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 Family: Where Our Story Begins

Creole Family Is More Than Blood—It’s Bond, Belonging, and the Stories That Shape Us
In Creole culture, family isn’t just who raised you—it’s who fed you, prayed for you, danced with you, and told you stories under the stars. It’s the aunties and cousins, the parains and marains, the church elders and neighbors who became kin. Our families carry the spirit of who we are and the wisdom of who we’ve always been.
At Bella Creole Life, we celebrate Creole families—past, present, and future—as one of our sacred pillars.
FEATURE

Monthly Family Features 

Every month, we spotlight a Creole family from a different Louisiana region or diaspora community. These features highlight:
Where they’re from and where they are now
Family matriarchs/patriarchs and their legacy
Photos, oral histories, and cher-ished traditions
How they’re keeping Creole culture alive across generations
Know a family whose story should be told? Nominate a Family to Feature or want to tell your family's story?
FIND YOUR PEOPLE

Connecting Across Distance

 Connecting Across

Distance

Whether you’re still in Louisiana or living across the country (or the world), this page is here to help you find your people—the Creole cousins, kinfolk, and connections you didn’t even know you had.
1
Discover other Creole families by region
2
Connect through reunions, family Facebook groups, and newsletters
3
Browse a directory of Creole family surnames, heritage societies, and cultural groups
4
Submit your own family info or search for shared roots

Mission

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.
CREOLE ROOTS

Trace Your Creole Roots: Genealogy Tools & Tips

Trace Your Creole Roots: Genealogy

Tools & Tips

We know that researching Creole family history can be both beautiful and challenging. With names passed down, stories scattered, and histories erased or hidden, it takes patience and care. But your story is waiting to be found.
Here’s how we help:
Getting Started Guide
Step-by-step advice for beginning your Creole genealogy
Recommended Resources
Church records, Freedmen’s Bureau archives, Creole heritage books, and more
Templates & Worksheets
Family tree charts, interview questions for elders, and record logs
How-To Videos
Interviews with Creole genealogists and researchers sharing their tips
Resources for Researching Your Roots
Including the Creole Heritage Center, Louisiana Creole Research Association, and local parish archives
REUNIONS

Reunite  & Remember 

Many of us are trying to piece together parts of our family story—looking for cousins we haven’t met yet, or hoping to understand where a great-grandmother came from. This section helps bring those pieces together.
Post about upcoming family reunions
Find out if your surname is linked to other known Creole lines
Join community-led projects and DNA groups focused on Louisiana Creole ancestry
Because sometimes, the biggest surprise isn’t what you find—it’s who you find.
Find Out
FEATURED

Explore Our Genealogy Workbooks

Explore Our Genealogy

Workbooks

Best Seller
5.0
Bella Creole Life Genealogy Workbook (E-Book)
by Christie Rachall
$4.99
Buy Now
Best Seller
5.0
Bella Creole Life Genealogy Workbook (PDF)
by Christie Rachall
$5.99
Buy Now

Faith . Family . Food . Fun

Bella Creole Life, we celebrate the vibrant spirit of Louisiana Creole culture through the four pillars that have shaped our lives for generations. Bella Creole Life is a place for anyone with Creole roots or a love for the culture to gather—digitally and spiritually.
BLOGS

Blog Posts 

From heartfelt essays to community reflections, cooking memories, family history how-tos, and travel stories from Creoles across the globe.
Explore More

Loving Hard & Living Proud — Lessons From the Elders Who Raised Me

Christie Rachal

By Christie “Cici” Rachal | Bella Creole Life

In every Creole family, there is an unspoken truth: love is our inheritance.
Not just the gentle, quiet kind — though we have that too — but a deep, steady, stubborn love that weathered storms, survived migrations, crossed oceans of hardship, and still managed to bless the next generation.
When I think of family, I don’t think of small circles.
I think of villages.
Villages made of grandparents, great-aunts, uncles, cousins, neighbors, and church ladies who loved us so completely that it shaped our very bones.
I think of the elders who taught me how to love hard and live proud.

