Home Actress Yaya DaCosta HD Instagram Photos and Wallpapers March 2024 Yaya DaCosta Instagram - is CHEROKEE. . For thousands of years, at least as far back as 10,000 BCE, The Cherokee Nation’s (originally called Ani’-Yun’wiya) ancestral lands were located in what is now the southeastern United States (including parts of present day Alabama, Georgia, Tennessee, Kentucky, North Carolina, South Carolina, Arkansas, Virginia and Missouri). We were an agricultural people organized into matrilineal clans, with a deep connection to Nature, reflected in our spiritual beliefs, ceremonies, and art. Despite centuries of imperialist efforts, we remain the largest surviving indigenous American population to this day, with the majority residing in Oklahoma, as a result of the U.S. government’s “Indian Removal Act” and subsequent “Trail of Tears” in the 1830s. . Channeled message from a Cherokee ancestor: They tried to erase us, But we were not made of such fickle matter. We were made of earth, of water, of breath, of light… In order to survive many of us changed names, identities, communities… But society’s refusal to see us does not mean we don’t exist. You don’t have to know my name to feel me in your veins. We do not require that you speak Tsalagi, the old language, because we see the way you acknowledge the Four Directions, the way you’ve danced to our heartbeats through drums at pows wows your whole life, the beaded earrings you made and sold as a teenager, the way you translated the message we sent you through the Crow when your brother joined us, the way you connect with the lands you’ve lived on… We see you. This land asks only that you protect it. That you show up for it the way it has shown up for you, generation after generation, Through conditions that were impossible to survive. Yet here you are. Still. That you remain, and that you claim us out loud, gives others permission to do the same. We were here. We were here. We have always been here. . 📸: @thaisaquinophotography 💇🏾‍♀️: @chiomanvhair *who plaited my hair in a pattern resembling a DNA chain, representing the links of lineage 🎵: Walela- Cherokee Morning Song . #AncestryDecolonized #BlackFuturism #IndigenousFuturism #BlackHistoryMonth #BlackHerstoryMonth #BlackFutureMonth

Yaya DaCosta Instagram – is CHEROKEE. . For thousands of years, at least as far back as 10,000 BCE, The Cherokee Nation’s (originally called Ani’-Yun’wiya) ancestral lands were located in what is now the southeastern United States (including parts of present day Alabama, Georgia, Tennessee, Kentucky, North Carolina, South Carolina, Arkansas, Virginia and Missouri). We were an agricultural people organized into matrilineal clans, with a deep connection to Nature, reflected in our spiritual beliefs, ceremonies, and art. Despite centuries of imperialist efforts, we remain the largest surviving indigenous American population to this day, with the majority residing in Oklahoma, as a result of the U.S. government’s “Indian Removal Act” and subsequent “Trail of Tears” in the 1830s. . Channeled message from a Cherokee ancestor: They tried to erase us, But we were not made of such fickle matter. We were made of earth, of water, of breath, of light… In order to survive many of us changed names, identities, communities… But society’s refusal to see us does not mean we don’t exist. You don’t have to know my name to feel me in your veins. We do not require that you speak Tsalagi, the old language, because we see the way you acknowledge the Four Directions, the way you’ve danced to our heartbeats through drums at pows wows your whole life, the beaded earrings you made and sold as a teenager, the way you translated the message we sent you through the Crow when your brother joined us, the way you connect with the lands you’ve lived on… We see you. This land asks only that you protect it. That you show up for it the way it has shown up for you, generation after generation, Through conditions that were impossible to survive. Yet here you are. Still. That you remain, and that you claim us out loud, gives others permission to do the same. We were here. We were here. We have always been here. . 📸: @thaisaquinophotography 💇🏾‍♀️: @chiomanvhair *who plaited my hair in a pattern resembling a DNA chain, representing the links of lineage 🎵: Walela- Cherokee Morning Song . #AncestryDecolonized #BlackFuturism #IndigenousFuturism #BlackHistoryMonth #BlackHerstoryMonth #BlackFutureMonth

