Follow Jay Cameron on his KZbin Channel at @jaycameronofficial I've partnered with Jay to bring you tours in Ghana! ***Tour does not include flight*** Register for the tour here: maximumimpacttravel.wetravel.com/trips/the-gateway-experience-ghana-with-ivy-prosper-jan-6-16-2025-maximum-impact-travel-99112321
@lisamurray2662Ай бұрын
I’m speechless THIS is Everything Man!💯💎🏆🥂
@sourcestvghuk9897Ай бұрын
@@IvyProsper ur more than CNN presenter
@kuyahkudey3217Ай бұрын
You look amazing Ivy.
@IvyProsperАй бұрын
@@lisamurray2662 So glad you enjoyed it.
@IvyProsperАй бұрын
@@sourcestvghuk9897 Thank you.
@omobowalekush354828 күн бұрын
I have been to Africa almost 3 dozen times Ghana, South Africa , Ethiopia , Egypt, Benin, Togo , Ivory Coast . Most of my trips to Ghana and South Africa , I will be in South Africa this December 2024 and was in Ghana last December 2023. If I had a negative opinion of Africa it left since I was 13 years old even though I watched Tarzan movies on tv lol. I unofficially adopted 4 young ladies in Ghana and 2 in South Africa in the early 1990’s this is why I mostly go to Ghana and South Africa to see my daughters and grand children
@py2026 күн бұрын
Thanks for your sacrifices for them. May the Lord bless and keep you.
@LionMentality198225 күн бұрын
Amazing Story. I want to visit Ghana and SA. Which country would you suggest to visit first? Thx
@DK1049124 күн бұрын
Wow, where are you originally from?
@emmanuelamoh18214 күн бұрын
@@omobowalekush3548 God bless you!
@IvyProsperКүн бұрын
@@omobowalekush3548 Wonderful. Thanks for sharing
@joeymorris478728 күн бұрын
My 1st time on the continent, I was in tears landing on the runway in Kenya..totally unexpected! Wouldn't trade it for anything!!!
@Sonny3503Ай бұрын
There is nowhere in the world like Africa. It is also the richest continent with many countries all with great cities, natural resources and fantastic landscapes. It is also blessed with a large population of brilliant young people.
@jahbless4everАй бұрын
Jay Cameron made a good point about how us in the diaspora were brainwashed and indoctrinated with the colonialist values and culture. For me, it took me years to get rid of the colorist mentally. Now, after years of research and self learned education I appreciate melanin. However, I am not perfect. I am still learning. Peace
@DonaldJegedeАй бұрын
@jahbless4ever. Africans living in Africa were also brainwashed. Even at 60 I am still re-educating myself. That shout never stop.
@@DonaldJegedeNot as Bad as Afrikans still have their culture intact, can’t compare about 60 years of colonisation to 500 years and counting, it’s generational trauma
@JaniceLThinkerАй бұрын
Many Africans are also brainwashed and indoctrinated with the colonialist mindset. This is evident in much of the older leadership. As a kid, I was extremely curious and I studied ancient history, mythology and geography a lot. Africa was always mysterious & exotic to me. I knew Egypt was in Africa I remember my older sister telling me about Kings & Queens in Africa. My teacher showed us photos of African kings being crowned in elaborate ceremonies.
@asaasare220Ай бұрын
@@DonaldJegedebro U R so right .. those of us on the continent are even more brainwashed
@NwareFilmsАй бұрын
So proud of you Ivy. Keep going FOREVER!!!!!!!...........I am so called African-American from Newark, New Jersey who is 54 years old. ( I say so-called African-American because I am AFRICAN).... I can say that I am soooo lucky and blessed to have had parents who spoke about this EVERYDAY in my household growing up in the 1970's, 1980's and 1990's!!!! 😄✊🏿
@IvyProsperАй бұрын
Thank you so much
@gerrytushh27 күн бұрын
Wonderful, you and your parents are the real deal for acknowledging your Africanness❤✌🏽 Greetings from Kampala 🇺🇬
@EvaAnikaАй бұрын
So many gems here, a book can be written! But about Saint Catherine’s. Down here in the United States we are taught about Harriet Tubman and we are taught that she ended up in Canada. It wasn't until I visited St. Catherine’s as an adult on a trip to Niagara Falls that the people up there expressed their pride that Harriet Tubman planted 2 churches and built 2 communities up there! So we adjusted our trip so that we could visit all the sites. It was outstanding! Harriet Tubman was infinitely more than a name in a history book.
