding the logs like a raft durring the heaviest currents of the year. they called this "la drave" it is a part of the culture were i live and the men who did this were the last people to practice la drave in america

    • @muchgreatness7497
      @muchgreatness7497 Před 9 měsíci

      @@denistardif6650 #RockStars!

    • @dinkster1729
      @dinkster1729 Před 7 měsíci

      @@denistardif6650 The drive, an Anglicisme no doubt. My grandfather died after a week when he was hit by a log. He died on March 19, 1933. I have always wondered if he wasn't killed in a "drave" rather than in a farm accident given the time of year. My father had an uncle, a young man, who was blown out to sea on the Bay of Chaleur. My father detested the water and when my mother wanted to live by the water here in Ontario flatly refused to have anything to do with her plan. I wonder if those 2 accidents influenced my father's thinking.

  • @Euromerican
    @Euromerican Před 4 lety +73

    Louisiana Cajun here. You got it right for the most part cher!

    • @cruzgomes5660
      @cruzgomes5660 Před 3 lety +2

      What did he not get right

    • @nataliekenny7490
      @nataliekenny7490 Před 3 lety +3

      Acadian here from the Canadian east coast 👋

    • @jonathansgarden9128
      @jonathansgarden9128 Před 2 lety +4

      @@cruzgomes5660 He missed some important points about the Acadians in Canada. There are more communities there than he mentioned.

    • @cruzgomes5660
      @cruzgomes5660 Před 2 lety +1

      @@jonathansgarden9128 where at?

    • @bobbertsonlarz1743
      @bobbertsonlarz1743 Před 2 měsíci

      ​@@cruzgomes5660Alberta for one. I know a few out there, I met one who is a fellow lifter, except he's a pro, and I found out we shared an ancestor. Ever since, I been vibing with him and his whenever I get the chance. He travels often for competitions, and his people are sweet as peach pie.

  • @beautyindarkness8146
    @beautyindarkness8146 Před 4 lety +89

    As a direct descendant of the Acadians, thank you for covering this.

  • @Johnosaka
    @Johnosaka Před 4 lety +199

    I'm an Acadian from New Brunwick and also a public school French teacher in Nova Scotia, so I am lucky enough to experience my culture in both provinces. Your video was quite good, but much like The Dollop episode on the subject you missed a lot of important information. There is still a thriving Acadian community all over Atlantic Canada, and while there have been many attempts to assimilate us, we are still here. In New Brunswick and Nova Scotia we have our own French school boards. In New Brunswick we represent about 32% of the population, while in Nova Scotia, it is around 5%. The majority of people identifying as Acadians speak French, though many people who consider themselves Acadian have non-French ancestry (Irish, Scottish, Mi'qmaq, even Lebanese). In my hometown and even in New Brunswick as a whole people with last names like McGraw, Richardson, MacLaughlin are likely French speaking. Statistics don't account for the whole story. We're still here, we still speak French, and we still celebrate our culture.
    Thank you for the video. I know you can't get everything 100%, especially considering how many you make. I appreciate the effort you put in.

    • @Kai-xr6vs
      @Kai-xr6vs Před 4 lety +34

      They seem to think there are no Acadians left in the maritimes or something... how does one research the Acadians and miss that there are still 300 000 french-speaking Acadians in Acadie? J'en peut plus

    • @JAlex-dg5mk
      @JAlex-dg5mk Před 4 lety +3

      www.museeacadien.com/implantation-acadienne
      acadiensduquebec.org/monuments.php
      J'ai des ancêtres Acadiens qui ont été déportés dans les colonies américaines en 1755 et qui se sont établis au Québec (Lanaudière) en 1766 et 1767.

    • @Kai-xr6vs
      @Kai-xr6vs Před 4 lety +8

      @@JAlex-dg5mk Trop cool, la plupart des Québécois ont au moins un peu d'ascendance Acadienne mais les régions de Trois-Rivières, Lanaudière, Nicolet, Louiseville, Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu, Gaspésie et les îles-de-la-madeleine ont des concentrations les plus fortes.

    • @joecrachemontange4613
      @joecrachemontange4613 Před 3 lety +8

      je suis un acadien du nord du maine.

    • @snakesmcgee7640
      @snakesmcgee7640 Před 2 lety +9

      Well, the amount of intermarriage between the Mi'kmaq and Acadians (both before and after the deportation) is significant enough that both populations were effectively hybridized. Anecdotally, as a Nova Scotian Acadian, I've met tons of Acadians that look like First Nations people and Mi'kmaq who look European. Which of the two groupings you find yourself in tends to boil down to a complex network of amicable back-and-forth assimilation rather than strict ancestry. Which to me is neat, as someone who values cultural identity over genetic lineage.

  • @gabrielseaborn257
    @gabrielseaborn257 Před 4 lety +65

    !!!! I can’t believe somebody finally made this video! The Acadians are such a fascinating group to talk about and I’m glad you did

  • @hikiwa1
    @hikiwa1 Před 4 lety +142

    0:56 I love you.
    There's so much information that are missing from the english wikipedia pages that talk about the English Conquest and their post-war threatment of the catholics in the Lower Canada. Acadiens, Irish, Québecois, Métis and even Scottish suffered greatly during their reign of assimilation and destruction. Masaman, if you ever want to talk in great details of the 'why' there are so little old French habitations left inbetween Montréal and Québec City, the main reason was the burning, destruction, raping of all the inhabitants of the regions, in their conquest, they sought to absolutely destroy the seigniorial system of New France. The hanging of Louis Riel, the Patriots hangings.. .All those things were made before the Durham report, which called all of them “a people with no literature and no history --” (without stating, that they destroyed most of the culture and literature, with the exile of all the nouveau-nobles, bourgeois and nobles back to France...)
    A lot of Acadiens were shut in chapels and burnt alive, as catholic church had little values to protestants, reformists, etc. The men were sent away by ships to work as indebted workers, or simply put slaves. You should read up the poem 'Évangéline' which although a little fictionalize, does account for what the Acadians had to live through.
    I'll give you a bunch of credited sources, I need for people to understand the plight of the people of 'lower' Canada, the British Empire was brutal and did a lot of horrible things that isn't represented whatsoever in the Anglo-sphere of the internet.
    Love you brother, take care.

    • @boozecruiser
      @boozecruiser Před 4 lety +8

      That's based as fuck. Vae victis

    • @harfangbleu
      @harfangbleu Před 4 lety +22

      French Canadians and Acadians suffered a great deal because of the British conquest, but we are still here, and proud of our heritage!
      Vaincu nous fûmes, mais certainement pas mort!

    • @EdinburghFive
      @EdinburghFive Před 3 lety +5

      Linkyoo - you have no idea what you are talking about concerning the Acadians. There were no "Acadiens were shut in chapels and burnt alive". The Acadian men were not shipped off into indentured servitude (what you are calling indebted workers) or into slavery. Evangeline, A Tale of Acadie is a wonderful epic poem. It only imparts a very rudimentary idea of Acadia and the Acadians. It was very successful at mythologizing Acadians.
      You are also overstating what the British did "in between Montréal and Québec City". Furthermore, the British did not "absolutely destroy the seigniorial system ". It actually flourished under the British. The British had no issue with the seigneurial system. In Acadia for example the British government bought some of the seigneuries and thus participated directly in the system. You really do not know the history. The Durham Report was issued in 1839. Riel was not hanged until 1885. This act takes place after Canada became a nation, thus it has nothing to do with the British.
      You should do a little broader reading about French imperialism. It was pretty brutal.

    • @nickmtp8824
      @nickmtp8824 Před 2 lety +1

      Je suis français Bourguignon et même si je n'ai jamais été au Canada, je me suis intéressé à l'histoire de l'Acadie. C'est fou ce que vous avez vécu et je respecte votre courage. Ce que les anglais ont fait en acadie, ça me rappelle la guerre des boers où les anglais ont inventé les camps de concentration pour matter les boers. Beaucoup en sont morts.

    • @xanimationsyt7423
      @xanimationsyt7423 Před 2 lety +6

      Linkyoo is right. Do not try to even downplay what happened. She or he is on point with information. I'm Cajun french from Acadia Parish Louisiana. The oppression is deep. It was the first ethnic cleansing years before Jamestown. Just because there's no movie doesn't make it any less real. In the 1930s a law was passed so French children were forced to learn and speak English in school. My grandmother was severely paddled for accidentally speaking French. It should be taught in all schools in Louisiana and any Acadie communities in America as Spanish is taught in schools in southwestern America. All the Acadians were guilty of was not bowing down to the crown and being a proud people. The language might be slowly dying here, but the culture is rich. It's impressive after 100s of years of oppression Southern Louisiana has not forgotten her motherland and is like a different world in America

  • @_JCM_NB_
    @_JCM_NB_ Před 3 lety +12

    Metis-acadian from nouveau Brunswick we are very much still here! Sadly alot of our language has been assimilated from us due to the traumas of our elders regarding many things but the connection and history will always have been !!