T’fra & Cecile — Love That Worked the Land, and Worked Things Out

My maternal grandparents, Papa Felix “T’fra” Monette and Momo Cecile, were married 62 years — sixty-two years of learning, forgiving, arguing, making up, leaning on one another, and building a life that fed more than just their own children; it fed our entire community.

From them I learned:

Love is work and grace, braided together.

  • Forgiveness is a daily choice.
  • Love is work and grace, braided together.
  • Family is a structure you uphold even when life feels heavy.

Their home was a lesson in resilience.
Their marriage was the blueprint for the kind of love I hope to experience at least once in my life.

Grandma Carrie — A Wild Heart and a Courageous Spirit

My paternal grandmother, Carrie Dunn, whose story I only fully understood after her passing in 2024, was a revelation.
As I organized her documents and photos, her life unfolded piece by piece:
A woman who could have chosen a glittering life — beautiful, magnetic, a force —
but instead chose family, chose courage, chose hard work, and built a life with her own hands.

From her I learned:

  • Where my wanderlust came from
  • Why I crave adventure and that “something more” that pushes me to reinvent myself
  • Why the wild, dramatic streak in me has always felt so natural

She was flawed and human, and she loved us fiercely. I adore her all the more for it.

The Elders Who Carried Me Before I Knew I Needed Carrying

My great-aunts and great-uncles — on both sides — formed a net that caught me whenever life shifted beneath my feet.It was lived in front of you.

Uncle Neal and Aunt Artelia (Aunt Tee) Dunn, who lived next door when I was growing up, offered a kindness that was steady and soft:

  • Aunt Tee’s front porch swing
  • Her gentle hands rocking me
  • Her chicken gravy and rice — the best in Cloutierville — nourishing both body and soul
  • Her love that felt like being one of her own

Uncle Neal worked tirelessly, teaching me without words that providing for family takes labor, sacrifice, and pride.
And Aunt Lucille Conde, my confidant, my secret-keeper, my soft place to land —
She spoke to me as though I were already grown, already capable, already worthy.

From all of them I learned:

  • Pride is not arrogance; it is heritage.
  • Dignity is not money; it is behavior.
  • Your word is your bond.
  • Hard work and kindness walk hand in hand.

Papa’s Last Lesson: The One That Changed Everything

Days before he passed, Papa T’fra told me something I didn’t fully understand until much later:
“My baby, sometimes people love you the best way they know how.
You have to decide if you are loving them back the best way you know how.
And if you are… is it enough?”
He told me to keep others out of my relationships. To guard my heart but not harden it.
To understand that love is not perfect — but it is holy when it is honest.
I carry those words everywhere.
They softened me. They saved me. They made me grow up.

A Creole Woman’s Way of Loving

A woman I adored, Momo Mary Rachal, my Uncle Merl’s mother, summed up Creole women best:
“One thing about Creole women — we will either feed you to death or love you to death.
And sometimes we do both.”

And it’s true.

  • Our love is big.
  • Our tables are full.
  • Our homes are open.
  • Our arms are strong.
  • Our hearts hold generations.

This is the Creole way.

Explore the Family Page 🌳

If you want to trace your roots, reconnect with family, or rebuild the stories that brought you here, explore the Family Page of the Bella Creole Life website.
The Genealogy Workbook offers step-by-step guidance for documenting your family history, interviewing your elders, and capturing the stories that matter most.
The Family Reunion Planning Guide will help you stay organized and on track as you plan the gathering that brings everything — and everyone — together.


💛 From Me to You ❤️

If you ever doubt your worth, your roots, or your belonging, remember this:
You come from people who loved hard and lived proud.
People who survived.
People who prayed for you before your name was ever spoken.
People who taught you to stand tall and love deep.
You are their wildest dreams — and their answered prayers.
With all my love,
Cici

Read More
WHY FAMILY

Why Family Matters 

Our family stories carry more than names. They carry resilience, love, heartbreak, humor, faith, and tradition. They are the foundation of everything Creole. When we tell them, we honor our ancestors—and we give our children a place to belong.
Bella Creole Life is here to help you preserve those stories and reconnect with the beautiful, complicated, powerful tapestry that is your Creole family.
Let’s find each other. Let’s remember. Let’s keep our roots alive.
Find Out Now!
Lets
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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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