@IvyProsperАй бұрын
Wow that's amazing!!!
@davidgoodlettmusicАй бұрын
Bro Jay, I never met you, but I love you! You are keeping it a stack! I visited Ghana in 2020, then got dual citizenship for my wife and kids in Sierra Leone in 2022 and made it to Kemet in 2023. Each trip has been a life changer. Maybe we can travel with you one of these days. Thank you for all you do.
@TheWatchmanPostАй бұрын
Jay's maturity and intelligence is a demonstration of how free he is. Jay is dope!!! Ivy is royally stunning❤
@Africa-arise-m23 күн бұрын
I love the consciousness of Jay
@KemeticCenteredLiving22 күн бұрын
So loved this video and his perspective. "No need for outside validation" Love it!
@IvyProsper22 күн бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@jasonsimmons67127 күн бұрын
This is an awesome video, thank you ❤! My trips to Africa started in 2012 : Kenya 🇰🇪 and Ghana 🇬🇭 so far , and God willing Tanzania 🇹🇿 next year ! This has changed my life forever ❤. I don’t wanna stop traveling this beautiful continent. Live more and learn more !
@joeymorris478720 күн бұрын
@@jasonsimmons671 Zanzibar is a must..please try and make it there!
@blaqLionАй бұрын
We need part 2 of this conversation with jay again and some Caribbeans, those from UK, Canada, African American and Strong pan African from Ghana and other one African countries
@IvyProsperАй бұрын
Thanks for the suggestion!
@eulogemadzou3045Ай бұрын
Dear sister, Great show and very insightful! Great work!! We are with you!!
@teddydavis2339Ай бұрын
I absolutely love Jay Cameron. His energy is illuminating. He's waking up so many African Americans. I don't understand how African Americans could object to other African Americans moving or visiting Africa. They congratulate African Americans who move to Portugal, and they pioneered the European slave trade. I appreciate this conversation, and I hope it gets millions of views and likes.
@jahifarajiАй бұрын
Agreed 100 %
@IvyProsperАй бұрын
@@teddydavis2339 I am glad you enjoyed the video.
@JohnEyubehdabronАй бұрын
The reason why other African Americans discourage others is because of the LIES they've been told about Africa. You have to keep in mind that America is the LAND Of PROPAGANDA LIESand! America has mastered the art of propaganda that they continuously BOMBARD the citizens with lies. So the people believe everything they are told. That is why Americans are very IGNORANT about the whole world, including Africa. If you live in the US and you were not born there, you will hear the citizens ask stupid questions that no one should ever ask...especially now that the lnternet is available to do research and find out the truth. For example, a lady said to me, if we don't have cars in Africa, how do we go around? I just couldn't believe the insult. And when l embarrassed and told her that people not only drive cars like in the US but there are those who can afford a luxury car, she was confused and dumbfounded. I showed her some KZbin videos about African countries, and she realized how stupid she was because of her ignorance. But l don't blame her. It's the USELESS media that we see in America who are not interested in telling the TRUTH but spread LIES and PROPAGANDA! And why does the media tell so MANY lies about Africa and the rest of the world? It's very simple. The citizens have been BRAINWASHED to believe that America is the best country in the world. So the media has to keep the lies going, in order to discourage the citizens from traveling and see if it's true that America is really the best country like the are told, so they just stay in America and never travel. That's why l respect what Jay is doing by bringing black people from America to Africa so they can see for themselves that they have been lied to.