Yaya DaCosta Instagram - is CHEROKEE. . For thousands of years, at least as far back as 10,000 BCE, The Cherokee Nation’s (originally called Ani’-Yun’wiya) ancestral lands were located in what is now the southeastern United States (including parts of present day Alabama, Georgia, Tennessee, Kentucky, North Carolina, South Carolina, Arkansas, Virginia and Missouri). We were an agricultural people organized into matrilineal clans, with a deep connection to Nature, reflected in our spiritual beliefs, ceremonies, and art. Despite centuries of imperialist efforts, we remain the largest surviving indigenous American population to this day, with the majority residing in Oklahoma, as a result of the U.S. government’s “Indian Removal Act” and subsequent “Trail of Tears” in the 1830s. . Channeled message from a Cherokee ancestor: They tried to erase us, But we were not made of such fickle matter. We were made of earth, of water, of breath, of light… In order to survive many of us changed names, identities, communities… But society’s refusal to see us does not mean we don’t exist. You don’t have to know my name to feel me in your veins. We do not require that you speak Tsalagi, the old language, because we see the way you acknowledge the Four Directions, the way you’ve danced to our heartbeats through drums at pows wows your whole life, the beaded earrings you made and sold as a teenager, the way you translated the message we sent you through the Crow when your brother joined us, the way you connect with the lands you’ve lived on… We see you. This land asks only that you protect it. That you show up for it the way it has shown up for you, generation after generation, Through conditions that were impossible to survive. Yet here you are. Still. That you remain, and that you claim us out loud, gives others permission to do the same. We were here. We were here. We have always been here. . 📸: @thaisaquinophotography 💇🏾‍♀️: @chiomanvhair *who plaited my hair in a pattern resembling a DNA chain, representing the links of lineage 🎵: Walela- Cherokee Morning Song . #AncestryDecolonized #BlackFuturism #IndigenousFuturism #BlackHistoryMonth #BlackHerstoryMonth #BlackFutureMonth

Yaya DaCosta Instagram – is CHEROKEE.
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For thousands of years, at least as far back as 10,000 BCE, The Cherokee Nation’s (originally called Ani’-Yun’wiya) ancestral lands were located in what is now the southeastern United States (including parts of present day Alabama, Georgia, Tennessee, Kentucky, North Carolina, South Carolina, Arkansas, Virginia and Missouri). We were an agricultural people organized into matrilineal clans, with a deep connection to Nature, reflected in our spiritual beliefs, ceremonies, and art. Despite centuries of imperialist efforts, we remain the largest surviving indigenous American population to this day, with the majority residing in Oklahoma, as a result of the U.S. government’s “Indian Removal Act” and subsequent “Trail of Tears” in the 1830s.
.
Channeled message from a Cherokee ancestor:

They tried to erase us,
But we were not made of such fickle matter.
We were made of earth, of water, of breath, of light…
In order to survive many of us changed names, identities, communities…
But society’s refusal to see us does not mean we don’t exist.
You don’t have to know my name to feel me in your veins.
We do not require that you speak Tsalagi, the old language, because we see
the way you acknowledge the Four Directions,
the way you’ve danced to our heartbeats through drums at pows wows your whole life,
the beaded earrings you made and sold as a teenager,
the way you translated the message we sent you through the Crow when your brother joined us,
the way you connect with the lands you’ve lived on…
We see you.
This land asks only that you protect it.
That you show up for it the way it has shown up for you, generation after generation,
Through conditions that were impossible to survive.
Yet here you are.
Still.
That you remain, and that you claim us
out loud, gives others permission to do the same.
We were here.
We were here.
We have always been here.
.
📸: @thaisaquinophotography
💇🏾‍♀️: @chiomanvhair *who plaited my hair in a pattern resembling a DNA chain, representing the links of lineage
🎵: Walela- Cherokee Morning Song
.
#AncestryDecolonized
#BlackFuturism
#IndigenousFuturism
#BlackHistoryMonth
#BlackHerstoryMonth
#BlackFutureMonth | Posted on 29/Feb/2024 04:40:48

Yaya DaCosta Instagram – is YORUBA.