  • @nathanriver1556
    @nathanriver1556 Před 2 lety +33

    As an Acadian, all I have to say is that we're still here (even though there aren't a lot of us).
    Amusingly one of the Acadia day tradition at least in New Brunswick is the tintamarre, which is a parade where Acadians do as much noise as possible (literally).

    • @Lostparadigm
      @Lostparadigm Před 3 měsíci

      Breaux here 💥

    • @ThisIsMyYoutubeName1
      @ThisIsMyYoutubeName1 Před 2 měsíci

      I don’t know about that. I had DNA testing done with 2 different companies and I have probably 6,000 matches in Canada and I am a Louisiana native. I have some lines that came from Quebec, but more of the ones from Acadia. Y’all are still big up there

  • @jonathansgarden9128
    @jonathansgarden9128 Před 2 lety +16

    My grandfather knew French fluently. He wasn't allowed to speak it at school and gotten beaten a few times for doing so. My mom learned French in school on her own but didn't pass it down. No with my generation and the internet, i am purposely learning Cajun french to pass it down and to others!

  • @mauiroy2124
    @mauiroy2124 Před 4 lety +27

    I'm Cajun. My family is from Houma, Raceland, and Thibodeaux. Manifest from the ship shows my family landed in Acadia in 1640. We were french fur trappers, canoe people that spread to the west , then down the Mississippi river to southern Louisiana by 1730. One of my ancestors was a Colonel in the Point Coupe militia in the American Revolutionary War, and some of my ancestors were with Jean Lafitte at Barataria. My family is part Chippewa and Houma indian. My grandmother spoke only Cajun french until she was 35 years old.

    • @thelifeandtimesronaldloupe7869
      @thelifeandtimesronaldloupe7869 Před rokem +1

      From Des allemands myself

    • @IslenoGutierrez
      @IslenoGutierrez Před rokem +3

      Did you know today’s “Cajuns” today are not Acadians but rather a mixture of ancestors from Acadie, France and Québec? When the Acadians arrived in Louisiana, they mixed with the French Creoles (white Louisianians of ancestry from France and Québec) who were already here in Louisiana. That’s how many of the surnames of “Cajun” identified folks today are of French Creole origin such as surnames like Ardoin, Fontenot, Rabalais, Dupré, Fuselier, Cantrelle, Mayeux, Pellegrin, Vidrine, Chauvin, Rodrigue, Soileau and too many others to list. Some of my family is from Houma too, the Autin family and Autin is of French Creole origin that originally came from Québec. Many people in Louisiana do not know this.

  • @arthur__lt
    @arthur__lt Před 4 lety +100

    N'oublions pas les Acadiens ! 🇨🇦🇨🇵

    • @fs400ion
      @fs400ion Před 2 měsíci

      Fait qu'ils fassent des enfants pis un pays

  • @alexanderjohnson8800
    @alexanderjohnson8800 Před 3 lety +14

    As a direct descendant of the Acadians having people cover my ancestors makes me happy. My ancestors were some of first Acadians to settle in South Louisiana after being ousted by the British.

  • @lefloconblanc
    @lefloconblanc Před 3 lety +12

    Je suis une descendante acadienne je suis Québécois ma mère et sa famille sont de la bay des chaleurs en Gaspésie j’ai bien aimé votre rapportage sur les acadiens

  • @Masaman
    @Masaman  Před 4 lety +59

    *So guys, we did it, we reached a third of a million subscribers. 333,000 subscribers and still growing. The fact that we reached this number....*
    Okay memes aside, wow! Thanks all! My recent hiatus was partially due to my 6 year old laptop suddenly (and unexpectedly) getting bricked, and although I lost a lot of progress on nearly a dozen videos I was working on at the time, thankfully I had a lot of my bigger projects backed up and I was able to recover them on my new fancy big-boy laptop. These projects include:
    Updated ethno-racial map of the world
    Geo-cultural map of the world
    Updated global migration map of the world
    And I'm even starting a new short mystery/horror story I might link here if it's any good (CreepsMcPasta narrated the last one I wrote called “There's Something in the Fields Behind my Apartment” if you're interested)
    But yeah, thanks for a third of a million! Peace out fellas

    • @mr.meister7617
      @mr.meister7617 Před 4 lety +2

      Nice

    • @Demographiaanthropology
      @Demographiaanthropology Před 4 lety +2

      wow awesome. Also, i'm glad you're back

    • @duck1ente
      @duck1ente Před 4 lety

      Is this a pyro reference?

    • @f4u21ramon8
      @f4u21ramon8 Před 4 lety

      Hi masaman brother please your explainer about syeilendra kingdom in indonesia, build Borobudur and prambanan temple and what connection about syeilendra and sriwijaya empire.
      This is vital for southeast asian archipilago .
      Help

    • @abloodorange5233
      @abloodorange5233 Před 4 lety +1

      Are you going to do the genetics of the levant?

  • @kamelhaj6850
    @kamelhaj6850 Před 4 lety +21

    When I was learning French in high school (Buffalo, NY area), our class once crossed into Canada to attend a French Mass in Port Colborne, Ontario.

  • @charlene9693
    @charlene9693 Před 3 lety +13

    I wish people knew more about the suffering that my ancestors went through ...

    • @bigb8179
      @bigb8179 Před 2 lety +4

      Our people weren't victims they carved out a amazing way of life in a place others could not. Britain's loss.

    • @ChildishSoap
      @ChildishSoap Před 2 měsíci

      Yup ​@@bigb8179

  • @nowellm
    @nowellm Před 4 lety +20

    In 1961 a French-speaking National Guard outfit from from Lafayette, Louisiana, stayed at our barracks at Fort Sill, Oklahoma for their summer camp. Years later there was a documentary about Lafayette on television where old people were saying the youngsters weren’t speaking French anymore.

    • @laurenmeadors3501
      @laurenmeadors3501 Před 4 lety +8

      That’s because they haven’t taught it to us , when I grand parents went to school they were punished and beat if they spoke Louisiana French .So they didn’t teach it to their children and I our parents couldn’t teach us.

    •  Před 3 lety +2

      I’m from Lafayette and my father’s generation spoke French but we don’t. They passed a law in 1921 that French couldn’t be spoken in school so it was only spoken at home. It soon began dying out.

    • @dorisbetts3012
      @dorisbetts3012 Před rokem +4

      @@laurenmeadors3501 This was the case in the Maritime provinces ( formerly Acadie, and the ancestral home of the Acadian/ Cajun people). But it has changed. We now have 22 Acadian French schools in Nova Scotia and I taught at our local school. My son graduated from there and is bilingual. I did not have this opportunity as a student but the Acadian people fought for the right to have their own schools and school board here and won in the 1990s. Because I have French Acadian ancestry, my son had the right to attend this school and reclaim his cultural heritage. I hooe the Cajun people will work at establishing French immersive schools for the survival of their own cultural heritage!

    • @dinkster1729
      @dinkster1729 Před 7 měsíci

      @@dorisbetts3012 You're in Nova Scotia. How many immersion programmes are there around you? When my daughter and son were enrolled in the French school here in Kingston, Ontario in the early 1980s, the discrimination against Anglophones trying to enroll their kids in that school was horrible. It got worse a bit later when an absolute Francophobe moved in from Toronto to be the superintendent of French as a 2nd language.. He wouldn't even let the French as a 2nd language consultant tell people that they could enroll their kids in the French first language school if they been in Early French Immersion elsewhere. I was told that just a couple of years before when I found out that there was no Early French Immersion programme here. Dirty secret! Anglophone, non Roman Catholic families could enroll their kids in the French first language school and the public board would pay their fees and pick up the tab for bus transportation. We, myself and a few supporters, fought for 3 years to have the Early French Immersion programme started in the public board. We finally won, not because we were really well organize, but because the court case that said that Francophones and non -Francophones with kids enrolled in the elementary and high school French first language programmes would be putting 3 board members on the school boards. Can't have that, right? French power! and Early French Immersion power! So, now, the French first language schools have been opened to Anglophones with no language test and we have Early Total French Immersion and Early Partial Immersion in place.

