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Posts Tagged ‘Non-fiction’

27 June 2012

Pro Patria!

As I made my way to work this morning, my thoughts turned, as usual for this week in particular, toAfrica. I have been musing this week aboutGhanaand today I added the country I consider my second home –Nigeria.

I have been working here in Eko permanently for almost three months now. I am not new to Amalaman. Since I started working with Unilever after school in 2000, I have been visiting here for about fourteen times before moving here permanently. My first visit to Amalaman was in January 2001, and it was for a conference in Ogere. Interestingly, my first trip out ofLagosin April this year was toIbadanand we went by Ogere and right by the conference centre – nostalgic. In 2009, I stayed here for a full month.

I have been telling my colleagues at work, Mr O and Mrs B especially that when I read the papers, especially The Punch which is what I subscribe to at work, I find too many negative words being used, to much pessimism.

Just as an example, I have now picked, randomly, the Thursday June 14 2012 edition of The Punch. The words and phrases that jump at me: scandals, bribe, suspicion, rot, stinks, emergency, warns, recession. This is just the front page, I have not opened it yet. There is, however, one positive story – Man, 80, bags B.Sc in Sociology (that was so inspiring).

I ask my colleagues why.

When I come to work during the week and also move about during the weekend, I never regret being inNigeriaor working here. I love it. Challenges nevertheless.

Another argument I always have with my Nigerian friends – I tell them they have a romantic view ofGhana. Usually when I hear such statements as ‘Oh, it is not like this or that inGhana’, I challenge the speaker and ask ‘Have you ever been toGhana?’ Three times out of four, the person hasn’t been. It is not all that rosy in my homeland, we are all on this road to development, and have our challenges.

After my first degree and my statutory (second) National Service, I worked for five years in Ghanabefore going to the UKfor a year’s masters program. This was between September 2005 and September 2006. I submitted my dissertation on the 15 September, stayed for two weeks to help with the Welcome program for International Students and to tidy up a few issues and I was back in Ghana on the 2nd October 2006. I had resigned from Unilever before going for my studies and as at the time I returned, there was no firm offer from Unilever to take me back. A Ghanaian friend based in theUK asked me why I was returning toGhana, and why I didn’t like it in theUK. As a typical Ghanaian, I answered him with a question, querying him in return why he was in theUK and why he didn’t like it inGhana. I will state my reasons for returning home so soon, later in this piece but before that, allow me to share a statement a senior colleague made to me.

I had got a Chevening scholarship to study atNottinghamUniversity. As I considered my options, I went to consult with Adlai Opoku-Boamah, a senior manager at Unilever who had just recently returned from theUKon a similar scholarship. His advice was simple: “Nana, if you want to be a big man, come back home.”

I saw the development in theUK, I have seen the development inSouth Africaand since returning from my studies, I have been to other countries where the level of advancement is far above what transpires inGhanaand other African countries. I saw how hard people, including many Africans, are working in theUKto make that country prosper and become what it is. And I asked myself, Why sweat somewhere else?

Why sweat my youthful years away building someone’s village and not mine? Why put my shoulders to a wheel that turns another economy whilst the one that has my umbilical cord tied to it travels south? And in returning toGhana, I was returning toAfrica, to the continent that needs the resources to grow.

We berate the whites for slavery and argue that the slave trade took away all our energetic and productive young men and women. Are we not practising a voluntary trade today?

One of the issues that tickle in the wrong places is when my brothers and sisters living abroad visit home for a week and lament about everything and see nothing worthwhile to commend. Who should stay behind and build?

I was in school with a number of Nigerians, who stayed back. Try telling them to come back home to help, and it will be like selling amala to a Chinese man. How else canNigeriagrow if all the top brains are going out for studies and not returning? How canAfricaimprove if we don’t want to stay, sweat and swim against the tide of under-development and turn our economies around?

 

Who is to give the hope back? Who is to change the language we use? Who is to enervate us, inspire us, bring us the va-va-voom? It will not be the politicians, I can guarantee you. It will be us, the ordinary citizens.

Why sweat elsewhere when I can sweat on the continent, and stay in a betterGhana, a betterNigeria, a betterAfrica?

Why sweat elsewhere?