@section8ight174Ай бұрын
The Brainwash is deep & so is the self hate!!
@AminaPhilosophyАй бұрын
Africans were not the first or the last people enslaved by euro-pee-ons. My point: Let’s not allow -historians- story tellers make African people the only face of slavery. They do this to make us feel second class and inferior. This shame is what makes us not want to reconnect with Africa…the land and its people.
@msmercy5280Ай бұрын
Hello from the UK Praying for good health and life for the coming year so that I can join one of your trips to Tanzania
@section8ight174Ай бұрын
WELCOME HOME 🇹🇿
@georgekarago445818 күн бұрын
Jay's emotional intelligence is on another level; extremely top-notch. Thank you Ivy for providing the forum; you are a very intelligent gal.
@IvyProsper18 күн бұрын
I agree. Jay is on another level. I'm glad you enjoyed the conversation. Thank you.
@InsituteFFАй бұрын
The same happened to me when I got off the plane in Lagos. If I had listened to USA's negative campaign on Nigeria, I wouldn't have experienced the most wonderful time in my life! I was safe, the people were kind and wonderful. I loved the markets and culture. Nobody was on welfare. Everyone contributed.... and the Nigerians are brilliant and innovative. The beaches were magnificent!
@IvyProsperАй бұрын
@@InsituteFF So glad you had a wonderful experience
@nyakangaАй бұрын
Thanks @Ivyprosper for that education of Harriet Tubman. I live in Halifax, Nova Scotia and used to see the underground rail bits and pieces on TV but only at commercial time. So sad this brave woman is not taught in Schools. I too keep the $10 bill with Viola Desmond.
@IvyProsperАй бұрын
You're most welcome! And thank you for sharing about Halifax.
@kwakuagboАй бұрын
Salute to Mr Jay Cameron and thank you miss Ivy Prosper for this valuably interview. Peace and love.
@a1wynnАй бұрын
Egypt is not the only misconception when it comes to where it is located. Many modern day scholars do not know that there is no such place as Middle-East. This area too, according to ancient maps, historical books, and explorers documented records and maps, is part of Africa and is in truth North-East Africa. Just because a canal is built to divide the land does not change its geographical and historical association. The name Middle-East was coined out of the British-India Office during its colonization of the region in the 1950s and further emphasized widely when United States naval strategist Captain Alfred Thayer Mahan who designated the region to be called this, used the term in 1902 to impose it upon the rest of the world.
@JaniceLThinkerАй бұрын
CORRECT!!!
@ying_Ram0824Ай бұрын
People also don’t know that the Original Egyptians are not the Arabs who we see today. The Nubians who were resettled to Aswan, Egypt are the descendants of the Pharaohs. Arab invasion kicked out the Greeks.
@hadtrust5927Ай бұрын
Great job , Ivy . Some people use their channel for nonsense , and ' trash-talk ' Africa , you are using yours to shine light on Africa . Well done . Up for dinner ?
@jahifarajiАй бұрын
You are so correct..everytime one of us makes it back to our motherland, it's as if the ancestors are smiling and saying .This one made it back. "..
@nyakangaАй бұрын
You are right @Jaycameron we are everywhere and so is our art. Yes, I remember attending school in Uganda and we were never encouraged to speak our local languages. We actually got demerits for it. I am glad people are beginning to wake up and keep up with your platforms as you reach out to a lot more.
@kwameolatunji1193Ай бұрын
Wow two powerful African voices, doing there part for the uplifment of Africans.
@kwesidiamonds8242Ай бұрын
Finally I have someone who sees what I see. Thank you
@MohamedBarrie-n3i28 күн бұрын
Powerful interview 🙌 🙏 👏 with a intelligent black man
@IvyProsper28 күн бұрын
It was one of my most enjoyable interviews.