    • @DeplorableArab
      @DeplorableArab Před 23 dny

      As someone from that area, my grandma would speak Cajun French when she was talking to other adults, so we kids wouldn't know what they were saying. And in most of the adults doing that, they never did teach us kids. Although, we know some from hearing it so frequently.

  • @Louisiana1975
    @Louisiana1975 Před 2 lety +9

    I'm the last generation, who will remember this. #1975 #lostculture
    I still remember my grandmother(Smith/Dupree) talking on the phone in french, so we didn't understand what they were saying. But we heard our names, so we knew they were talking about us lol

  • @GrantJBratcher
    @GrantJBratcher Před 4 lety +11

    My mom’s family was nearly entirely Cajun. Both sides of her family spoke French 2 generations ago. They told my grandparents that “French was a dirty language” and refused to speak it around them. This is due to the aftermath of Louisiana’s policy that education was compulsory and must be in English. So sadly know I just know a little French. We are very protective of our culture in other aspects though, for example our food, music, and surprisingly our flag are everywhere and I don’t think that is going anywhere. It has only been in the last. Pulled decades Cajun culture has seen a reserve me in pride and I hope we can assert ourselves more in the future.

  • @kszush9575
    @kszush9575 Před 10 měsíci +2

    My Mother's family is French Cajun! My Father's family is Hungarian! How luckey am I to have had my Grandfather meet a Cajun Lady and fall in ❤️! Raised in South Louisiana, And I am Proud of It. Last name does not stop the Heritage! Everywhere I go they know where I'm from, just by the sound of my voice! Rock On+ Life Rocks!!

  • @DegenerateSharingan
    @DegenerateSharingan Před 4 lety +43

    Oh yeah my boy Mase is back!

  • @BedeLaplume
    @BedeLaplume Před 4 lety +62

    Although I was born in Montréal, I am a direct descendant of the Acadians settled in New Brunswick.. Kudos to your rigorous excellent historical research work.. In my humble opinion, I would tell you that the Acadians living in the Northern part of the province of New-Brunswick due to their proximity to Québec, to their dynamism and creativity are likely to survive.. However for the other more dispersed communities in Nova Scotia and Prince-Edward Island, the struggle to keep their culture is perhaps more fragile or uncertain.. I could be very wrong about that last point. Because as you know, history has surely proved the incredible resilience against overwhelming odds of the Acadian culture..

    • @abeezysportsxentertainment
      @abeezysportsxentertainment Před 4 lety

      Same as here.

    • @selenadawnwilson1534
      @selenadawnwilson1534 Před 4 lety +6

      Dartmouth is building a french school due to the demand from the acadien population

    • @alancloutier8820
      @alancloutier8820 Před 3 lety +3

      I appreciate learning anything that has to do with Acadian culture and appreciate the research . it is very interesting.I was born in the states (Maine) my paternal grandparents are from Quebec & my maternal grandparents are New Brunswick , ST Nobert & Caraquet ( my mother is a Dugas) there is a book called Jeanne Dugas 1731-1817 its very good reading.

    • @collinhaas6137
      @collinhaas6137 Před 3 lety +1

      Hey my mom is also born in Montreal but has family in new Brunswick I wonder if we are related LOL

    • @anthonycarroll6546
      @anthonycarroll6546 Před 3 lety +5

      @@alancloutier8820 we have a lot of Dugas people here in Louisiana

  • @Demographiaanthropology
    @Demographiaanthropology Před 4 lety +43

    as a canadian, i'm glad you finally covered this

  • @seanryan7729
    @seanryan7729 Před 4 lety +8

    Nova Scotian here. Acadian French and culture still alive in the Annapolis Valley in the south and in Cape Breton in various areas. Also found throughout coast of New Brunswick.

    • @canadiancontent352
      @canadiancontent352 Před 4 lety +3

      Thank you, and in Prince Edward Island and parts of Newfoundland as well

    • @BatCaveOz
      @BatCaveOz Před 4 lety +1

      Pomquet is still keeping Acadian culture alive.

    • @dorisbetts3012
      @dorisbetts3012 Před rokem

      And in Petit de Grat on Isle Madame Cape Breton and in Cheticamp, in Pubnico on the southern tip on NS and along the French shore of the Bay of Fundy in Metegan and Point de l'Eglise past the Annapolis Valley. And we can't forget Pomquet. There are French Acadian communities in PEI and also in Newfoundland, I believe.

    • @dinkster1729
      @dinkster1729 Před 7 měsíci

      @@dorisbetts3012 Would Ile de la Madeleine be Acadian or Québecois or both?

  • @oldgamerdufe2595
    @oldgamerdufe2595 Před 4 lety +71

    My great grandma spoke no English. She passed when I was 20. Her daughter, my grandma, spoke both languages and would intermingle English and French. She passed a year after my great grandma. My mother could speak Cajun but rarely did. She passed 10 years ago. I only know a few words but rarely use them. My children don't know much about our culture as they have no interest and we now live in panhandle of Florida. And lots of Cajuns live in the Panhandle.
    Also my grandmas lived in Gueydan. From what I understand the family helped found the town.

    • @StandWatie1862
      @StandWatie1862 Před 4 lety +12

      That's your fault. My grandpa was the last speaker but I'm still learning it on my own to pass down

    • @thegreatalyssa
      @thegreatalyssa Před 4 lety +5

      I grew up speaking many languages. The ones most important to me to pass down are Chahta (which has some French words), English, Spanish, and Italian. This is what I did with children to teach them these languages (and it was tiring) is when I said something in one language, I said the same thing in the other three that I wanted to pass down so they would hear the same thing in four languages. It worked.

    • @pwnageshow2549
      @pwnageshow2549 Před 4 lety +5

      Lol just learn french on duolingo and youre set 😂 you can add learning french from quebec which more similar to how french north amerikab people spoke
      Its not like it was berber or a native amerindian language where its very hard to learn it on internet due to lack of good quality complete online ressources 😂
      For english speaker learning french is easy. Much more easy then learning russian or japaneese korean

    •  Před 4 lety +9

      It’s the American way, you get stripped of your culture and identity and get rebranded “American”. Your kids grow up and go to school in a culture that promotes being “American” and being anything else will get you bullied.

    • @StandWatie1862
      @StandWatie1862 Před 4 lety

      @ yeah. Still they come. It doesn't work.

  • @ariareveluv
    @ariareveluv Před 3 lety +10

    8:45 is very inaccurate, I'm Acadian from New Brunswick. We are very loud and proud, go to any French speaking region and you will see Acadian flags literally everywhere on everything.

    • @huskyfaninmass1042
      @huskyfaninmass1042 Před 3 lety +1

      Does anyone identify as Quebecois?

    • @ariareveluv
      @ariareveluv Před 3 lety

      @@huskyfaninmass1042 people from Quebec only

    • @dm9489
      @dm9489 Před 3 lety

      Same! Acadian from NB and Acadian Culture is alive and well.

  • @JMM33RanMA
    @JMM33RanMA Před 4 lety +14

    A very interesting video. There is a group of French immigrants who were driven out of France and not welcomed in Quebec, the Huguenots. So, in Massachusetts, we have French Protestant Huguenots and Quebec Catholics. Keep up the good work.

    • @bouchacourtthierry8506
      @bouchacourtthierry8506 Před 3 lety +1

      In south Africa : 1/4 of dutch Settlers were huguenots .. as they were deported themselves during Révocation of Edith de Nantes ...

    • @marquesloving620
      @marquesloving620 Před 3 lety +1

      Very well done, Mon Ami! He suis an sud Louisiane Cajun

    • @vernicejillmagsino9603
      @vernicejillmagsino9603 Před 2 lety

      Recent Quebec is open to all immigrants and religion could be live for French Huguenots who are immigrants especially when they still speak and keep French culture

    • @IslenoGutierrez
      @IslenoGutierrez Před rokem

      Louisiana is loaded with ancestry from direct from France and Québec. Many people don’t know this, but the “Cajuns” in Louisiana are a three-way mix of Acadian-French-Québécois because when the Acadians arrived to Louisiana they intermarried with the French Creoles (these are white Louisianians of ancestry from France and Québec). There are other white Louisianians today that still identify as French Creoles. Also, there are mixed race type Creoles of a mixture of European and West African descent called Creoles of Color and their European side is mostly a mixture of ancestry from France and Québec (via the French Creoles) but many also have Acadian descent too. Cajuns used to be called Acadian Creoles. Creole means to be a local born person to Louisiana (of any race or ancestry) of old world ancestry (any ancestry not of Native American origin, which is new world) and usually descended from the colonial Louisiana population (of any race or ancestry). Creoles are usually either white, mixed race or black in Louisiana.

