On my RU-vid channel, I share my journey and my experience of living in tanzania with you. Hopefully, I can inspire and motivate you to take a leap of faith and come to Africa
What a touching and empowering experience. You have reconnected with the ancestors both spiritually and physically. You can walk in the confidence of being grounded and rooted in your ancestral home.
Your culture is everything. It is your roots and your identity. It is where you belong. It is home and community. So much were stolen from us. Would we ever be able to find it?
Bro you are 100% I have seen why they want to keep us from Africa. Just like me since I landed there I am there every other month and making plans to move. I have that experience
THE OTHER GROUPS POOL THEIR MONEY..THEY ARE NOT WORKING AS INDIVIDUALS. THEY ARE NOT CHRISTIANS..THEY ARE MUSLIM AND HINDUS WHO LOVE THEIR GODS AND LOVE AND TRUST EACH OTHER.
This is a new channel for you? I know I’ve seen some videos of you on a different channel. Yt be deleting and unsubscribing us from various channels so I hadn’t seen you in a while.
We need to fully embrace our ancestry and not just speak of it conveniently. IT IS IMPORTANT!!! All other ethnicities full embrace theirs no matter where in the world they go.
Bless day King's & Queen's. My hold life has been over shadowed thinking of my home land Africa, my forefather's had left their cries in my heart. I have never fully accepted the land to which I was born to be my home land, but always looked to Africa as my home land, since it is the home land of my ancestor's, seem impossible for my feet to never feel the connections to the soil to which my forefather's once walked, and to learn to speak in my African tongue, and to be part of restablish a United Africa. Presently I am not in a financial position to over any of the cost that would permit me to come over and take my rightful place in our father's land. Anyone one reading this, if u can give me any type of support. I would be much thankful. Love going out to all.
Africa needs people who help it develop and not those who just want to be pampered... try to understand the context Africa is in and stop crying like a child
You are saying the truth. Problem many diasporans do not know immigration process. The process is similar the worldover with peculiarities specific per country. When I go to Europe or Americas, I have to abide by the immigration laws of the specific country. The channel owner understands this because he has done it from Carreibean to Canada, so he knows he has to meet the same regulations when it comes to Tanzania. But you the diasporan want the rules to be bent to your advantage. You can't have that entitlement, what have you to show for being favoured? Only saying you are a descendant won't cut it, unless you can justify it with what value you bring and not coming to add more problems than what we already have
Sometimes, you have to move away from an environment to a place where you can find peace and contentment. For me, I found it in Tanzania. Thank you for watching and commenting on the video
Where you stopped is about Kisota area just starting, but if you went further ahead about 10 minutes walk, you would have arrived in Ungindoni area. You would have been mind blown by the construction of areas that can stand side to side with Mbweni or any other influent parts of Dar. You should venture more into Kigamboni. It is very big as far as Gezaulole, Kibada etc, where you live is just the start, and places have mentioned hardly have any plots unless you go further out. Good thing I see you are talking to locals and will soon get opportunities for plots if Kigamboni is to your liking
Please don't take the boda boda, it is very dangerous. Leave the boda boda to young people who take more risks. Take the Bajaj instead, please please do that. Keep well and have safe journeys.
Always nice to listen to an adult speaking. The one thing I would strongly advise anyone coming to live in Africa for a long time is to learn a local language(choose one). As an African myself, I find it tiring communicating in a second language(English in my case). At home I speak my mother tongue with my wife and relatives and it feels so good. At work, of course, I have no problem with speaking in English. In Africa, when I am chilling out with my friends at bar for example, and the beer is flowing, as are the jokes, in my mother tongue, and then you show up to sit with us. Now we have to change the whole vibe just to accommodate you. The jokes are no longer funny because they are being translated into English. That's what makes you a perpetual, "other". You are tiring people with forcing them to adjust to your needs.
Your comment started of nice, but then it turned into insulting. I agree that it is important to learn the language. Please keep in mind that learning a second language is not an easy process. Especially when one is a bit older
@@theafricanjumbee4057 No insult intended. I am not sure which part you find insulting. The fact of the matter is, if you are making people change their way of doing things just so you can be accommodated you makes you an outsider. That's what I have heard many returnees complain about. That they don't feel fully embraced in Africa. I am positing that the language barrier is one such reason. No insult intended my dear. Sorry if I came across that way.
