When our ancestors were stolen from Africa, Africa was taken from us. By design and with intention, enslavers stripped away our African identity, from our languages to our customs and traditions, and even our faith. AfricanAncestry.com co-founder and CEO, Dr. Gina Paige, calls this emptiness the Africa Void. It is the hollow state of being without knowledge of or connection to Africa. The outcomes of the Africa Void have been devastating. It is, arguably, the cause of most of the mental, physical, and sociological traumas that we experience/suffer even today.
Five Ways the Africa Void Impacts Us

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Johana Bonnell, Afro-Colombian. Bubi People.
My name is Johana. I was born in Cali, Colombia but raised in Seattle. I've traced my lineage and share African Ancestry with the Bubi Tribe of Equatorial Guinea. This was amazing to find out about my lineage, because it's the only Spanish-speaking country in Africa; being Afro-Colombian, it was a great commonality.

Ricky Adamus, Afro-Colombian. Umbundu People.
My name is Ricky. I was born to an Afro-Latino father and Euro-Latina mother. I traced my lineage and I share paternal African Ancestry with Umbundu people in Angola today. Our family immigrated to the USA four months after I was born in 1968. Living in Texas, the Colombian community was close and had many shades so I associated myself with my nationality and not a race.