visto che ancora stai facendo finta di "studiare" l'articolo linkato sotto il falso titolo su Zaia dal mentitore vasco, non voglio affaticarti destiny nel dover ricercare nel passato:
http://www.associna.com/modules.php?name=Forums&file=viewtopic&t=12458&postdays=0&postorder=asc&start=01) nel link stesso citato da destiny nel precedente thread in cui era intervenuto raccontando balle sui "somali", i "somali-bantu" e dintorni, si scrive:
"
The term "Somali Bantu" is an ethnonym that was invented by humanitarian aid-supplying agencies shortly after the outbreak of the civil war in Somalia in 1991. Its purpose was to help the staff of these aid agencies better distinguish between, on the one hand, Bantu minority groups hailing from Somalia and thus in need of immediate humanitarian attention, and on the other hand, other Bantu groups from elsewhere in Africa that did not require immediate humanitarian assistance. The neologism further spread through the media, which repeated verbatim what the aid agencies' increasingly began indicating in their reports as the new name for Somalia's ethnically Bantu minorities." quindi tu usi "Somali-bantu" come un etnonimo reale mentre é stato INVENTATO (coerentemente con l'invenzione anch'essa OCCIDENTALE e coloniale del concetto di "Somalia" bel XIX secolo....) nel 1991!!!!
http://orvillejenkins.com/peoples/somalibantu.html First the term "Bantu." This is a linguistic term, and refers to a complex family of languages all over Africa. It is also generally used in a loose way to refer to the culture groups or tribes of peoples speaking one of the languages classified as Bantu.
Thus the term "Bantu" refers to about 1500 or more languages. The Bantu languages and peoples are the majority of people living south of the Sahara and cover about 2/3 of the land area in the African continent south of the Sahara./p>
The Somali people are not among these Bantu peoples, and their language is classified as Cushitic, not Bantu. (...) The term "Bantu" is a technical term used by Western scholars as a reference term for these languages. ("Bantu" is a common form of the word for "person" in many of these languages, in various phonetic variations.)
Many Africans, now aware of these Western, technical academic terms and categories -- scholars as well as educated common people – may nowadays also use these terms to classify their own tribe, if they are referring to the broad different ethnic or language groupings of people in Africa, especially if talking to a European. No particular tribe is named Bantu by scholars or would actually call themselves by that name.(...)
In recent years I heard the strange term "Somali Bantu," and it took me a while to figure out what that was meant to refer to.
This is an unusual term, as no Somali is Bantu, and no Bantu would commonly claim to be Somali. [/size]
e per me la questione era già ampiamente conclusa
se vuoi ancora parlare di Somalia per non parlare delle malefatte di9 Grillo fallo pure, destiny, continua pure ad andare Ot....buon divertimento!