    • @dinkster1729
      @dinkster1729 Před 7 měsíci

      @@vernicejillmagsino9603 Quebec is not too friendly to Arab women wearing hijabs at work in the public service, right? Legault is really pushing the envelope. I think eventually Montreal will just say , "Bye-Bye!" to Quebec.

  • @RickShort21
    @RickShort21 Před 4 lety +9

    Thank you for keeping Acadian history alive.
    An idea for next time; chronicle the Acadian migration up the St. Lawrence and into northern New York State.

    • @dinkster1729
      @dinkster1729 Před 7 měsíci

      Yeah! I'm in Kingston, Ontario and, apparently, there were a lot of French-Canadians in northern Frontenac County and also along the St Lawrence river. However they were never expelled and just assimilated so their story is not that tragic, I guess. There was certainly discrimination. One study tried to show that French Canadian kids in New York state were poorly looked after, but it ended up proving they were better cared for than their anglo counterparts.

  • @JimDorman
    @JimDorman Před 3 lety +8

    I am nearly 60, from Massachusetts, and only recently learning some of the details of my Acadian roots in what is now called Nova Scotia. My great grandfather was of English descent, and my great grandmother was Acadian. She and her sisters spoke French at home. The names Babin, Lavache, LeBlanc, Hebert, Daigle, Dugas, Gaudet and many others dating back to the early settlement of Port Royal are coming up on my family tree. I am astonished to know this history.

    • @huskyfaninmass1042
      @huskyfaninmass1042 Před 3 lety +1

      I've seen that name "Dugas" before.

    • @MassachusettsTrainVideos1136
      @MassachusettsTrainVideos1136 Před rokem +1

      That's great that you know your history. Massachusetts is also the best state.

    • @dorisbetts3012
      @dorisbetts3012 Před rokem +1

      How wonderful for you! My father was Acadian from Isle Madame in Cape Breton, Nova Scotia and I love my Acadian family and history. I have some of those same names in my family tree. You could learn so much coming to Nova Scotia, the land of your ancestors!

    • @dorisbetts3012
      @dorisbetts3012 Před rokem +1

      Check our the history of Jeanne Dugas online and you will be proud of your ancestry! She was an amazing Acadian woman!

    • @JimDorman
      @JimDorman Před rokem

      @@dorisbetts3012 I will! Many of my known French ancestors lived in Arichat on Isle Madame.

  • @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un
    @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un Před 4 lety +153

    And then there’s St Pierre and Miquelon, the last part of New France under French control. They have a cool flag

  • @Kai-xr6vs
    @Kai-xr6vs Před 4 lety +38

    "Although the number that actually identify as Acadian is quite low (...) so it would appear that the bulk of the French descendants in this region are of Québécois or French origin, or at least are unaware of their Acadian heritage". My grandmother was Acadian from New Brunswick, I'm just going to say you are very, abominably, almost offensively wrong. The reason for the low number of people in the maritimes stating their heritage as "Acadian" is because it is a fairly recent addition to the census form, and most do not know it's there and write "French" or identify as Canadian first and foremost. However a trip to the Acadian regions of Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and PEI will reveal that there is an Acadian flag on almost every house (literally, I am not exaggerating) every Francophone in that region identifies as Acadian, Acadian names such as LeBlanc, Cormier, Landry, Arsenault, Comeau, Gallant, Richard, and many others are some of the most common names in the provinces, the French school board in Nova Scotia is called the Conseil Acadien Provincial, the dialect of Acadian French is still spoken there by 300 000 people, and I mean just say that to anyone who lives there and see what happens. I am frankly surprised and disappointed that you made a video about Acadians without talking about the modern Acadians and I'm trying to wrap my head around how that's even possible.

    • @rudolfkraffzick642
      @rudolfkraffzick642 Před 4 lety +13

      Trying to portray the french culture and language outside the province of Quebec as a bygone matter of history is a subtle form of britishamerican colonialism.
      This feeling and practise of superiority is the origin of racial tensions in the US.

    • @Pole_Ice
      @Pole_Ice Před 4 lety +2

      Well Said!

    • @rasputingames3518
      @rasputingames3518 Před 4 lety +2

      I guess it’s just better not to talk about it at all as to not offend you guys?

    • @stylustechnology
      @stylustechnology Před 3 lety

      Rudolf Kraffzick you are so so right 🙏🏻

    • @catserver8577
      @catserver8577 Před 3 lety +4

      It's an 11 minute blurb about a complicated subject. It's not a university class. Make your own video and try to give people some credit for making any attempt to educate people. There is no need to so dramatically disagree with someone, you can actually have an active productive conversation without all of the histrionics.

  • @lonestarst8
    @lonestarst8 Před rokem +3

    My Acadian line, once booted out of Nova Scotia, moved south west and settled in a place near Hillsboro, Wisconsin. The settlement was later called the Cheyenne Valley Settlement, also one of the first, if not the first, mixed settlements in the U.S, and we built the round barns scattered throughout Wisconsin. We mixed with people from Togo, Mali, Nigeria, and East Coastal Indians like the Waccamaw descendants who also settled around Hillsboro. Some stayed in and around Cheyenne Valley, but my kin moved south to the area now know as Lake Charles, LA.

  • @fomalhauto
    @fomalhauto Před 4 lety +4

    My paternal grandmother's maternal grandfather's paternal grandmother was Anastasia Bourgeois who was a Cajun born in Assumption Parish, Louisiana.
    She was 3/4 Acadian.

  • @kadenelijah9329
    @kadenelijah9329 Před 3 lety +8

    Vive le Quebec, Vive les Acadiens, Vive le France! 🇫🇷 ⚜️🇲🇶

  • @hollys2778
    @hollys2778 Před 4 lety +8

    Newfie with Acadian ancestors here. We have french, acadian and mikmaq influences.
    French Shore Newfoundland born n bread.

  • @micahgriffiths
    @micahgriffiths Před 4 lety +18

    In New Brunswick, Acadian culture is alive and well. The amount of pride people take in being Acadian, in speaking the French language and in celebrating "La journée d'Acadie" really shows that this culture will not go out quietly. Our province has bilingual laws, mandating equal use of the two languages. It's also split, with the northeast being mostly french and the southwest being mostly English.

    • @dm9489
      @dm9489 Před 3 lety +2

      Couldn't agree more with you! Proud Acadian myself, and the amount of Acadian flags that fly on peoples front lawns and the excitement for August 15th celebrations shows that Acadian culture is alive and well in NB, NS and PEI

    • @nickiesable
      @nickiesable Před 2 lety

      On dit "La fete des Acadiens" ❤️

  • @angiporter2863
    @angiporter2863 Před 4 lety +6

    I lived in Quebec for three years 1980’s. My grandsons are descendants of Louisiana [son in law) I love this video and your awesome content! Thank you for your hard work!

  • @TheMatrixxandRhodesShow
    @TheMatrixxandRhodesShow Před 4 lety +7

    Glad this video came out. I am descended from Arcadians/ Cajuns in Louisiana.

  • @TheMariemarie16
    @TheMariemarie16 Před 4 lety +13

    Great content as usual.
    My great grandparents were some of these Blacks or Creoles in South Louisiana who grew up speaking only French. The number of blacks or Creole of color who spoke French or Creole in Louisiana was quoted as 400,000 in 1989. The population at that time was 4.2 million so the number of Blacks speaking French at that time(1989) would be about 10.2%( no doubt much much less now)
    I was the only grandchild that was old enough to know them well. I would hear them speaking among themselves but they did not think that it was a thing to teach us. It never occurred to them. Even my own grandmother only knew few words having moved to Texas as a girl.

    • @dorisbetts3012
      @dorisbetts3012 Před rokem +1

      There was a time when it was considered shameful to speak French. The French speakers were discriminated against in terms of employment, religion, etc. That may be why they never taught you.

    • @WealthyWook720
      @WealthyWook720 Před rokem

      Exact same. Both of my greatgrandparents moved to Texas from Louisiana in the 50s and spoke multiple languages between the two of them but didn't teach it to us. My grandmother knew some words and phrases. They said that their elders didn't want them to advance ahead of them so naturally that was apart of the reasoning why we weren't taught.

