Porte du non retour

Bɛ̌ sín Wikipedya

Porte du non retour‚ kanumɔnɔnli yi yovogbéjì xoxó Danxomɛ tɔn‚ nyi alɔgbanǔ xwénǔxŏ tɔn ɖo Glexwé ɖo Benɛɛtò[1]. Azɔxwé gbɛ ɔ bì tɔn UNESCO ɖalɔ bɔ é gbǎ ɖo ahoyɔ kinjì ɖo xwé 1995 tɔn mɛ.

Kanumɔnɔnli yi Yovogbéji xoxó (Glexwé)

Alɔgbanǔ énɛn ɖo finɛn nǔ xwénuxǒ mɛwi kanǔmɔnnɔn ɖeɖéé yovo lɛ bɛ gbɔn Glexwé sìn ahɔyɔ kinjì sɔyi yovogbéji lɛ̀ é[2].

Tǎn tɔn[wlǎn nú | wla nú ɖoɖo ɔ]

Dodo tɔn[wlǎn nú | wla nú ɖoɖo ɔ]

  1. http://www.lesmemoiresdesesclavages.com/lieux5.html
  2. Timothy R. Landry et Helaine Silverman (dir.), Contested Cultural Heritage : Religion, Nationalism, Erasure, and Exclusion in a Global World, Springer, 2010, 286 p.