family

It's a baby girl!

Mwin-Bangfu Brielle Kuuyuor! The big family has a new member! Now it is the youngest.


Soon! REMEMBER

First the chicken, then the egg, then the exhibition   After eight months and all sorts of hatching and preparations, I am showing a selection of my photos, texts and videos…


Work and fun at the same time

Regarding the project, I would like to take this opportunity to thank you, Aunt Verena, for giving me such a great opportunity to apply a lot of what I learnt in my journalism…


Ernestina and me on a great mission

You might think that people who live in the country always have a little time to spare. Unlike stressed city dwellers. In fact, Ernestina and I had to make a great effort to do…


Cracking peanuts in a big round

Now that many have arrived from near and far, the homestead and all the individual households are filling up with young, old and adult children, grandchildren, great-grandchildren…


How the story shall be told

A first prerequisite is that we ask all family members, neighbours and villagers on site for their permission to interview them and to record the conversations, to photograph or…


Flying and arriving

It was the first long flight since the beginning of the Corona pandemic. The preparations already showed that travelling has become complicated and costly. A plane ticket and visa…


A project of the heart

ROOTS is intended to continue the oral tradition of storytelling and my knowledge from previous stays and interviews from 1989 and 2019. There have always been close ties between…


Past, present and future

Now my adoptive mother, her name is Pigr, has died. I will travel to Hiineteng to attend her funeral ceremony. A cousin of my adoptive family has also died. Both will be buried on…


What ROOTS is about

ROOTS is meant to be a starting point to develop a deeper understanding of people who still live as subsistence farmers in an area where the soil has been depleted for decades. I…


Why do I have a family in Ghana?

I was adopted in 1989 as the daughter of the then eldest of a lineage in Hiineteng/Ghana: Kuuyuour Zinige. I lived with the family (four households) for several months to carry…


A really big lineage

I have a big family. I could never count how many relatives I have and many of them I have never met in my life. Some live and work in a remote village in the northwest of Ghana,…