    • @IslenoGutierrez
      @IslenoGutierrez Před rokem +2

      Many of the whites in Louisiana (including Cajuns) are descended from French Creoles (white Louisianians of ancestry from France and Québec). Actually most of the surnames of Creoles of Color also came from French Creoles (Creoles of Color also descend from French Creoles). I myself descend from French Creoles (but also Spanish Creoles and Acadian Creoles also known as Cajun).

    • @dinkster1729
      @dinkster1729 Před 7 měsíci

      @@dorisbetts3012 Right! They didn't want their children to experience the same discrimination that maybe, their parents had suffered. My mother's parents both spoke German,but they also spoke English with a standard North American accent. They would speak German to each other when they didn't want their children to understand what they were talking about. German was my Grandmother's 3rd language since she grew up speaking Norwegian in Iowa and using English at school. She was a servant for a German-speaking family in Iowa and learned the language from that family. My grandfather was 2nd or 3rd generation in Berlin, Ontario and the family still spoke German at home and in church, but went to school and shopped in English.

  • @stevesavoie08
    @stevesavoie08 Před 3 lety +11

    Good stuff! Acadian here and I can trace my ancestors back to France. Must've been tough traveling threw the winter in the woods on foot! We owe so much to our first nations. Vive l'acadie!

    • @Katbow23
      @Katbow23 Před 2 lety +2

      Vive l'acadie!
      I've traced my heritage back to the 1755 expulsion. My particular line of Bellefontaine-Godin we're among those few Acadians who managed to survive in Nova Scotia. Being on the run and hunted by the royals, my ancestors for many years after lived in fear of being captured. Living on the run, never a permanent home. Always in fear of capture. A resilient line still! Long live L'acadie!

    • @dorisbetts3012
      @dorisbetts3012 Před rokem +1

      @@Katbow23 the Bellefontaine family remains in NS.

  • @karenm7346
    @karenm7346 Před 3 lety +5

    Thru Ancestry, I found out about my Acadian roots. My grandmother was from New Brunswick. Her side goes back several hundred years.

  • @NotMac
    @NotMac Před 4 lety +7

    Great video! I’ve always been fascinated with the connection between Cajun/ Creole culture in Louisiana with early Canada

    • @IslenoGutierrez
      @IslenoGutierrez Před rokem +2

      Cajun culture in Louisiana is Creole culture because Cajuns are a type of white Louisiana Creole and the food and culture Cajuns have is the general south Louisiana food and culture that everyone who has ancestors in the Louisiana colony partake in no matter race or ancestry so the food and culture is Creole. Creole encompasses the whites, blacks and mixed race peoples of Louisiana that usually are descended from the colonial Louisiana population. Creole also means to be local and native-born to Louisiana. Cajun (Acadian) is an ancestry. But even so, today’s Cajuns are a mixture of ancestry from Acadie, France and Québec from the mixing of Acadian settlers and French Creoles (white Louisianians with ancestry from France and Québec), so Cajuns today are not Acadians the same as the Acadian settlers that settled Louisiana.

  • @fizzmcdermott902
    @fizzmcdermott902 Před 4 lety +14

    Allo j'suis Acadienne. My family is from New Brunswick, I wouldn't say the language is dying out so much as it's changed. Most of the youth speak Chiac, which is a mixture of French and English. I wish you'd talk more about the Acadians who avoided the deportation and remained in Acadia, but nevertheless nice video!

    • @chickadeeacres3864
      @chickadeeacres3864 Před 2 lety

      I believe the ones who remained fled to NB before Le Grand Dérangement. You and I are the descendants of those Acadians. I mistakenly thought I'd find family names on mailboxes in Grand Pré. Big shock to learn, the lands were given to loyalists .

    • @EdinburghFive
      @EdinburghFive Před 2 lety

      @@chickadeeacres3864 That is what expulsions do - remove people from a place which then leaves it open for others to settle.
      There were Acadians who arrived in New Brunswick before, during, and after the deportations. The Grand Derangement is not just the period of the deportations. It extends beyond, being about the diaspora of Acadians; for example those who immigrate to Louisiana in the 1760s and 1780s.

    • @ozarkpathfinders8823
      @ozarkpathfinders8823 Před rokem

      I hope he does too. That’s fascinating!

    • @dinkster1729
      @dinkster1729 Před 7 měsíci

      @@chickadeeacres3864 Yes, the Acadians that were left or who returned to New Brunswick were told to go to northern New Brunswick, not return to the Anapolis Valley where they had lived previously. My family, the Jeffers were among "the planters'who were recruited by the British governor to take over the Acadian lands right after the Acadians were loaded on ships and deported or forced to flee to other more welcoming parts of "New France." The planters arrived a couple of decades before the Loyalists and were looked down upon by the Loyalists apparently. They had to be non-Roman Catholic and English-speaking. my original ancestor was born in Rhode Island, but the name is Irish and Protestant. There were about 5,000 Planters brought in to take over the Acadian farms which had been burned and pillaged by the English and New Englanders who wanted rid of them once and for all.

  • @Dragoncam13
    @Dragoncam13 Před 4 lety +22

    I'm a Creole with a Cajun Great Grandfather that was a lawyer!

    • @9thGenerationCajun
      @9thGenerationCajun Před 4 lety +4

      I'am a Cajun with a Cane River Creole grandmother

    • @StandWatie1862
      @StandWatie1862 Před 4 lety +1

      I'm an actual creole who's ancestors came directly from France. The original meaning of Creole

    • @neroleblanc7200
      @neroleblanc7200 Před 4 lety

      Nice Creole boy here hahaha

    • @demontespeechless_2
      @demontespeechless_2 Před 3 lety

      I have Louisiana creole, Cajun, and islenos roots on my mother’s paternal side

    • @kaisersadd3667
      @kaisersadd3667 Před 26 dny

      ​@@StandWatie1862
      Louder for those who are ignorant about the term "Creole". Many people in Louisiana don't know the term Creoles and the other type is called Creoles of color. The former refers to the descendants of French and Spanish settlers while the latter refers to the descendants of Africans, or Mixed Race descent. The term Cajun was used during the American civil war and the term itself is derogatory as it refers to those who are of low status particularly the ones who live in Swamps, regardless if they are actually of Acadian descent or not.

  • @uverpro3598
    @uverpro3598 Před 3 lety +1

    il y a du fromage dans mes oreilles de cette richesse abondante de connaissances sur les mamelons. Merci du haut d'une oreille d'éléphant. Pieds de fer! 🇫🇷

  • @edwardsaulnier892
    @edwardsaulnier892 Před 3 lety +4

    My last name is Saulnier which is of course Acadian. My father's mother was a Belliveau. My mother's father was a Gallant. These too are Acadian names.

  • @bsb7181
    @bsb7181 Před 4 lety +3

    This is such an outstanding video. We have to explain all the different “pockets” of different heritage just found within a couple hundred square miles of South Louisiana, from Acadiana to New Orleans. I’m a French-Cajun “mutt” with one side of my family being directly from France and having immigrated to South Louisiana just after the Civil War, and the other side being “Cajuns” with ancestry traced to “La Grande Dérangement” from Acadie, Canada in the 18th century! Mason you’ve done a bang up job succinctly explaining this crazy cultural mix we have in Louisiana, while giving me some great new info about French heritage in New England. I knew about Massachusetts - but Maine and New Hampshire I did not! More French ancestry in those two states than Louisiana! Wow! Thanks man! Well done! I just subscribed!

    • @JAlex-dg5mk
      @JAlex-dg5mk Před 4 lety

      Bourgeois in my ancestry tree. Hi from Québec.

    • @dorisbetts3012
      @dorisbetts3012 Před rokem

      The New England states historically had strong connections to Atlantic Canada, both in commerce and family ties. I am half Acadian from Nova Scotia and many of my family went to the New England states for work during the 1920s and 1930s. But prior to the establishment of Canada in 1867, the trade links were strong between our two countries, north snd south. After the Intercolonial railway was built in Canada, trade shifted to the east to west corridor and the links with Atlantic Canada eventually were weakened.

