Call Me Guyanese
<p>These ethnic groups brought to Guyana with them unique individual cultures that over the years fused to develop into our now colourful Guyanese Culture. Just take for instances, Pepperpot, a traditional Amerindian dish, has now become a Guyanese custom/ tradition to eat during the Christmas season. Christmas would not be Christmas in Guyana without a taste of Pepperpot.</p>
<p>Another Guyanese custom is at the dawn of a New Year, it is traditional to prepare Cook-up, a traditional African dish. Our cultural diversity has also produced a rich variety of festivals (such as Diwali), celebrations, and development of the preforming arts, inclusive of Masqueraders. In addition, the fusing of our different backgrounds has established a form of broken English which we speak (besides Standard English), called Guyanese Creole.</p>
<p><a href="https://medium.com/@C.R.Bascom/call-me-guyanese-23de9bce92cc"><strong>Click Here</strong></a></p>