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Compiled by Nana Awere Damoah [With contributions by Kofi Boakye Afrifa, Gifty Allotey, Dzamesi Selorm, Rita Boateng Nyantakyi, Ayimadu Theduke Ofgh, Sandy Nartey, Elijah Atta-Aidoo, Henrietta Hammond, Kotei Neequaye, Francis K Ocloo, Abraham N Adomah]

 

Not to be left out, groups will soon emerge to push for the 2012 election of Nana A Addo. Enjoy these possibilities…

 

1. KONAS – Kookoasi Office of Nana Addo Supporters

2. WISAA – Women In Support of Akufo Addo

3. NAB FC – Nana Addo Bottoms Fan Club (eligibility criterion: ladies with heavy bottoms)

4. NASU – Nana Addo Supporters Union

5.  SADAA – Sons And Daughters of Akufo Addo

6. BASAA – Brothers And Sisters of Akufo Addo

7. AMSU – Akyem Mafias Supporters Union

8. TONA FC. teachers of nana addo fun club

9. NASK – Nana Addo Supporters of Kyebi

10. NACAB- Nana Addo Coalition Against Azorka Boys

11. KASOA – Kooko Ase Supporters Of Akufo-Addo

12.  NACOB – Nana Addo Coalition Of Ordinary Boyz

13. ASAANAA- Alliance of Sincere and Authentic Admirers of Nana Akuffo Addo

14. NAADBDSU – Nana Addo All Die Be Die Supporters Union

15. SMAOGSNA – Short Men Association Of Ghana Supporting Nana Addo

16. NAACAFS – Nana Akufo Addo Coalition Against Foot Soldiers

17. NASA - Nana Addo Supporters Around

18.  MUISONAA – Musicians United In Support of Nana Akuffo Addo

19.  NAADBDA – Nana Addo All Die Be Die Assembly

20. KANAS – Kyebi Association of Nana Addo Supporters

21. DUNA – Diers Union of Nana Addo

 

 

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My brothers and sisters, first and foremost,  I think basically that Ghanaians are a great bunch of people. We have our own expressions that are understood only by us. They come in various ways. We like to happy ourselves. Is that true for all Ghanaians, you may ask. My response? “Who told you?”

As a matter of fact, when you are contributing to a debate, you may get a response from a panellist to say your argument  does not wash, because the issue is neither here nor there. Should in case you try to correct him, he will stand him ground, that his point is the gospel truth, actually true fact. Should you try to interrupt, he will insist that you let him land. Otherwise, he will shout, “Please give me a break!”

Try putting in a call to the ECG consumer care line (does one exist?) to complain about an issue. The standard response: “We are working on it.” Walk to the centre, and you may meet workers there, and not get any response because ‘we are on break’. Break can last for 3 hours.  Try telling them that it is not good customer service, and the response will be “my friend, what is your beef? This is not America. You are even lucky we haven’t closed at 2pm”.

Supposing you work in that establishment and want things to be done differently, you will be asked ‘Is it your father’s work?’ Don’t push too much, because you will be branded as ‘too known’. Be careful, because the next time you misbehave, a superior could show you where power lies. A colleague may even warn you to be careful – “you di3, you know know!” The thing is that you may end up dismissed.

As far as these service providers are concerned, we have gone to the drawing board for too long; I wonder the efficacy of the modalities that have been drawn to move them forward. In this democratic dispensation, our leaders need to expedite action to get them to be efficient; already we are reeling under the effect of the ecomini. Then, and only then, can we say ‘Thumps up!’ to them.

When speaking to a Ghanaman, especially an older folk, and something is unclear, don’t say ‘what do you mean?’. That is an insult. You can say ‘I beg your pardon?’. Otherwise, you could be called a bleddy fool!

The rainy season in Ghana brings with it various excuses to skip work, especially for those in the civil service. You will find the guy pulling his cloth around him the more, as the rain hits his roof. The standard expression is “The weather bring itself! As for this weather, hmmm.” Frankly speaking, he is not going to work!

“Chop, make I chop some”; now that is not referring to a chop bar experience. It is the practice of hand-go-hand-come, corruption spread thinly so everyone is settled. If you attempt to swerve any member of the team, you will be asked “Charlie, where is my share?” Sometimes, one officer takes the lead in the corruption move and gives the rest back passes.

In a trotro, when the vehicle approaches where a passenger wants to alight, you could hear “Bass stop! I will drop here!” The mate should by now be ready with the passenger’s balance. If you don’t give the mate enough notice before your bass stop, be ready to experience a jolt as the driver applies apokye brake!

