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 MOOR.

The Moors were a predominantly Muslim people originating in North Africa (modern day Algeria, Morocco, Mali, Mauritania, Tunisia, Niger) and the Iberian Peninsula in the Middle Ages. Between 711 C.E. and 1492 C.E. Moors ruled over Iberia, which consists of modern-day Spain and Portugal. Our introduction of new scientific techniques and tools to Europe accelerated progress in Moorish Spain and made it flourish in the areas of Astronomy, Chemistry, Physics, Mathematics, Geography and Philosophy.
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Channelled message:

Trust in the changing nature of life.
The reality that you perceive today is but an expression of the energy needed to cultivate the transformation of Earth at this time.
Do not cling to notions of “good” and “bad”.
The next phase will always come.
Take a step back and see the circumstances of this lifetime as but a brief moment in the grand lifetime of humanity.
The power scales shall shift again and again.
We have conquered the people who have conquered us.
See the humans around you as reflections and reminders of every possible experience within you;
of every feeling that is also possible within you;
of every action – positive or negative- that is also a possibility for you.
Contribute with compassion to humanity’s ascension to a place where its goal is no longer power, but Love. Inshallah.
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📸: @thaisaquinophotography 
💇🏾‍♀️: @chiomanvhair
🎵: Khalifa Ould Eide, Dimi Mint Abba “Hassaniya Love Poem”
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#AncestryDecolonized
#BlackFuturism
#IndigenousFuturism
Yaya DaCosta Instagram – @ninasimone

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