    • @dorisbetts3012
      @dorisbetts3012 Před rokem

      This link is very good and you may be interested in listening. czcams.com/video/KbjrUAl3yBs/video.html

  • @jhonjhonson8677
    @jhonjhonson8677 Před 2 lety +1

    I'm here ontario family from newbrunswick trust and belive our ways of life will come back and change this world for the better

  • @JM-hj4ss
    @JM-hj4ss Před 4 lety +2

    Haven't watched your videos for a while but the quality of the video and work you've put in it is always awesome.
    Thank You,

  • @leonceboudreauxwolf
    @leonceboudreauxwolf Před 4 měsíci +4

    What happened to Les Acadian, Cajin, ...and I'll add Métis ? We are STILL HERE..some in Loozianne, others in other places, we've been knocked down, but not knocked out. We are in the provinces of Canada, Eastern American coast lands, the swamps of Louisiana, and various other places...WE ARE STILL HERE ! DON'T EVER COUNT US OUT, WE'RE STRONGER THAN OUR PERSECUTORS...WE WILL STILL STAND AND NOT BEND A KNEE TO ANYONE ..✊🏽

  • @heyner_rivera.14
    @heyner_rivera.14 Před 4 lety +52

    Well, Amos Moses was a cajun, he lived by himself in the swamp, he hunted alligators for livin'...

    • @zerodelgato3842
      @zerodelgato3842 Před 4 lety +13

      He just knock em in the head with a stump

    • @DixieBanjo
      @DixieBanjo Před 4 lety

      I can just hear Jerry Reed singing that.

    • @deadenduass
      @deadenduass Před 3 lety

      Long live the Cajuns,
      My 6th great-grandfather Jean Mouton is recognized as the founder of Lafayette, Louisiana. Many of the Acadians who were forced out by the British ended up in Louisiana. We are a God-fearing people who strive to get along with everyone. Laissez les bons temps rouler!

  • @rickcyr7666
    @rickcyr7666 Před 3 měsíci

    Thank You so much for this, I trace my Acadian Heritage back to 1600"s Poitou, France on my father's side and Riviere Ouelle, Quebec on my mother's side. Proud to be Acadian. One thing missing is the large presence of French speaking Acadians in Aroostook County Maine, here since their expulsion from Nova Scotia in the mid 1700"s. Live on Acadie!

  • @denisduperre280
    @denisduperre280 Před 26 dny

    I'm a proud Acadian born in Edmundston, NB and raised in Madawaska, Maine. Great video !!!!

  • @kuroazrem5376
    @kuroazrem5376 Před 4 lety +3

    Finally, a new video! WHERE WERE YOU MAN? I MISSED YOU!

  • @boudewijnboot3667
    @boudewijnboot3667 Před 4 lety +32

    Two ideas for a interesting video:
    The peoples of the north Caucasus, like the Circassians and Vainahk peoples
    Ahmadiyya, a branch of islam with you could call the “mormon-like islam”

    • @chickadeeacres3864
      @chickadeeacres3864 Před 2 lety

      Coincidentally, that’s how I found this video. It was through the Who are Circassians video I spotted while looking for Circassian dancing after seeing an Instagram reel. Talk about a rabbit hole!😂

  • @mavymalach
    @mavymalach Před 4 lety +7

    I don’t know if you take suggestions but i’d love to see a video on the Yakuts or Kalmyks, great video none the less!

  • @ZontarDow
    @ZontarDow Před 4 lety +8

    Western settlements where not known as Quebec, we where Canadians. Quebec was just a single settlement that the now province of Quebec was named after during British rule.

  • @burisha2351
    @burisha2351 Před 4 lety +7

    Thank you Masaman ! C'est passionnant ! I'm personally really interested to know more about Louisiana History 😁

    • @dorisbetts3012
      @dorisbetts3012 Před rokem

      Here is a link for you...czcams.com/video/KbjrUAl3yBs/video.html

  • @Elykar
    @Elykar Před 4 lety +6

    I am about 1/4th Acadian, owing to my 100% Acadian grandmother who once spoke only French as a child and whose family was never deported. It's an interesting little culture.

  • @Amesang
    @Amesang Před 4 lety +22

    Cajun culture is how this D&D player learned the difference between "blow of mercy" and "blow of fat."

    • @mrgeorgejetson
      @mrgeorgejetson Před 3 lety +3

      Ha! Yes, indeed. Every time I hear an American say "fat" instead of "grace/mercy," I wince a little bit on the inside. Next stop: chaise-lounge!

    • @dju1999
      @dju1999 Před 3 lety +2

      Took me a while but I understood the pun. Noice :D

    • @Xerxes2005
      @Xerxes2005 Před 2 lety +1

      Oh, yeah: "coup de gras" instead of "coup de grâce". It's like "fleur-de-lit" instead of "fleur-de-lys"...

  • @selenadawnwilson1534
    @selenadawnwilson1534 Před 4 lety +2

    I AM ACADIEN!!!! My mother is a Pellerin. I am bilingual. My city of FULL of acadiens. Everywhere. Allot of us speak French perfect. I was born and raised in Notre-Dame, New Brunswick. In my city, especially during quinzou you will see almost every second house especially on the eastern part of greater moncton area have an acadien flag. We are very well here, alive and populous. We also have a large black acadien population! And indigenous acadien population as well. Most of the Green Party candidates for my city were black Acadien women.

  • @maninedoow5895
    @maninedoow5895 Před 4 lety +8

    I learned more about the Cajuns/Acadians in my fall semester history course.

    • @quipalco
      @quipalco Před 4 lety

      This is an 11 minute video, what did you expect? This is not the complete history of cajuns, rather what happened to the people.

  • @anon20
    @anon20 Před 4 lety +13

    Masaman, your subreddit got hijacked by one of the moderators, (samueldp) who de-modded and/or banned every moderator below him. We still have a good Discord going if you're interested!

  • @jenniferlyons4150
    @jenniferlyons4150 Před měsícem +1

    My great grandfather was a French Canadian! He spoke French. Unfortunately he died before I was born so I know little about him. His family were from Quebec and they lived in Connecticut.

  • @comradecracker447
    @comradecracker447 Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you so much for this extensive and well done video.

  • @Dabs_All_Ovar
    @Dabs_All_Ovar Před 4 lety +48

    we roleplay Acadia in a minecraft server, so it’s very well alive

    • @jeiku5314
      @jeiku5314 Před 4 lety +6

      *Hon hons in Acadienne*

    • @fritoss3437
      @fritoss3437 Před 4 lety +2

      can i have the IP pleaaaaaaaaase

    • @fritz404
      @fritz404 Před 4 lety

      @@fritoss3437 EarthMC.net

    • @Sueci
      @Sueci Před 4 lety +1

      Bruh can they restart the server already?

    • @belstar1128
      @belstar1128 Před 4 lety +1

      Cringe

  • @marcgallant5270
    @marcgallant5270 Před 2 lety +4

    Theres roughly 100,000 Acadians in the Moncton Region (roughly 30,000+ in moncton, roughly 25,000 in Dieppe, few 1000 in Riverview and almost every village from moncton to miramichi is Acadian, multiple small 2000-5000 villages). This doesn't even include the north east region.

  • @ultimatewafflegaming1018
    @ultimatewafflegaming1018 Před 6 měsíci +2

    im franco-american /acadian of new england in rhode island my grand parents worked the mills of woonsocket and im 19 i speak new england french and my genetics are of breton and norman origins, we still exist and for my birthday we're doing a traditional celebrations with traditional live music dances and food

    • @jptey289
      @jptey289 Před 5 měsíci

      Très bien et surtout continuez ici en France on vous soutient par la pensée et ne vous laissez pas bouffer par ces salopards d'anglo_ saxons 💪

  • @kmm2442
    @kmm2442 Před 4 lety +1

    There is so much in this. I need to watch this again.

  • @ocirontariocryptidinvestig8010

    you should do a video on the US exiles who fled the 13 colonies after the revolution and moved to upper Canada [Ontario]. becoming the founding population of the province.

    • @terrygallant9938
      @terrygallant9938 Před 4 lety +1

      Yes, the Loyalists arrived in the British colonies. It is a major factor in the division of Québec and the creation of Ontario. It also happened in Nova Scotia, as the British in Halifax did not get along with the Loyalists who settled the Saint John River valley and thus created New Brunswick. Interestingly, the Acadians are a very small but culturally rich minority in Nova Scotia now, but in New Brunswick, they make up a large minority. Moncton is the defacto capital of Acadia in NB with the urbanisation of the province. The city has an Acadian University, arts, and a vibrant economy.

    • @ChimeraActual
      @ChimeraActual Před 4 lety +1

      They may have fled on their own, but many were forced out, their property confiscated. The British shipped them (we Americans call them Tories) to parts of Canada, New Brunswick in my family's case, as well as England and the Caribbean.
      A bit of an odd story, over a hundred years before that, my ancestors, being Huguenots, were forced out of France and settled on the Delaware river, only to end up in Acadia, albeit British, after the Revolution. They moved to Boston around 1900, and somehow here I am in Texas.