“Ei, Kwaku, I see you ch3 o!”

“Yes o, Akwasi! Do you know something? The last time, I was sitting my somewhere when I got a call from Bruno, you remember him?”

“Oh no, please remember me of him.”

“Ah, this boy who was in House 1!”

“Ahaa, I remember. But when you see him, will you see him?”

That means that because it’s been such a long time, it could be difficult to recognise him.

“OK Charlie, we will crush tomorrow.”

I like booklong people. They like book and they love to read. But the Ghanaman is likely to ask you why you are booklong like that, if all you do it to study, and quote big English.

When a statement seems too good to be true, the Ghanaman will exclaim “As for this one paa di3!” But if the matter sweet him, he will say “Say it and say it again!” But if the issue is worrying or irritating, you will hear him say “What kind matter koraa be this?”

When I attend events, and the MC starts by saying, without much ado (some actually say ‘without much I do’), he will be brief, I laugh; usually the opposite happens. Or when a speaker opens by “ I won’t take much of your time”, watch out. In church, when the pastor states “In conclusion…”, be prepared for one more hour of the sermon, particularly if he is in the spirit. You will never be the same, again. All too soon, which does not come soon enough, the pastor will touch on his ‘last but not the least’ point and you may heave a sigh of relief.

Ingenuity is a strong characteristic of a Ghanaman. ,Take away’ used to be available only for check-check or fried rice. These days, you can do take away from chop bars, with fufu and light soup koraa. When you leave the food joint, don’t be surprised to hear the proprietor say that ‘Please return back soon’, sure of his good customer service. However, if you go to such a joint and change your mind about patronising, perhaps due to insanitary conditions and are called back, you could give an excuse that you are not going away totally, just going to come. Express your opinion about the insanitary conditions, and you may hear who disagrees with you saying ‘but you why?’

 In fact, Ghana dey be! I feel you, Ghanaians.

With ECG’s dum-sor-dum-sor antics, we usually don’t have the opportunity to off the light in the mornings.

Ask a Ghanaman how he is doing. “We are managing o”, “It is not easy o” or “By his grace o”. Home hard usually, raining but the ground is still hard. But how for do? Small small, e go be. God dey.

We are noted for our courtesy, especially in addressing older folks. The combinations are endless and sometimes needless: Bra Oldman, Sister girl, Auntie Sister, Uncle Dada.

Some people just love to eat. Ghanaman will call such a person a foodian. When a foodian is your buddy buddy and visits you whilst eating, be careful about telling him ‘you are invited’ or ‘you have met me’. He could take over your meal and also ask silly questions like ‘was the akrantie shot or killed in a trap?’ A good answer, particularly if you are not amused, could be ‘lightning killed it!’ You will talk true! Shine your eyes about such friends.

As kids, we knew such friends, so when they found us eating, we would jokingly say, “All hands are invited except those who will eat!” Some foodians were not shy koraa, they would still join in!

Don’t cross the big men in our society. “Do you know who I am? Who are you? Who born dog? Who born you by mistake?’ are some of the expressions you could hear. If you are bold to stand up to them, the really annoyed one can tell you ‘Go way you! The cheek of it!’ Please increase the distance between you and that big man, otherwise you will smell pepper and be laughing at the wrong side of your mouth.

In relationship and marriages, choices differ. Some of the ladies like thick tall men and some like slim machos. Some men like women with enough body.

I was listening to a twi commentary on radio. Kotoko was playing against Hearts of Oak. It was a cagey encounter. “Mine oh mine,” the commentator kept repeating. He gave the commentary in between adverts for the many sponsors, most of them locally produced blood tonics. I wondered whether the players took those tonics instead of water on the field of play.

Watch repairers, tailors, seamstresses, radio repairs – these are amongst the artisans whose words are taken with bags of Annapurna salt. You visit their shops to check on the progress of your job. “Oh small time, I will finish; e lef small.” When they ask you to look up, look down, otherwise a piece of wood will pierce your eyes! When they see you approaching their shops, they pick up your article or equipment; once you leave, they switch to another’s.

Thiefman thief thiefman, no one vex! A simple law in Ghana. Similar to the law that says “you do me, I do you”. All die be die!