Thanks for the informative video. You're right, the fight we should have is for policies that will facilitate the return to Africa for the descendants of the continent bt the African Union
Best and only trustworthy expat RU-vid. Most rational and realistic as well... The only one who did it right... All the others are young misguided, deluded scammers
Thank you very much for watching and commenting on the video. I traveled to tanzania three times before I moved permanently. I did my research to know what it takes to move here. What it takes to set up a business and to live here long term.
@@theafricanjumbee4057 And that's why I'm learning from you. I am emulating your methods that I too can be successful like you. I too am from the Caribbean small island not too far from Grenada , St Lucia. Moved it to Canada. What? 15 years ago I have, like you, started with the TTC, but I moved over to Purolator, working as a Courier. I am a very young man, and like you did, I will work until I am a retiree. Then and only then will I will move to Africa. With a pension My RRSP, my TFSA's and my other investments. That way I could contribute to Africa and live comfortably knowing the rules, knowing the immigration policies and having a realistic outlook on things. I've been searching Tanzania and that's how I came across your channel and it just fits the bill. Thank you for being a pioneer. Thank you for everything that you do in right now. It means so much.
Hello how are you? Can you share your WhatsApp number please, I’m organizing to come Tanzania. I’m Mozambican but I would like to invest more in Tanzania.
One year and ten months. I practice every day. My best Tanzanian friend and my Tanzanian brother take me to task from time to time by speaking kiswahili to me only, I am forced to learn. They also teach me. It's not easy, but you can't give up. Sometimes, having a qualified teacher can help.
I love videos like this. Very eye-opening, informative and most of all, gives an insight into what level of preparation is required as opposed to assuming things will just work out if we move over to Africa. It's definitely not impossible, it just requires preparation and planning. No one is saying even by planning and being prepared or having enough savings, things will work out perfectly. I'm sure there'll be hiccups here and there but at least, you won't fall over at the first hurdle. Thanks for sharing @theafricanjumbee4057
Yah, here is an adult talking. Continue to educate because I, as an African, knew that the way things were going, the stuff will hit the fan very quickly...
Omg i was saying the same thing to my family this morning. You may want to say it but cannot. But i will say it for you. Alot of these young men and women are broken, ex convicts, religious fanatics with delusions of grandeur, all tattooed up and misguided. Most of them are unemployed, weed/pot smoking addicts with an identity crisis. Some claiming black Hebrews, some claiming Moors etc etc. They have this false delusion that Africa belongs to them as some chosen people delusion. They come to Africa sometimes with only a few hundred dollars or even less. They have and had no income back in the US, alot of them on government handouts and cheques. Then they come thinking free land etc. They come here BROKE!!! No feasible plans, no realistic ideas. Foolishness!! The Truth is offensive. But it's true.
Correctly said brother. Those of us who follow the different channels on RU-vid know exactly who you are referring to. I have commented the same thing on their channel. You cannot have small money to invest but expect the government to view you as an asset to the country. They need to just move on and stop complaining. They want the cheap Tanzanian life but they bring little value to the country by way of taxes, jobs, or large scale social charity.
The majority of Black Diasporans who migrate back to Africa do not have the money for large investments because living in most places in America and in Europe is very expensive and Black people usually get the lowest pay in those countries compare to Whites and other races. Spending of money in the country by Black Diasporans is a form of investing in the country; they buy goods/items from businesses which collect sales tax for the government and they also add money to the economy when they buy food at the markets/restaurants, when they paid rent, when they pay for transportation, when they start small businesses. Small contributions add up to large contribution. The mentality of valuing only large investments is narrow thinking.
@@coz2j69 I understand what you are saying, however, that point cannot work from the viewpoint of a nation's government. A government receiving tax from a few immigrants making purchases can never move the needle the same way that someone who invests and creates jobs, creates markets and/or creates products for more persons to purchase and in turn pay more taxes through that investment. If your statement were true, then there would be no need for passports as all nations will welcome any and all individuals to come to their country because they would all be doing spending in some way or another. The passports are there because they benefit the nations on a large scale. We do not like the process and in some ways it can be made easier to navigate, but we should understand why the process is there. Try to view this from the eyes of the state. Having investments which contribute to the real growth of your economy is always better than having immigrants who contribute small amounts and pose bigger challenges. Finally a question. Should America prioritize immigrants of small income over immigrants with greater investing capabilities?
Remember that those countries were not built over night. We just have to persevere and work towards a better tomorrow. Even if the wages is smaller and their is contentment then its worth it. Yes, don't be afraid of having discussions to bring about better without the battles. Of course it's a personal choice for each individuals for different reasons.