An African man should not do anything called housework or cooking.
“An African man should not do anything called housework or cooking.”
The World Motivation
An African man should not do anything called housework or cooking.
“An African man should not do anything called housework or cooking.”
Explore more quotes by Fela Kuti on topics like African, wisdom, and life lessons.
“An African man should not do anything called housework or cooking.”
“I'm playing deep African music.”
“No, I didn't hear about 'Live Aid.' I was in prison, and we were not allowed newspapers in prison.”
“Music must awaken people to do their duty as citizens and act.”
“My mother was the most wicked mother ever seen in life when it came to beating. Oh-la-la! Every time I would say, 'This is the end of me.' Oh, how she would beat me.”
“My country will be a symbol of free human society.”
“The insidious aid culture has left African countries more debt-laden, more inflation-prone, more vulnerable to the vagaries of the currency markets and more unattractive to higher-quality investment.”
“I like African music, and I'm a huge Ravi Shankar fan.”
“I'd been told that when you first put your feet on African ground, you'll be hit by a feeling of overwhelming understanding, like you've returned home and suddenly belong. Quite frankly, I didn't feel that.”
“We do have Museums of African American Art in the United States, and there is a National Museum of Women's Art. However, I believe Latinos are best served by displaying their art next to the art of other groups, particularly North American, European, and even Asian artists.”
“African American women, and moms in particular, are evicted at disproportionately high rates.”
“When I was very little, I was into Michael Jackson. At six or seven, it was Madonna, but she's not what she used to be. I've been into everything from Edith Piaf to Joe Strummer to the Velvet Underground to Suicide to A Tribe Called Quest to African music.”