We didn’t know we were preserving a culture—we were just living it
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About Bella Creole Life

Preserving our roots. Celebrating our rhythm.
MESSAGE

A Place to Visit, Just Like the Old Days

In the old Creole tradition, weekends weren’t complete without visiting. From house to house, kin and neighbors would drop in to swap stories, share a meal, sing a song, or just pass the time together. It wasn’t planned—it was just life.
At Bella Creole Life, we’re rekindling that spirit in the digital age. This site is our front porch. Our Sunday dinner table. Our screen door swinging open with a warm "Come in, baby!"
LEGACY

Our Story 

Bella Creole Life was born from the legacy of one man—my grandfather, Felix “T’fra” Monette—and the countless unsung Creole elders like him. This is for them. For us. For what comes next.

Mission

At Bella Creole Life, our mission is to preserve, celebrate, and share the beauty, strength, and soul of Louisiana Creole culture—past, present, and future. We aim to bridge generations and geography by creating a digital “front porch” where Creole families, friends, and allies can gather to honor traditions, uplift community, and keep our stories alive.
AUTHOR

Meet the Woman Behind the Mission 

By day, I’m an attorney committed to public service. But my soul belongs to the stories, traditions, and resilience of my people—Louisiana Creoles.

Raised in Cloutierville, Louisiana, just south of Natchitoches, I grew up surrounded by generations of strong Creole men and women, lively church choirs, pecan trees, and the stories of "the old folks." I didn’t realize it then, but I was soaking up history, one Sunday afternoon at a time.

My grandfather, T’fra, taught me that our culture is worth preserving—not just the recipes and songs, but the values, the humor, the faith, and the way we love our families. That’s what I’m doing here. Through Bella Creole Life, I hope to make our traditions visible, accessible, and cherished by every generation.

I’ve been published in International Magazine Kreol and am currently working on several writing projects. My debut children’s book, Discovery Days with Papa T’fra, celebrates adventure, family bonds, and the magic of Creole culture. I also have a novel in the works inspired by the strength and spirit of my own family. When I’m not working or writing, I’m with my three nephews—Drew, Ian, and Dominic—who remind me daily why legacy matters.

I write to remember, to comfort, and to inspire. Through Bella Creole Life, I’m passing it on.
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Christie Rachal
Legacy of Papa T’fra

About Papa T’fraFelix “T’fra” Monette, Jr.

About Papa Felix 

“T’fra” Monette, Jr.

T’fra wasn’t just a grandfather—he was a movement of one. A storyteller. A jokester. A quiet historian who carried our heritage in his bones. He was devoted to his wife, Cecile Rachal Monette, and to the family they raised in Derry, Louisiana. Together, they raised five daughters: Judy, Cathy Lynn, Jennifer, Felecia, and Rhonda. His walls proudly displayed their graduation photos like royal portraits.

His greatest joy, though, was being “Papa” to his grandchildren—and eventually, his great-grandchildren. He gave each of us a piece of himself, whether it was a joke, a song, a gentle forehead kiss, or a guitar melody drifting through the evening air.
What made Papa T’fra extraordinary wasn’t just his knowledge of our culture—but his commitment to living it, sharing it, and passing it down. He taught us to laugh loud, work hard, love big, and keep the stories alive.
This site is one of those stories. One we’re still writing.
Bella Creole Life is more than a website. It’s a revival. A reconnection. A reminder that no matter where we are, we belong to something beautiful.
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BLOGS

Blog Posts 

From heartfelt essays to community reflections, cooking memories, family history how-tos, and travel stories from Creoles across the globe.
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What Does It Mean to Be Louisiana Creole?

Christie Rachal

A Discussion of Culture, Identity, and History

If you ask ten people what it means to be Creole, you’ll likely get ten different answers.

And the truth is… they’re probably all speaking from a real place.

Because Creole identity in Louisiana has never been singular or fixed. It is layered—shaped by history, culture, language, faith, family, and, just as importantly, by the systems that tried to define people long before we ever had the chance to define ourselves.

To really understand it, you have to hold two truths at once: Creole identity is cultural.
And it has always existed within a world structured by race.

A Word That Meant More Than It Seems

Originally, Creole was a straightforward term. It meant “native-born”—someone born in the colony rather than in Europe.

But Louisiana was never a simple place.

From early on, the population included people of French and Spanish descent, enslaved Africans, free people of color, and Native communities—all interacting, forming relationships, building families, and creating a shared cultural world.

So the word Creole began to stretch.

It came to represent more than birthplace. It reflected a way of life—rooted in language, Catholic faith, foodways, music, and tightly woven family networks. It described people who belonged to this place in a way that outsiders did not.

And importantly, in its earlier usage, it was not limited to one race.

That matters.

The Systems That Shaped the Conversation

At the same time, identity in Louisiana was never free from structure.

Under French rule, the Code Noir regulated slavery and attempted to define relationships between Europeans, enslaved Africans, and free people of color. It didn’t just control labor, it shaped social order, family life, and the boundaries of belonging.

When the Spanish took control, they expanded recordkeeping practices influenced by their caste system. Parish records, legal documents, and census data began reflecting increasingly detailed classifications, based on ancestry, status, and perceived race.

So while Creole identity was forming culturally, it was also being documented, categorized, and constrained.

That dual reality, lived identity versus imposed identity, is at the heart of why this conversation still feels complicated today.

Culture, Language, and the Early Creole World

Before Louisiana became part of the United States, Creole identity was deeply tied to culture.