  • @jacksoncorcoran5977
    @jacksoncorcoran5977 Před 4 lety +4

    I live in New Brunswick and there is no shortage of Acadians

    • @stephanosnormandusdelacroi8570
      @stephanosnormandusdelacroi8570 Před 3 lety +1

      We're literally everywhere in New Brunswick. Try going a day without seeing an Acadian flag here. Encore ici ! We aren't going anywhere I made two more Acadians myself.

  • @starfireapache
    @starfireapache Před 2 lety +1

    I was born in Louisiana of Arcadian parents! My mother and her family spoke Arcadian French as a first language and had to learn English in school! They taught it to their father but their mother refused to learn it or give up her culture! My father's people spoke Arcadian French and English but my father never learned French! He moved to Texas for better working conditions and took mother with her! Mother would never teach my brother and I the Arcadian language fearing we'd be bullied in school thus I could not communicate with my grandmother whom I really would have liked to speak with! We can trace our heritage back to Nova Scotia, Kansas and Iowa! We have many nationalities from both grandparents besides French, but mostly French! An ancestor in Nova Scotia married a Mi' kaq chief's daughter so we also have Indian ancestry as well! I had a great love of Canada as a child but never knew why! I wish I could learn the language of my people but at 73 I have no one to teach me the nuances of that language and am just now learning of the history of who I am from programs like these! Thank You!

    • @EdinburghFive
      @EdinburghFive Před 2 lety

      Hi starfireapache. The name of the French from Nova Scotia is Acadian not Arcadian. Easy error to make.
      You might want to dig a little deeper into your ancestry and relation to a "Mi' kaq chief's daughter". That is a very common family myth. There must have been a lot of Chiefs marrying their daughters off to Frenchmen!
      Check Stephen White's Dictionnaire généalogique des familles acadiennes for your Acadian ancestors and whether there were any marriages to Mi'kmaq.

  • @22Doriano
    @22Doriano Před 4 lety +4

    There’s an awesome history of these French towns on the Mexican Atlantic Coast on the state of Veracruz called San Rafael and Jicaltepec (along with a few other surrounding towns) that were settled in the early 1800’s by French families and kept their culture alive to this day! The towns look like French colonial towns like parts of Quebec, St Genevieve/Kaskaskia (French Illinois) and Louisiana French Parishes! It’s like a continuation and they even had many Cajuns move in to these towns and become rich with the vanilla export which was divided between them (the French towns), Gutierrez Zamora (Italian colony just north) and the Spanish migrants in Papantla! It’s a cool history of this part of Mexico that little is known but the French culture is being showcased as a tourist attraction! Have been there and loved it! Really transports you out of Mexico and into France! Cheers

    • @kamikazes03
      @kamikazes03 Před 4 lety +1

      You have the most fascinating post I have read here. I did not know about this aspect of Mexico. All I know it that at one point Mexico had a little bit of an argument with one of the Napoléons. I will have to look into San Rafael and Jicaltepec. Please send me more info if you have more.

  • @KowboyUSA
    @KowboyUSA Před 4 lety +5

    The world would be far more tasteless without Cajun seasonings.

  • @teewilliams4520
    @teewilliams4520 Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks for this video! I grew up in middle of Acadiana! Good video 👍

  • @Explodoboy
    @Explodoboy Před rokem +1

    As a Cajun, I love seeing videos like this. One important thing to remember, though, is that we Cajuns do NOT consider New Orleans to be a part of Cajun country. That's a different culture altogether. I hate when media depicts New Orleans as Cajun. I'm like, bruh. You need to travel a couple hours west to Lafayette. That's the heart of Cajun country. Also, fun fact, in 1980, Cajuns became the smallest federally protected ethnic group in America.

    • @dinkster1729
      @dinkster1729 Před 7 měsíci

      What does "protected" mean?

    • @guyinsf
      @guyinsf Před měsícem +1

      @@dinkster1729 Means you can discriminate someone because of their cajun identity or heritage. So if a cajun person was fired from a job because he or she was cajun that would be illegal and if taken to court that person would win the case if they can prove that they were fired from their job because they were cajun.

    • @guyinsf
      @guyinsf Před měsícem

      Sorry first sentence "Means you can't...."

  • @LaSenioraKittehz
    @LaSenioraKittehz Před 4 lety +3

    Half Ethnic Acadian here; My family survived by moving into various rural areas deep in the woods around the maritimes. The ancestors i have that were deported mostly went to Haiti before the revolutions there surprisingly. My relatives were documented living in Acadia in 1604 there was also a tiny bit of Portuguese influence between 1600-1700 when I tried looking into some of my Petitpas lines in my family tree.

    • @canadiancontent352
      @canadiancontent352 Před 4 lety +1

      Mine hid in Gaspe and returned post deportation.

    • @kamikazes03
      @kamikazes03 Před 4 lety

      I was doing a little bit of genealogical research on the Rodrigue family, a common name in Louisiana and Quebec and I found out it was a Portuguese name. The question I dont have an answer to is : why would a Portuguese want to immigrate to freezing cold Canada instead of the relative paradise of Brazil? I still dont know!

    • @questfortruth783
      @questfortruth783 Před 4 lety

      @@kamikazes03 Some moors were deported from Spain and Portugal also to the Americas, and some to Africa. That may be why the surname Rodrigue ( Rodriguez) is from there. We have that surname in Haiti, too, but most of the surnames are french, a few spanish, etc..

    • @kamikazes03
      @kamikazes03 Před 4 lety

      @@questfortruth783 Rodrigues were Moors? Unlikely. The Moors would have left the Iberic peninsula during the Reconquista which ended in 1512. Muslims and Jews (Read the first articles of the Black Code) were barred from immigrating in French colonies and even Protestants were not welcomed.

    • @IslenoGutierrez
      @IslenoGutierrez Před rokem

      @@kamikazes03Yes, you’re right. Rodrigue is a Québec surname of Portuguese origin. It comes from a sailor named João Rodrigues who was born in Lisbon, Portugal in 1641. He arrived in Québec in 1668. He was employed by the French and sent to New France where he would wound up settling in Québec. He married a woman from Paris, France who also settled in Québec named Anne Le Roy and the two created a family in Québec. Their Québécois great-grandson Jean Baptiste Rodrigue migrated to and settled in south Louisiana sometime between 1760-1763 and married a local south Louisiana woman named Marie Josèphe Dervain from Destrehan, Louisiana (St. Charles Parish) with French and German ancestry. These two people, Jean Baptiste and Marie Josèphe started the original Rodrigue family in Louisiana (which would branch out into many lines thereafter). Jean Baptiste Rodrigue is buried at St. John the Baptist Cemetery in Edgard, Louisiana.
      Many of the surnames of Louisiana are of Québec origin (even many among today’s “Cajuns” as “Cajuns” today are descendants of people from Acadie, Québec and France via the mixing of the Acadians that settled Louisiana with the French Creoles of Louisiana who are white Louisianians with ancestry from France and Québec that were already in Louisiana). Louisiana’s “Creoles of Color” which is a mixed European/West African group also have Québécois ancestry via the French Creoles mentioned above). French Creoles still exist today in Louisiana mostly in the Greater New Orleans area (New Orleans and it’s surrounding parishes) and the northern part of Acadiana (Avoyelles, St. Landry and Pointe Coupée parishes) however also in various other parts of south Louisiana such as Ville Platte and Opelousas. Some identify as Cajun (incorrectly, it’s a long story) while others identify as French Creoles. Here are some common surnames in Louisiana that are of Québécois origin (via the French Creoles of Louisiana):
      Ardoin
      Carriere
      Lavergne
      Devillier
      Autin
      Barré
      Normand
      Dupré
      Vasseur
      Bienvenue
      Langlois
      Deshotels (Desautels)
      Rozat
      Couvillon
      Gaspard
      St. Romain
      Beaudreaux (not to be confused with the Acadian Boudreaux)
      Major
      Verret
      Chauvin
      Rodrigue
      Ledoux
      St. Pierre
      Lemieux
      Dufrene (Dufresne)
      Badeaux
      Beaulieu
      Fournier
      Primeaux
      Dupont
      DeRouen
      Bouchard
      Robillard
      Morvant
      LeFebre
      Bellanger
      Dubuisson
      Marcotte
      Francois
      Joffrion
      Degruy
      Courville
      Hulin
      Beauvais
      Brouillette

  • @kaminari1028
    @kaminari1028 Před 4 lety +4

    It’s interesting how the Quebecois settled in Illinois. I am originally from about an hour south of Chicago and a lot of the towns around there have French names (Bourbonnais for example). After doing family history research, I found I that I have a ton of Quebecois ancestry. My 8th great grandfather sailed with Champlain. Apparently there was a priest in Montreal and was excommunicated from the church or something and headed southwest to settle that part of Illinois. I guess a lot of his followers went with him?