When I went to Form 1 for my secondary education, it was a whole different world. On the walls of my dormitory, I found out that some of those who had left had their names written there, as a reminder that they were there some. Apart from that memorial on the walls, no one remembered them. Some would come to visit the school, expecting some sort or remembrance. Zilch. They would ask the little ones :”When we were we, where were you?” Excuse me to say, we were in cyto and preparatory schools. They may have been obontias in their time but they forgot that ‘no condition is permanent.

Dining hall food made us miss home made cho all the time. Except for the mamabas and dadabas who were visited every weekend.

Some of the concoctions we were served in school defied characterisation. Some swore that the kontomire stew we were served was actually made from cassava leaves. Once a week, we got one egg each. For breakfast. Went with the bread and milo tea. Sometimes, we experienced scattey in the dining hall. Free for all. That was the only time the junior boys got more than a paltry portion.

One day, there was scattey. This friend of mine got an entire table’s portion of bread. This guy was a good runner. He could run like something. He really tried, his skin caught him papa, but he survived the chaos in the hall. After managing to exit the hall with two surviving loaves, an intelligent senior boy standing by the entrance just called him over, took the two loaves of bread (cut into five parts, with the one hard end) and just gave him that hard end of one of the loaves. Agyeiiii, monkey dey work, baboon dey chop! My friend was livid. “Nana, my eyes are red, but how for do? I can only hit him stick.”

In Ghana, people are willing to give you directions when you ask. However, there are basically two problems. First and foremost, if the person doesn’t know, he won’t tell you. Secondly, the instructions are rarely conclusive. Check out these directions to the post office: “please go straight aah, you will see a mango tree, pass in front of it and turn left, go straight again and ask anybody you see.”

Then there are those who never keep to their time. They follow the Ghana Man Time. You have an appointment and they call you a few minutes to the time. “Charlie, I dey traffic inside o!” or “I am in a long line at Circle.” Meanwhile, Ghanaman haven’t even left his house. If such a person is a friend, you have to manage the relationship well, otherwise you will not be on speaking terms with him soon. Usually, it is better to speak your mind and tell him, “Massa, this your habit is not fresh koraa, you got to change.”

When it came to such conflict in friendships, usually the female struggled. Small time nor, then one would  say  to the friend ‘we are not on speaking terms, don’t speak to me again. Aka aka aka, akaa dompe!’

There are friends who will promise to touch base with you, to call, but only flash. Especially when they are travelling. “I will bell you when I catch there.” They never have units on their phones. You try calling them and they won’t pick up. Their excuse? “My phone was on charge.” When you get them on the phone and they don’t want to talk, they go: “Hello hello, the network is bad o.” Reminds me of this guy who had a stomach upset, was in the loo when a call came through. “Hello, hello,” he said, “please call me later, I am in a serious meeting!” Indeed, thumps up to this smart guy!

“You fool too much”, some may be saying. Well, this is true Ghanaman talk. I taya self. I am going to come, catch you later. Perhaps we will crush moro, abi? I have to run, I am taking my little girl to the hospital for weighing.

Ah, weighing. In the good old days, weighing was not just weighing. You got tom brown if you took your child for weighing. I can’t remember whether the tom brown was for the child or the mum or elder siblings. The nurses also took a lot of it home, that is where I got my supply for school. And sometimes the tom brown came with powdered milk. Kai, that one could produce a steady stream of gas from the human exhaust pipe. We call that milk ‘dinat’, you ate it and flatulence was koko!

Opiana got a call from his friend Ascona.

“Massa, did you listen to Cool FM today?”

“Why? What is the matter?”

“Honorable Menum alleged that you have taken bribe.”

“Me? Ei! Does he have proof?”

“He said has documents and a tape.”

“I will call the station then. I challenge him to produce the tape (ah, do people still records tapes?). Today be today, he has been having verbal diarrhoea for so long! That statement is far from the truth, my honesty is as crystal as glass.”

“Opiana, he said that you rather have to prove that you are innocent.”

“Tweaa, na lie! I won’t! If he doesn’t provide the evidence, I will leave him to God.”

Ghana dey be. The land where any allegation can be made. I dey feel the country!

Okidoke, I got to go now, we will crush later!

