When I saw an Ethiopian old lady

CaliTedesse

I ❤️ Islam & Aabo Kush. Anti-BBB Anti-Inbred
VIP
Work at the same engineer company I work that's when I realised Soomalidda waa gaajo. I've never seen an old Somali lady work at such a firm. Walle speaks volumes. She also has that Zi Zi Zi accent kkkkkkkk.
 

Apollo

VIP
Work at the same engineer company I work that's when I realised Soomalidda waa gaajo. I've never seen an old Somali lady work at such a firm. Walle speaks volumes. She also has that Zi Zi Zi accent kkkkkkkk.

I have met an Italian-Greek Ethiopian recently. I was shocked by it. She was mostly Italian and Greek and only a quarter Ethiopian and knew a lot about the Horn.

I thought she was Maghrebi at first. :mjlol:

Then I looked up on the internet and found out that there used to be a relatively large Italian and Greek community in Ethiopia. Guess that explains it.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greeks_in_Ethiopia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Italians_of_Ethiopia

:hmm:
 

Awdalia Rising

SSpot Special Correspondent
Somali women want to retire at age 40. Even if they have their own career they expect their husband to be running his own businesses and paying for everything by the time the woman is 40 so she can just relax

Somali women back home don’t even work unless it’s at a khat stand or in a shop or cooking in a restaurant
 
I have met an Italian-Greek Ethiopian recently. I was shocked by it. She was mostly Italian and Greek and only a quarter Ethiopian and knew a lot about the Horn.

I thought she was Maghrebi at first. :mjlol:

Then I looked up on the internet that there used to be a relatively large Italian and Greek community in Ethiopia. Guess that explains it.
WE WUZ GREEK N SHIEET
 

Maximus

Lord Maximus
WE WUZ GREEK N SHIEET
upload_2020-2-18_15-44-14.jpeg


upload_2020-2-18_15-44-45.jpeg


You can see a resemblance
 

Apollo

VIP
^ Lol, they came to Ethiopia in the 1800s, early 1900s. Not ancient stuff.

What was extra strange: she was born in Ethiopia not the West and had a Habesha accent.
 
I have met an Italian-Greek Ethiopian recently. I was shocked by it. She was mostly Italian and Greek and only a quarter Ethiopian and knew a lot about the Horn.

I thought she was Maghrebi at first. :mjlol:

Then I looked up on the internet and found out that there used to be a relatively large Italian and Greek community in Ethiopia. Guess that explains it.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greeks_in_Ethiopia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Italians_of_Ethiopia

:hmm:

There is also an Armenian community in Ethiopia since the time of Emperor Menilik II. They played a big role in modern Ethiopian music.
 
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