@armstrongigenerateАй бұрын
Good job my brother, am Ghanaian in america, you doing a great job 👏
@aaronlattimore9409Ай бұрын
Love This!!! I agree with him 100%. I am Military.
@kingstonrebelАй бұрын
Interesting... America 🇺🇸 Canada 🇨🇦 discussion on Motherland Africa...Thanks for sharing your experiences. Well done ❤👍🏿
@p_black3219Ай бұрын
Two of my favorites. While I've never met Jay but we have had our share of back and forth in the comments. I met Ivory at a restaurant in Ghana 🇬🇭 and we took pictures, and she knows me through my comments on her KZbin channel. This is a great dialog and conversation. 😊
@IvyProsperАй бұрын
It's Ivy not Ivory 😀. Thanks for watching and always sharing your thoughts in the comments
@eileenwatt8283Ай бұрын
@@IvyProsper welcome back Ivy. The last vlog I watched of you was when you had typhoid and was going back to Canada for care. Missed you❤
@eileenwatt8283Ай бұрын
@@IvyProsperthe black colleges were named after white abolitionist. It's possible they may have funded the colleges because they were also wealthy. Spelman was named after someone in the Rockefeller family.
@p_black3219Ай бұрын
@@IvyProsper sorry for the typo...I know your name
@IvyProsperАй бұрын
@p_black3219 I understand. It can happen
@osuaccraАй бұрын
Good interview Ivy. Jay is doing an amazing job. Thanks for having him.
@alicegyamfi6772Ай бұрын
Ivy, l think this is The Best interview l have watched you do, l have learned so much history as a Black British born Ghanaian. God Bless you Both. Amen
@IvyProsper29 күн бұрын
Thank you. I'm glad you enjoyed it.
@namuyabamwafrikaАй бұрын
I really wish this conversation had no end. I have these conversations so often, so it was such a relief to hear it from someone else. Let's have group dialogues like this. Thank you.
@southafricaismyhome814Ай бұрын
AFRICA IS THE HOLLY LAND, AFRICA CALL HIS CHILDREN BACK, 🇿🇦🇿🇦🇿🇦🇿🇦
@JohnArmwood27 күн бұрын
It id how backward Southern schools are. We learned all of this by the time we were 18 in 1971. In NYC we ;learned history. I am 71 years old. We read Chinua Achebe, Thinks Fall Apart and Arrow of God. I read all of Nkrumah’s books. Africa Must Unite, Neocolonialism the last state of Imperialism, Dark Days in Ghana and Conciousism. We met leadership from various African Liberation Movements. I took 11 African Studies courses. I last pledged allegiance when I was in the 8th grade. We protested the War in Vietnam as teenagers.
@IvyProsper27 күн бұрын
@@JohnArmwood That's great you learned all of that.
@ancat2521Ай бұрын
We got rid of the judicial wigs a decade or more ago.Watching from beautiful Barbados 🇧🇧
@IvyProsperАй бұрын
Yeah those wigs are wild.
@section8ight174Ай бұрын
Now just for the coloniser names ❤
@lammuriАй бұрын
@@IvyProsperThey actually originate from us, Kemet or ancient Egypt. If you can find the book titled LE FABULEUX HERITAGE DE L'EGYPTE by Christiane Deroches Noblecourt you will find the pictures there.
@emmanuelamoh182Ай бұрын
Listening to this interview felt deeply personal and enlightening, as it touched on themes of tradition and the African Diaspora that resonate with my own experiences. The discussion brought forward the complex layers of cultural transitions, showing how colonial influences have left an indelible mark on African identity-from language to family structures. It reminded me of the delicate balance many of us face in honoring our heritage while adapting to new, global contexts. This conversation underscored the resilience within our communities and sparked a renewed appreciation for the journey of preserving culture amid change, thank you for sharing Ivy and Jay Cameron.👍
@tamikajones6213Ай бұрын
I'm over 50. Listening to the continent tell the true story has created a shift in my thinking.