[Acknowledgments: Gideon Segbefia, Nana Sam O, Yvonne Amenuvor, Elijah Ekow Atta-Aidoo, Kwabena Antwi-Boasiako, Tesa D Ayernor, Bernadette Adjei, Tawia Addo-Ashong, Dzamesi Selorm, Kweku Eyiah, Maame Akua Boateng, Priscilla Budu, Kay Frimpong Ankomah, Lily Afia Obirikorang, Bob Palitz, Qouphy Appiah Obirikorang, Ewuraba Gorgeouss, Raymond Atta-Kesson, Arko Akoto-Ampaw, Emmanuel Tehn-Addy, Fatahu Adam, Barbara Obempong, Nana Kweku Ankobiah, Kwame Ohemeng Gyan, Yvonne Boateng]

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I spent the weekend of 5 and 6 March 2011 dabbling in two of my delights: spending time with the youth in Cape Coast and ministering with Joyful Way Incorporated in Takoradi, now christened Oil City or OilKrom.

I was a priviledged to be invited by Nhyira Foundation to speak at the Gathering of Visioneers Conference in Capec Coast, bringing together pupils and students from Junior High and Senior High Schools in and around Cape Coast.

It was not all talk, though. We had some good music. On the bill was Michael Oware Sakyi, aka OJ. I had heard a couple of his soings but had neither seen nor heard him live. Two of his popular songs are Obi Nya W’aye and Koso Na Koso, which he released in 2003. I was impressed with him.

Before singing his last song for the afternoon, OJ shared with us his story, where he had come from, how far God had brought him, how his experiences and desires combined to make him who he had become, and provoked our thoughts that God had made each one of us unique. Then he sang Obi Nya W’aye, loosely translated from Akan as ‘someone wishes he/she was like you’. He asked us to sit quietly and listen to the lyrics. It was good advice.

The story is told of a man, let’s call him Kwame Nkrabia, who was so frustrated with life, his lack of success,and the non-achievement of his dreams that he decided to end it all. He was broke, in debt, with no hope of recovery. After begging for a few months, he felt he didn’t even have the strength to go on begging. One day, he left town, to hang himself.

Finding a forest area, Nkrabia selected a tree whose branches were strong enough to ensure the rope held. To delay any chances of his body being found, he decided to remove his clothes, leaving only his underpants. As he tied the noose, he detected some human activity in the undergrowth. With amazement, he saw a man kneeling by his discarded, tattered clothes, carefully folding them, whilst muttering a prayer for a good find. Nkrabea aborted his suicide mission.

Someone gave a testimony of expressing gratitude and appreciating that his lack of shoes was not that bleak, considering some had no feet. In secondary school, any time I was broke with no food in the chop box, I could thank God that I was able to eat in the dining hall, fresh food, not like the sopi boys who came from the nearby villages to help in the pantry so they could go home with the leftover food, what we discarded – actually not much so the sopi boys had to sweep the tables to take the crumbs and spills from our plates, literally.

It is good to compare yourself to your peers, to calibrate, so as to encourage yourself to do more. But we should always remember that our paths in life are different. Even twins don’t have the same characteristics, a friend reminded me at work this week. Even Siamese twins disagree on what to do from time to time. 

As my friend Dr Bisi Onoviran said, “you shouldnt compare yourself to others – they are more screwed up than you think.”

There is always someone who will admire something in you, wishing to be you. Who you are today is someone’s dream.

But that is not to say you have to remain at this point. You can only become better from today, as you keep on. But the journey forward is enhanced with a positive appreciation of the path you have trodden, lessons learnt and gratitude of the present. It is only then that you can practise what Eugene V Debs called ‘intelligent discontent’ which he stated “is the mainspring of civilization”. That discontent which says “I am grateful for what I am, but I can be more”.

Action Exercise

What is eating you up? Could it have been worse? Reflect and take action to improve, to go ahead, to be better.

Quotes

“I am content with what I have, little be it, or much.” John Bunyan

“It is not being out of heels that makes a man discontented, it is being out at heart. To be contented is to be good friends with yourself.” Bliss Carman

“All our discontents spring from the want of thankfulness for what we have.” Daniel Defoe

“Content makes poor men rich; discontent makes rich men poor.” Benjamin Franklin

“It is right to be contented with what we have, never with what we are.” James Mackintosh

“It is a mistake to look too far ahead. Only one link of the chain of destiny can be handled at a time.” Winston Churchill

“Envy is ever joined with the comparing of a man’s self, and where there is no comparison, no envy.” Francis Bacon

