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Friends
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Loved ones
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Brothers
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I welcome you all this Sunday
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Today, I don't want to speak too long
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But I'll talk a little about myself
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And if I have time, I'll continue
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My name is Collins Agyeman
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But my house name
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or my Fante name
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is Papa Ekow
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My family calls me Ekow
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I am 18 years old
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and I am a Fante
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I was born in America
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in a city called New Orleans
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But I lived in Ghana for about 8 years
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So that's where I learned the Fante language
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Right now, I go to Vanderbilt University
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In the American city of Nashville
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And I am majoring in History
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or how we say in Fante
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Abakosem
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And I'm also studying the Arabic Language
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I am very fascinated by all the languages in the world
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So one day, I decided that I would record a video
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And upload it to WikiTongues
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So that the people will see that
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The Fante are also here
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What many people don't know about the Fante language is
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No matter what
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English is part of it
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Even someone who has never been educated
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You will hear that
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When he's speaking Fante
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There is a little English mixed in
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Because if you look at the history of Ghana
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You will see that
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In the olden days, where the Fante lived
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was near the sea
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And that's also where the British came from
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And while we're on the topic of the English
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You will notice that many Fante
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have English lastnames
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It's not everyone
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But many have English lastnames
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My own uncle is called Thompson
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And before my mother got married
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she was called Ghartey
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So you see that there are many English names
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And also, there isn't just one Fante language
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The people of Cape Coast speak their Fante
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The people of Swedru speak their Fante
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The people of Gomoa speak their Fante
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The Fante I'm speaking right now is known as Takoradi Fante
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This is the dialect spoken in the Secondi-Takoradi area
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Everything I'm saying comes down to this
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If you know your native langauge
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Never stop speaking it
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Those of us who were born overseas
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There are so many who can't even speak with their own extended family
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Because they never learned the langauge
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Nobody taught them
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So let's keep on teaching our culture
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Our history
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and our language
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So that in the future
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It remains
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Peace be unto you all