@IvyProsperАй бұрын
Thank you for sharing your experience on having a shift in your thinking.
@mr.mr.5010Ай бұрын
Excellent conversation. We need more stories like that.
@dadoboye1536Ай бұрын
Jay is so knowledgeable beyond words.
@abbassaquee286Ай бұрын
Not only black Americans treat Africans with disregard even some of us Africans don't treat other Africans with disregard especially travelling by road from African country to the other the amount hassle will encounter especially the franco speaking countries.
@barbaraburns8014Ай бұрын
Thank you Ivy. Thank you Jay for connecting our people to home.
@IvyProsperАй бұрын
@@barbaraburns8014 Thank you too for following the conversation.
@April1999-CANАй бұрын
I love Jay. His thought process is sooo amazing!!!
@Nsibidiimohtep-pf9ghАй бұрын
That's what it called a proper education.
@jeanetterawls4752Ай бұрын
THIS IS REVELATION TIME Africa Unite.....Jah people want to come Home!! ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
@hosealong3930Ай бұрын
Ivory, this was absolutely fantastic! You and Jay are two of my favorite young Black people. This video was quite educational. I've forwarded it to several of my relatives, one who still has this profound ignorance about Africa. Thanks so much for this and keep bringing viewers such valuable content.
@eatforlifebymarsha25 күн бұрын
I am from 🇨🇦 and would love to go to Ghana. 😊
@IvyProsper20 күн бұрын
You should try and come if you can!
@egbeeyong7327Ай бұрын
Hey Ivy, this is my first time of watching your program. Is very interesting and educational. I have tried to educate a lot of African Americans here in Atlanta about Africa, but you will be surprised that a lot of them are not even interested. I hope to ask them to watch your program. I am from Cameroon, and travel back home every year. So if you guys need to know any information about Cameroon, I would be delighted to share with you all. Has Jay ever been to Cameroon?
@IvyProsperАй бұрын
Thanks for watching. I'm not surprised there are still people not interested in Africa. I am not sure if Jay has been to Cameroon yet.
@egbeeyong7327Ай бұрын
If he is interested, I would love to hook him up with friends and family to facilitate his travel and stay there. There are so many slave monuments and interesting sites to explore .
@lammuriАй бұрын
Question for you: which Cameroonian ethnic groups are so aware of their ancient Egyptian origins that actually they wear the Ankh sign instead of the Christian cross? I know there were Njoya hieroglyphics buy I don't know if they trace back to Kemet or ancient Egypt.
@nyakangaАй бұрын
@@egbeeyong7327 it saddens me too when I hear an African American or diasporian say they are not interested in Africa. I am from Uganda and have met some African Americans who speak proudly of Idi Amin that just excites me. With people like @IvyProsper and @JayCameroon, the shift will happen in good time.
@AA-tw9nqАй бұрын
Even in Ghana, there is Brazil house in James Town where former slaves from Brazil were brought to settle and some were also sent to Nigeria.
@kwennisonАй бұрын
Where I am from, Ga Man
@LewatifaАй бұрын
African unit, I can't wait to see more come back home to Ghana. I'm not talking about Accra but to see the oil and golden city of Ghana ❤❤❤ I can't wait ❤❤❤❤
@prosperakpi6884Ай бұрын
Try to visit the Volta region, northern region, Ashanti region and many, Accra is choked. Most Real nice people can be found out of the city,
@mmg0705Ай бұрын
Yes jay africa awiats her children 👊🏿👌🏿👍🏿👏🏿✊🏿
@Seventh_dimension27 күн бұрын
This was a great conversation.
@msmercy5280Ай бұрын
Welcome back home, JAY. I always listen to you and Ivy. As a Ghanaian, I am unlearning and learning because our grandparents and parents taught me most of the history. We had history lessons at school, most about West Africa. I love what you do and represent
@gerrimason830Ай бұрын
Nothing but respect for Jay Cameron and his goals.