Language, especially French and Louisiana Creole, was central. Catholicism shaped community life. Family networks connected people across regions like New Orleans, Cane River, the River Parishes and Southwest Louisiana.

In that context, “Creole” often signified belonging to that cultural world. It was an identity shared across racial lines by those who were part of that linguistic and religious community.

But that would not remain the dominant framework.

Americanization and the Narrowing of Identity

After the Louisiana Purchase in 1803, American influence began to reshape everything.

English replaced French and Creole in public life and education. Over time, especially by the early 20th century, laws and policies enforced English-only schooling, accelerating the loss of heritage language.

At the same time, American racial frameworks, far more rigid and binary, took hold.

Where earlier systems, though complex, allowed for multiple categories, American society increasingly reduced identity to Black or white.

That shift had lasting consequences.

It didn’t erase Creole identity, but it compressed it, forcing people to navigate a world that no longer recognized the in-between.

Gens de Couleur Libres and the Creole Middle Space

One of the clearest examples of that “in-between” space is the community of gens de couleur libres. free people of color.

In Louisiana, particularly in places like New Orleans and along Cane River, these communities developed strong social and economic foundations. They owned land, built businesses, practiced their faith, and created tightly connected family networks.

Their existence challenges any simplified understanding of race in early Louisiana.

And many Creole families today trace their roots back to these communities.

But even within that space, identity was not static.

It was negotiated.
Lived.
Sometimes contested, even within families.

Survival, Choice, and the Weight of History

As Louisiana moved into the late 19th and early 20th centuries, those complexities became harder to sustain.

Jim Crow laws enforced segregation. Access to opportunity became increasingly tied to racial classification. Social and economic realities forced families into difficult decisions.

Some individuals chose to pass, aligning with whiteness when possible. Others maintained a strong identification with Black identity. Many navigated a more fluid space, even when the broader society resisted it.

These were not abstract identity debates.

They were decisions shaped by:

  • safety
  • access
  • survival
  • and the desire to protect future generations

We don’t have to agree with every choice to understand the conditions that produced them.

Color, Community, and Belonging

Even today, the legacy of those systems lingers.

Within Creole communities, variation in skin tone, features, upbringing, and community acceptance continues to influence how people identify—and how they are perceived.

And if we’re being honest, that can create tension.

I’ve seen it. I’ve felt it.

I’ve seen family members distance themselves. I’ve seen identity become a point of quiet division. And I’ve seen people who never felt fully claimed by any one group, even while carrying a deep sense of belonging within themselves.

Over time, I’ve come to understand that identity is not shaped by ancestry alone.

It is also shaped by relationship.

Who claims you.
Who teaches you.
Who embraces you.

And sometimes, who doesn’t.

A Personal Reflection

This conversation has never been purely academic for me.

I know what it feels like to be asked, “What are you?”, as though the answer should be simple, immediate, and easily categorized.

But when your history is layered, that question doesn’t land lightly.

It carries expectation. Assumption. Sometimes judgment.

What I’ve learned over time is this:

Clarity doesn’t always come from choosing one part of your identity over another.

Sometimes it comes from accepting the fullness of it, even when it doesn’t fit neatly into someone else’s framework.

Creole Identity Today

Today, Creole identity continues to evolve.

For some, it is rooted in genealogy and ancestry.
For others, in cultural practice—food, language, faith, and tradition.
For others, in the historical experience of free people of color and the communities they built.

And for many, it is all of those things at once.

That complexity doesn’t weaken the identity.

It defines it.

Why This Still Matters

This isn’t just about defining a word.

It’s about understanding the forces that shaped our families—and by extension, ourselves.

When you begin to see how history, policy, culture, and community intersect, you start to make sense of things that may have once felt fragmented.

And that understanding can be grounding.

So After All That…What Is Creole?

All I can give you is what I have landed on as my definition of Creole through lived expreince, chatting with other Creoles and reading A LOT of other “opinons” :

Creole is not a race. It is a cultural identity shaped by heritage, language, faith, family, and community, formed where multiple worlds meet, overlap, and evolve. It continues to grow as we deepen our understanding of our history and actively shape our future.

❤️ From Me to You

If you’ve ever felt like your identity didn’t fit neatly into a box…

That doesn’t mean you’re unclear.

It means your story is layered.

And that layering? That depth?

That’s not something to simplify.

It’s something to understand—and carry with intention.

Until next time, cousin,

take care of yourself, take care of your people, and keep living the Bella Creole Life.

With love and intention,
Cici

Please Note: This is my perspective, shaped by my family, my experiences, and what I’ve come to understand along the way. I encourage you to dig into your own roots, ask questions, do the research, and come to your own conclusions. There is beauty in discovering your story for yourself.

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ABOUT US

Why Bella Creole Life?

Because our culture isn’t fading—it’s evolving.
Because even in a digital world, we still need to visit.
Because our stories are worth telling.
Whether you grew up in Louisiana or found your Creole roots later in life, this space is for you. Here, we laugh, cry, pray, eat, and celebrate—just like our ancestors did. We share recipes, history, upcoming events, and personal stories. We shine a light on Creole voices from every shade, shape, and background.
Bella Creole Life is a love letter to our people—past, present, and future.
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Bella Creole Life is about honoring where we came from and inspiring where we go next. Let's keep visiting, like the old folks did, with love, laughter, and plenty of lagniappe to go around.
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