General Videos

Mọ́ínmọ́ín Eléwé | Mọ́ínmọ́ín in Leaves
Mọ́ínmọ́ín Eléwé | Mọ́ínmọ́ín in Leaves Ọbádélé Kambon 89 Views • 3 years ago

How To Make Moin Moin in Leaves / Moin Moin Elewe

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Moin Moin Recipes
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MHp7DmqOPzk
Moin Main with Beans Flour
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IoZQxpPodhc
Oven Baked Moin Moin
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MHp7DmqOPzk


Moin Moin Recipe

- 2 Cups Beans
- 200ml water to blend
- Tatashe 3
- Scotch Bonnet 3
- Shombo 4
- Onion 2
- Crayfish Powder 2 Tablespoons
- Vegetable oil 1/4 cup
- Salt 1 Teaspoon
- Curry Powder 2 Teaspoons
- Chicken seasoning powder 2 Teaspoon (depends on the seasoning in your stock)
- Chicken/Beef Stock 150ml (hot)
- Smoked Mackerel deboned 1
- 3 Eggs boiled


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Location: Lagos, Nigeria (West Africa)
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I'm a Nigerian Food and Lifestyle Blogger documenting bits of every other day in my life with my son Tito , daughter Tiara and husband Bobo.

Philippians 4:6-7

Do not be anxious about anything, but in every situation, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God. And the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.

What it means to be Black in Brazil
What it means to be Black in Brazil Kwabena Ofori Osei 36 Views • 3 years ago

Racism rooted in slavery has not gone away in Brazil — and it took time until its existence was even acknowledged.

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Brazil imported more African slaves than any other country in the world: over 4 million people. Despite the ancestry forming a big part of the population, the development of a national Black identity was hindered after the country’s abolition of slavery in 1888.

Brazil didn’t have an apartheid system like South Africa’s or Jim Crow laws like the United States, and its mixed population was seen as a symbol of harmony between races. The idea of Brazil being a “racial democracy” affected how Brazilians saw the role of race in their own lives — until the myth was debunked.

“Several people were raised with certain privileges for being a light-skinned person, but still suffering some discrimination and not understanding exactly why is that so,” explains lawyer and diversity studies professor Thiago Amparo. “Only by understanding the history of Brazil, the [social] construction of whiteness and their own Black ancestry, they start to self-identify as Black.”
The rise in the number of Brazilians who self-identify as Black came as a result of the Black movement’s fight to denounce racism in the country and to promote positive references of Blackness. Many achievements have been made over the past decades, such as the implementation of affirmative action practices. However, challenges remain. Seventy-five percent of people killed by police in Brazil in 2019 were Black, and socio-economic characteristics of this population widely differ from those of white people.

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