@pamelaatram4175Ай бұрын
Wow i just luv Jay ! Anytime he opens his mouth I can't stop listening till the end!
@lisamurray2662Ай бұрын
Trattoria just stopped outlawed those ridiculous court wigs in Burkina Faso.
@mhenry9273Ай бұрын
Traore' is the da rula.... genious.
@jahifarajiАй бұрын
Ibrahim traore is at present leading burkina faso to its best days. And inspiring the rest of africas. Youths. .
@mohmhkАй бұрын
Although I get the gist behind well intended Africans propagating such news, but Burkinabes never wore those things to begin with. It is Anglo oriented, hence you'll likely find english speaking African judicial personnel wearing them as opposed to french speaking Africans.
@section8ight174Ай бұрын
@@mohmhkBurkinabes need to OUTLAW that’s silly French language! Swahili is already a preferred language to more than 200M Afrikans 😊
@mohmhkАй бұрын
@@section8ight174 I agree.
@debbiewilliams1257Ай бұрын
I love your description of Africa and it’s many different cultures! I would love to explore the world!After listening to your interview with Jay Cameron, I felt enlightened and am looking forward to continue to chase my dreams! As an artist and poet, I would ❤️❤️❤️❤️to explore travel to Africa, and would like more information about planning a trip to Guiana… Please update me about how I can further pursue my quest…Thank you🤗🙏🏿😎
@globalmusicunlimitedАй бұрын
Great great conversation! We need a part 2. Thank you both 🙏 .
@madstarr2Ай бұрын
Very enlightening and informational!
@IvyProsperАй бұрын
Thanks for watching.
@kwennisonАй бұрын
Two of my favorite peeps on the YT..The work goes on. Looking forward to more interviews like this, Ivy
@f6876Ай бұрын
Jay is amazing, great interview
@IvyProsperАй бұрын
He is! Thanks for watching.
@AminaPhilosophyАй бұрын
26:00 Yep. Moorehouse, Spelman etc.
@eyedgaf4955Ай бұрын
Ivy God bless you and your Mom for educating you. Salute to both of you. ✊🏿
@IvyProsperАй бұрын
Thank you
@eileenwatt8283Ай бұрын
Ivy is back❤ T he last time I saw her on You Tube she had typhoid and was going to Canada to get treatment. Welcome back Ivy❤❤❤your channel
@IvyProsperАй бұрын
I was sick but it was not Typhoid. That was two years ago! I was only away from Ghana for 4 months.. Thanks for following my videos. Much appreciated.
@Asheroyal12Ай бұрын
Thank you guys for all of your efforts and contributions. Africa for Africans at home and abroad ❤️🖤💚🫡
@IvyProsperАй бұрын
Thanks. Appreciate you for watching and your comments.
@eileenwatt8283Ай бұрын
@@IvyProsper slaves were sent from Jamaica to Nova Scotia. The black population there are related to Jamaicans. I'm not sure of other islands sent slaves too
@ialislam8 күн бұрын
So informative session. Thanks!!
@IvyProsper8 күн бұрын
You're welcome
@haroldbottom347414 күн бұрын
History is (His Story)...It's the story of the victor. Never depend someone to teach you about you.
@IvyProsper14 күн бұрын
Truth
@addokwabina3096Ай бұрын
We need more of this program God bless you Ivy
@naashormeofosu-appiah413829 күн бұрын
I have so much respect for the ancestors who paved the way for us to be here.
@bpjulie1Ай бұрын
Thank you both for this amazing knowledge. The both of you are great. Mr. Cameron I was scared to go to Africa, I will be reaching out to you.
