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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

Roots and Remembrance: Fall in Cloutierville, Louisiana

Christie Rachal

When the air turns crisp and the wind carries that smoky scent of burning leaves, I’m instantly transported back to my childhood in Cloutierville, Louisiana.

I can almost see myself walking down Main Street, bundled up against the cool breeze, the sidewalks scattered with leaves. Fall in Cloutierville had a particular rhythm — part celebration, part reflection — that has never left me.

🎃 Spooky Nights and Small-Town Magic

I remember Mr. Allen and Ms. Barbara’s house, an old Antebellum beauty that stood like a character out of a Southern ghost story. Every Halloween, they transformed it into a spooky seemingly haunted mansion, that was the destination for all us kids on Halloween night.

Mr. Allen would sit in the dark behind the wrought-iron fence, handing out candy with a flashlight, his face barely visible. The whole scene felt thrilling to a child,  like something straight out of a movie,  and yet it was all part of our small-town charm.

Up and down Main Street, we’d trick-or-treat from house to house, laughing, running, and squealing, the night air full of sugar, smoke from bonfires, and mischief.

🕯️ All Souls’ Day — A Night of Light and Love

Just a few days later, our attention turned from playfulness to reverence. All Souls’ Day was sacred in our community,  a day to honor our ancestors and remember those who came before us.

Families came home from far and wide to clean and paint the graves, to sweep leaves from the plots and repaint the white borders. As dusk fell, the priest would bless the cemetery, and the night would come alive with the soft flicker of hundreds of candles — tiny flames dancing in the darkness, each one representing a soul remembered and a love that never faded.

To this day, I can still picture it: the quiet reverence, the smell of wax and earth, the sound of whispered prayers carried on the wind.

Usually, around this time of year, we would see the first frost. My grandfather always said that about six weeks after you see the first fog, you’ll experience the first frost,  and he was almost always right. On this recent visit home, I was blessed to experience everything I’ve described here: the smells, the memories, the laughter, the love. On Monday morning as I gathered my things to head back to New Orleans and Mama was getting ready to leave for her work at the Creole Heritage Center, she called out, “Look out the back window!” I did — and there it was. The first frost had finally come, blanketing the roofs of the houses like a quiet blessing.

👵🏽 The Women Who Held Us Together

Inside the church hall, there was another kind of light — the laughter and energy of the women who seemed ancient to me then but were really just in their fifties or sixties.

Women like Miss Doris, Ms. Ella, Aunt Artelia, Miss “Sister”, Miss Rosalie, Ms. Judy,  my Aunt Lucille, my Aunt Doris and my Grandma Cecile. They were the backbone of the church, the cooks, the organizers, the prayer warriors, the doers.

Many of them have passed on now, but their daughters remain, carrying the mantle, keeping the church and our traditions alive. When I see the ones who are left, my heart swells. They always smile wide when they see me,  proud that I remember them, happy to be remembered.
And I do remember. I always will.

Looking back, I realize how deeply this community fed me — spiritually and physically.
As a child, I didn’t fully appreciate it. I thought the “village mentality” was just nosiness — too many people in your business, too many aunties telling you what to do. But now, as an adult, I understand that it was love. It was protection. It was Creole at its core.

That belief that we are our brother’s keeper, that we rise by lifting one another — that is the heartbeat of who we are.

Today, in a world where we’re more “connected” than ever yet more isolated than before — separated by screens, busy schedules, and the illusion of closeness — I long for that kind of connection again.

💫 Reclaiming What We’ve Lost

Through Bella Creole Life, I want to rekindle that sense of community. To remind us of our roots, to celebrate our elders, and to create a space where connection and compassion thrive again.

Life will always be messy, uncertain, and complicated. But what remains constant is our ability to love one another, to build community, and to honor those who gave us both roots and wings.

That is what I carry from Cloutierville — and what I hope to pass on through this platform.

💖 From Me to You ❤️

If you’ve ever found yourself missing the warmth of community — the sound of familiar laughter, the feeling of being known, the peace that comes from shared prayer and simple fellowship — you’re not alone.

Our ancestors built something beautiful: a way of living that fed both body and soul. We can build it again, together.

So light a candle, say a prayer for those who came before you, and reach out to someone today. Let them know they’re remembered.

That’s where the healing begins.

With love,
Bella 💕

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!
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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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