The Yoruba people of West Africa inhabit parts of present-day Benin and Togo, but are predominately and most famously one of the three largest ethnic groups in Nigeria.
Our origins trace back to at least the 10th century B.C. in Ile-Ife (in present day southwestern Nigeria), where it is believed the orisa Oduduwa descended to Earth to create the world.
While many Yoruba peoples on the continent of Africa are Christian or Muslim, the Yoruba diaspora consists of descendants of kidnapped and enslaved people who were dispersed across South America, The Caribbean, and North America, many of whom still keep traditional Yoruba spiritual practices alive.
The Yoruba are also known for being skilled craftsmen, farmers, and masters of the marketplace.
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Channeled Message:

Greatness.
Why hesitate when you come from greatness?
Why limit yourself when you were born to do a bililion beautiful things?
You, with roots that have stretched across lands for centuries,
You, with the perseverance to uphold countless generations…
The words we have spoken,
The deities we have venerated,
The divination tools we have perfected,
Have had such staying power in every place they arrived,
That even across borders, oceans and seas,
Even cloaked in diverse religious dogma,
We see ourselves.
A change of spelling here,
An alternate interpretation there…
The soul of what sustains us was never lost in translation. 
Get to the Essence of everything.
And infuse it with the staying power that runs through your veins.
Blood.
Èjè
Àse
Life force energy.
Excellence.
Creativity.
Rhythm that echoes the pulse of the planet.
Dance to that.
And do not be afraid to shine.
Adorn yourself
And celebrate your existence
Daily.
.
📸: @thaisaquinophotography 
💇🏾‍♀️: @chiomanvhair who used a traditional Nigerian wrapping technique to create a family tree with my hair.
🎵: Konkere Beats “ Dundun Instrumental Ensemble”
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#AncestryDecolonized
#BlackFuturism
#IndigenousFuturism
Yaya DaCosta Instagram – is MBUNDU.
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The Mbundu, traditionally a matrilineal Bantu people, have lived in present-day Angola since the Middle Ages. 
We were once head of “The Ambundu Kingdom” called “Ngola” (meaning iron), from which the name “Angola” was derived. 
The most well-known Mbundu figure in history was the powerful ruler Queen Nzinga. There are many oral traditions passed down about her polyandry, as well as her advanced military and negotiation tactics that staved off Portuguese invaders and kept them under control through a relationship of trade (ivory, rubber, wax, and humans). 
The tradition of resistance permeated Angolan culture so much that, even under Portuguese rule by the 1800s, many Ambundu communities remained sovereign, until the last of them, was defeated by the Portuguese in 1917. 
The spirit of revolt stayed with many descendants of this tribe as well, which could be evidenced by the existence of “Quilombos” (a Kimbundu word meaning “war camp”) in Brazil (another previous Portuguese colony), where self-freed people overthrew their captors and set up self-sufficient, independent communities.
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Channeled message:

You have done much much fighting on your feet.
It is time for buoyancy.
For wading in the waters of the creation of the New World.
There are those whose spears, guns, arrows and bombs must speak for them.
There are those whose sharp tongues pierce the minds of the masses from stages larger than we could have ever dreamt possible.
And still,
there are those whose contributions come from a quieter place,
but whose influence is no less effective.
You, my dear, have been tasked with using the gifts you have access to.
In that receptivity, that creativity, that reflection, that mysticism, that magic, that art,
you serve in accordance with the Divine’s plan.
You must do your work from there.
We have been many kinds of warriors.
Now,
Warriors of Peace…
This is your time.
.
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🎥: @thaisaquinophotography 
💇🏾‍♀️: @chiomanvhair
🎵: Bonga, “Mona Ki Ngi Xica” (meaning “The Child I Leave Behind” in Kimbundu)
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#AncestryDecolonized
#BlackFuturism
#IndigenousFuturism
#BlackHistoryMonth
#BlackHerstoryMonth
#BlackFutureMonth

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