@jaycameronofficial15 күн бұрын
Thank you 🙏🏾
@tourandrelocationcommunityАй бұрын
I loveeeeed this interview!!💛
@tonyafaulkner8483Ай бұрын
ME 2❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
@IvyProsperАй бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it
@nyakangaАй бұрын
Kudos to you @jaycameron for giving people confidence to travel those distances and learn for themselves. I am just listening and seeing how powerful it is as different generations make the trips together. ✊✊✊
@Asheroyal12Ай бұрын
New Subscriber here looking forward for the Journey ❤️🖤💚
@IvyProsperАй бұрын
Thank you so much
@Victoria-qk3mu12 күн бұрын
Dear Sister you look very beautiful and elegant great interview Love from Jacksonville, Florida
@shirleyw3382Ай бұрын
Could you please tell me which DNA that Jay Cameron used to discover his ancestors also I would love to travel to Africa on Jay Cameron excursion where could I get info about traveling to Africa . Where is this info available? Thank you fir your channel I have enjoyed your interview so much🙏🏽
@IvyProsperАй бұрын
It's www.africanancestry.com Black-owned.
@evelyngolden2272Ай бұрын
Watching the replay. Great interview, Ivy. Thanks for sharing your story, Jay.
@IvyProsperАй бұрын
Glad you enjoyed the conversation
@Brittainye28 күн бұрын
I was always that child that liked learning about other cultures and talking to people from other places. I would say I wanna see the world and see the "real people" not just the resorts....I never understood why until my first visited country was Nigeria and it looked just like "any ghetto USA" I was heartbroken at how colonized Nigeria was 😟i kept thinking "y'all live in the motherland, y'all know where your ancestors are from but y'all praise white?! You wanna be white?! Why do y'all have Santa Claus?!" Then I visited South Africa and still heartbreak. At that point I realized we have a common enemy and it's not each other, I realized why Africans "ingest" so much America but we didn't learn anything about Africa! All the lies! African resources built the US but so many Africans covet migrating to the US. I still talk to so many people who have no interest in visiting Africa because they believe it's nothing but lions and zebras, then the other group of people who think I'm only visiting for mission trips 💁🏾♀️ so thank you Jay and Ivy for getting the word out. I wanna visit all 54 countries and make a new home in one of them. 🙏🏾
@ellenharper462327 күн бұрын
I hope you find your heart place. But, we live in a global economy so you will always see somethings that are familiar, but when you talk to people and get to know them you’ll find differences too. Slavery in the U.S. ended in the 1860s but the independence of many Africans countries came in the 1960s. Neocolonialism is only now ending. We’ll not see the Africa without the scars of slavery and colonization. But I love going, I’m heading back in January to Nigeria. I’ve been to Ghana and a couple of other African countries and a few Caribbean countries too. I find there’s freedom and comfort. I find there’s poverty everywhere I travel.
@msmercy5280Ай бұрын
CAN you visit schools in Ghana as well? Your story can change the mindset of the African youth, especially in the tertiary institutions.👍🏿
@mhenry9273Ай бұрын
Anyone reading this, its worth taking a trip to the continent. I went to Kenya, and it was wort it.
@IvyProsperАй бұрын
I loved Kenya
@mhenry927321 күн бұрын
@@IvyProsper Living in Canada but Jamaican. Kenya, my second home. Thanks for sharing.
@altheadickerson4771Ай бұрын
I'm so glad I watched this ! 🇬🇭🙂💯
@lecardiosАй бұрын
Good convo
@Liy___444Ай бұрын
Love this ❤. Thank you both 🙏🏽
@IvyProsperАй бұрын
Thanks for watching. Glad you enjoyed it.
@MsArteliaАй бұрын
Thank you so very much
@geraldbeard4606Ай бұрын
Very informative, knowledgeable guy.
@IvyProsperАй бұрын
Glad you think so! Thanks for watching.
@p_black3219Ай бұрын
"Change Your Life"
@kokobean240Ай бұрын
❤ Im going to learn today! Thank you for sharing and bringing him on. Nice meet you Jay Cameron.