    • @IslenoGutierrez
      @IslenoGutierrez Před rokem +2

      The Québécois settled heavily in Louisiana before the arrival of the Acadians and mixed with the French in Louisiana who were from France and this mixed French-Québécois group came to be known as French Creoles. They are white Louisianians of French and Québécois ancestry. Today’s Cajuns in Louisiana are also their descendants because the Acadians mixed with the French Creoles when they arrived to Louisiana so many of today’s “Cajuns” in Louisiana have surnames of Québécois origin (and also surnames direct from France to Louisiana). Here are a few examples of common Louisiana surnames of Québécois origin:
      Carriere
      Lavergne
      Devillier
      Autin
      Barré
      Normand
      Dupré
      Vasseur
      Bienvenue
      Langlois
      DesHotels (Desautels)
      Rozat
      Couvillon
      Gaspard
      St. Romain
      Beaudreaux (not to be confused with the Acadian Boudreaux)
      Major
      Verret
      Chauvin
      Rodrigue
      Ledoux
      St. Pierre
      Lemieux
      Dufrene (Dufresne)
      Badeaux
      Beaulieu
      Fournier
      Primeaux
      Dupont
      DeRouen
      Bouchard
      Robillard
      Morvant
      LeFebre
      Fournier
      Bellanger
      Dubuisson
      Marcotte
      Francois
      Joffrion
      Some of the Louisiana surnames are of Québécois origin that were in 18th century Illinois first before arriving to 18th century Louisiana such as:
      Degruy
      Courville
      Ardoin
      Hulin
      Beauvais
      Brouillette

  • @bayouflier6641
    @bayouflier6641 Před 2 lety +2

    Cajun culture is a beautiful thing, and I am proud to be a member.

  • @zackamor8043
    @zackamor8043 Před 4 lety +1

    omg dude welcome back dude. I hope you were doing fine ;) nice to see you have put up a new video :D !!!!

  • @potatoegirl31
    @potatoegirl31 Před 4 lety +4

    We still exist! ☺ Hi from Northern Maine! *waves while eating ployes*

    • @stylustechnology
      @stylustechnology Před 3 lety

      Ayyye! Acadian here from northern Maine as well! Lived around machias and bar harbor areas too!

    • @silencedogood5766
      @silencedogood5766 Před 3 lety +1

      @@stylustechnology bar harbor is gorgeous moose head lake region as well Gods country love the peacefulness .

    • @silencedogood5766
      @silencedogood5766 Před 3 lety

      What’s a ploye anything like a plebe? 😀

    • @TacticalGhost939
      @TacticalGhost939 Před 3 měsíci

      I grew up in Fort Kent. The St John Valley is full of proud Acadians!

  • @paveldatsyuk7175
    @paveldatsyuk7175 Před 4 lety +4

    More great lakes stuff please : ) . Northern great lakes is very interesting!

  • @LalaLillith
    @LalaLillith Před 3 lety +2

    I watch this video and feel sadness. It's hard to see you're people scattered to the wind like that

  • @kramsociety1223
    @kramsociety1223 Před 2 lety +1

    Being of Cajun decent I find this video very educational. My ancestor was Andre Temple later changed to Templete and later Tomplait.

    • @aimeefriedman822
      @aimeefriedman822 Před 2 lety +1

      Can you answer something? My late husband was Cajun.
      Is Louisiana Cajun French similar to Canadian Acadian French? More importantly, can they understand each other?

    • @kramsociety1223
      @kramsociety1223 Před 2 lety

      @@aimeefriedman822 I’m not very educated on it. I do know they could understand one another but had different versions of words.

  • @frankdecron1306
    @frankdecron1306 Před 4 lety +35

    Last time I was this early Cajuns were all in France

    • @natewatl9423
      @natewatl9423 Před 4 lety

      😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣 Me too!

  • @electricwizard1949
    @electricwizard1949 Před 4 lety +13

    En ce qui me concerne, le Nouveau-Brunswick et la Nouvelle-Écosse (et la Gaspésie) sera toujours l'Acadie. Santé, confrères !

  • @vantzon
    @vantzon Před 4 lety +1

    Well done, thank you for new knowledge

  • @kelsietardif8264
    @kelsietardif8264 Před 3 lety +1

    Maine Acadian here! I often wonder about my Cajun cousins I know nothing about.

  • @Hsalf904
    @Hsalf904 Před 4 lety +3

    OK this was a little misleading. There are still TONS of Acadians in the Maritimes in each province but especially in New Brunswick. They are very much still there. Like it’s impossible to not know someone without an Acadian last name. I think most of them just said “French” in the census as opposed to “Acadian”

    • @stylustechnology
      @stylustechnology Před 3 lety +1

      Maine Acadian here! 100% on both sides! I hear ya, there’s a lot of communities still throughout acadie!

    • @dinkster1729
      @dinkster1729 Před 7 měsíci

      Maybe, the census should break it down. You say, "French". Then, you have to say, Acadian French or Quebecois French or Franco-Ontarian French or whatever.

    • @Hsalf904
      @Hsalf904 Před 7 měsíci

      @@dinkster1729 Yeah they could have done it better. They also had “Canadian” as an option so lots of people of all backgrounds chose that as well

  • @BrandonSanctius
    @BrandonSanctius Před 4 lety +8

    Ethnic Origins of the Spaniards, Please, Masaman!!!
    🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸

    • @cahallo5964
      @cahallo5964 Před 4 lety

      celtmeds people I guess

    • @SecretStepDaddy
      @SecretStepDaddy Před 3 lety

      New world “Latin Americans” are mostly genetically indigenous native North/ South Americans. Spanish have very little and mostly negative influences

  • @ds29891
    @ds29891 Před 4 měsíci +2

    checking in from manitoba canada

  • @qpdb840
    @qpdb840 Před 11 měsíci

    I am from Newfoundland by French British Persian Kurdish roots I have a teacher who is Acadian and he is very proud of it

  • @RPM1776
    @RPM1776 Před 4 lety +13

    Hey mason, what happened to r/Masastan?

    • @Masaman
      @Masaman  Před 4 lety +9

      Kinda got lazy with the Masamaps. I'll be working on some great new content to release there soon, don't worry.

    • @anon20
      @anon20 Před 4 lety +3

      @@Masaman We've had a Masastan Discord server for a long time if you'd like to join as well! You don't have to join and you don't have to be active on it of course, we know you're prob busy, but we'd really like to have you :D

    • @RPM1776
      @RPM1776 Před 4 lety +2

      Masaman Oh ok. Also, the subreddit went into a collapse while you were gone.

    • @RPM1776
      @RPM1776 Před 4 lety

      Firstname Lastname What is your discord name?

    • @belstar1128
      @belstar1128 Před 4 lety

      Reddit fails again

  • @vivetv3710
    @vivetv3710 Před 4 lety +5

    Attempt 3 of asking Masaman to do a video on Hausa people.

  • @bouzma
    @bouzma Před 4 lety

    Thanks for making this video!

  • @erikaguidry7698
    @erikaguidry7698 Před 2 lety +2

    I'm a cajun. My great grandparents only spoke French, my grandparents French was their first language, however now they have largely forgotten it, and my father understood French more than he spoke it, I only understand some words.

    • @IslenoGutierrez
      @IslenoGutierrez Před rokem

      I see you’re a Guidry. My grandmother was a Guidry from Larose, La. In Lafourche Parish. Where is your family from?

    • @erikaguidry7698
      @erikaguidry7698 Před rokem

      @@IslenoGutierrez Breaux Bridge/St Martinville

    • @IslenoGutierrez
      @IslenoGutierrez Před rokem

      @@erikaguidry7698 ok 👍

  • @alirezakhanzade2190
    @alirezakhanzade2190 Před 4 lety +7

    Hello Mason,
    I would like to inform you that your subreddit (r/masastan) has been hijacked by someone, who banned many of its most active members.
    One of the moderators has hijacked the server and banned all the other moderators, and he has also allowed white nationalist and racists to run free on the server.
    He is very selfish in his intent and i recommend you remove him from the moderation team.
    His name on reddit is u/samueldp.
    Best Regards,
    The masastan discord moderation team