working the land, wrongerring in the field, if you wanted to eat you ha to go in the field and grow.arvest. and bring it from the farm to the table. also, just a sense of community also when we lived with our family we lived in a communal setting i had my mother and my father, and my 13 siblings i had had my grammy, the cousins that were never nearby, and that's very indicative of the culture. and one thing that was very important, is that a derogatory tone to it, and i didn't know i was gullah until i went off to university, and saw these beautiful images that depicted my culture, and one in particular that showed my father, plowing a field at penn school. and that's what just made it even more important to me. >> victoria, a culture, we have that great tweet from arthur i think it is based on what patricia was saying the gullah people are hired for help building on their lands is this exploitation or opportunity and why, we have some great comments. exploitation, using the people to market nongullah business in gullah regions is classic internal u.s. colonialism, and then we have f