@IvyProsperАй бұрын
You're welcome. I'm glad you appreciated the conversation
@rudolphgraham2534Ай бұрын
Hi Jay , you are very frank about your upbringing. I am eighty three years old, and have been through the same colorism in my family, too . I have seen mothers quash their children noose to make it smaller. I have Lots of stories to tell but time wont let me !!. Thanks.
@keithnawls2010Ай бұрын
What does “quash their children’s noose” mean. Sorry this is interesting but these terms are confusing?
@jahifarajiАй бұрын
It's said ..," A bird born in a cage thinks flying is a disease . " Maximum impact applies 100% to what's Jay is bringing us..the highs ,the lows ,the inspiration, the education, the re-education is forever evident. Jay has reminded us that the blood in our bodies isn't ours,but those of our ancestors...it's equivalent to having the ancestors. Say. " This one has made it back home. .."..
@gettingaroundwithbaileybrownАй бұрын
Hey Ivy! How was I not already subscribed to your channel?! Well, I am now and so proud of you!
@IvyProsperАй бұрын
Thanks Bailey. I subscribed to yours too.
@AuthenticAfricanАй бұрын
This is a great story. Thanks Jay for all you do.
@IvyProsperАй бұрын
Thanks for watching.
@IvyProsperАй бұрын
Thanks for watching @authenticafrican
@DB99277Ай бұрын
❤Excellent discussion Sid✨🙏🏿✨☀️💕✨
@DB99277Ай бұрын
SiStar I meant ❤
@Mankind0112Ай бұрын
South Africa no longer requires judges and advocates to wear white wigs since October 30, 2005. but still correcting the judicial system
@otiskdarko6293Ай бұрын
Hi,Ivy & Jay,pls,how can i get the movie,try to let me know,either in Amazon.
@providetriggersforevolutio3748Ай бұрын
Ivy, who is the designer of your dress? Is there an online shop created by the designer?
@momwanafunziuumbaji3737Ай бұрын
There are few people that I can listen to for one hour, fifteen minutes and thirty seconds. Jay Cameron is one of them. Anymore, I listen to ***INFORMED*** Africans (Continental or Diaspora, Time in the Diaspora not important) before I listen to Western Media, western leaders and western sounding people (Black or White). I listen to the likes of Paul Kagame, Yoweri Museveni, Cyril Ramaphosa, Ibrahim Traore and others from the continent FIRST. Now I add to the list Jay Cameron. Listen to the ***INFORMED*** people of African Descent who ***CARE*** about Africa. !!! THE REST DON'T MATTER !!!
@4everfaithfulun2Him26 күн бұрын
I'm surprised they didn't 🚫 this channel after this video in the 🇺🇲. He called out some entities that don't like being called out!
@rainbow3649Ай бұрын
Ivy, when is Jay's documentary film coming out, i know he mentioned 2025, but where do u find it, to watch.
@IvyProsperАй бұрын
All I know is he said 2025. I don't know yet where it will be showing.
@April1999-CANАй бұрын
Deep but Truth
@EdnahChirchirАй бұрын
AA's talk exactly like Africans by expresion, laughing, gestures and language. We do the same
@ericjackson1852Ай бұрын
Thats right, the African, African-American connection.
@boss-de8884Ай бұрын
Y'all are some weird people
@EdnahChirchirАй бұрын
@@boss-de8884 you are the weird one, we live like humans not robots
@EdnahChirchirАй бұрын
@@boss-de8884 your like robots with no human heart of kindness and empathy
@section8ight174Ай бұрын
@@boss-de8884Ya mama weird
@IyannakabriaАй бұрын
Subscribing to you both! Great content ❤️
@IvyProsperАй бұрын
A big thank you.
@jaycameronofficial15 күн бұрын
Thank you 🙏🏾
@msmercy5280Ай бұрын
You are speaking the truth, Jay i like this conversation