“There is neither happiness nor misery in the world; there is only the comparison of one state to another, another more.” Alexandre Dumas

“He that is born to be hanged shall never be drowned.” French proverb

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For this year, there will be things you want to maintain, some to learn/introduce into your life, and some to change. A few ideas, not in any order of significance.
1. Plan to be on time for meetings, events and appointments. Plan to arrive about 15 minutes before the appointed time. Nothing teaches discipline than this.
2. Read more. Target one book every 2 months, at least. Vary what you read: novels, non-fiction, poetry. Don’t only read the newspapers and magazines.
3. Get closer to God. Read your Bible, live what you read. Christ’s second coming gets closer each day. Pray.
4. Thank God and think. Borrowed from Pastor Mensah Otabil. Thank God for what He has achieved with your life, but think about how more useful you can be to your family, society and nation. Think.
5. Give. Give your substance/money, your time, your love, your talent. Give. He who gives even grows richer.
6. Write. Keep a journal. Record your thoughts, your plans, your experiences. Much better if you can share with others.
7. Smile. Laugh. Plan to see the positive, bright side of life. It could be worse, always.
8. Affect at least one life. Find someone you can touch, an activity you can use to affect your world. You don’t have to be great to touch a life, but continue touching lives and you will be great.
9. Spend quality time with friends and family. Visit your village. Visit your grandparents. Make time for your loved ones.
10. Keep going. Don’t stop. Don’t give up.
Happy New Year.

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This is very eclectic. Enjoy and Happy New Year!

1. Most publicized job: Foot-soldier.

2. The most misunderstood statement: “There are many ways to kill a cat.”

3. The most popular charge: “Causing fear and panic.”

4. The most consistent utility company: Electricity Company of Ghana (ECG). You could always count on them to disappoint.

5. The most popular new word: Suarez. Wikileaks was a close second.

6. The most popular passenger: Amina.

7. Most popular make of bus: Yutong. (courtesy Abraham Nebu Adomah)

8. The most popular social commentator: Nana Darkwa.

9. The busiest service unit: Ghana Fire Service. The success rate was, however, low.

10. The most silent politician: Dr. Edward Mahama

11. The most soothing and well-received political promise: “2011 is a Year of Action”. We had been expecting that statement for two years. Better late than never.

12. The most discussed publication: “Better Ghana Agenda Top 50 Achievements” of Prof. John Evans Atta Mills-led government in his first two years in office. A number of the achievements are on-going, yet to be completed. And some of the projects are going…slow.

13. Arrest of the year: the arrest of Shakespeare Ofori-Atta by the Ahenfie Police of the Okyehene Osagyefo Amoatia Ofori Panyin. Shakespeare Ofori-Atta, together with some other executives of the NDC in the constituency, in an interview on Peacefm’s “Kokrokoo”, threatened to visit violence, fire and brimstone on the newly assigned NHIS Manager to the area, Mr. Daniel Adjei Danjuma, should he dare enter his office to perform any duties. The arrest of the Tuobodom chief by Techiman youth came a close second.

14. The most popular abbreviation: STX.

15. The most talked about commodity: Oil.

16. The most hesitant aspirant: Nana Konadu. Will she stand for the NDC Flagbearership or not? Still not clear.

17. The most challenged group: Alliance for Responsible Opposition (AFRO). They experienced more opposition within their ranks, leading to suggestions to form another group: Alliance to Keep AFRO Together (AKAFROT).

18. The busiest actor: Agya Koo.

19. The promise most expected to be fulfilled: “We shalll appeal!” Made various times by the Attorney General.

20. The most listened-to politician: JJ Rawlings. Everyone listens to his speeches, even when some know they may not like what he says.

21. Politican loss of the year: Uncle Dan Lartey’s death (29 Dec 09 but felt in 2010). I miss him, sincerely. Theresa Amerley Tagoe’s death came a close second.

22. The most anticipated date: 15 December, when first production of Ghana’s Jubilee oil took place.

23. The most secret naming ceremony: The change of name/restoration of name/putting up of signage – Jubilee House called Flagstaff House.

24. The most consistent TV station: GTV. Nothing has changed since I stopped wearing napkins, the one that used pins to hold intact.

25. The most anticipated death (Africa): President Yar-Adua of Nigeria. His aides told us he was getting well and started jogging when no one believed them.

26. Team of the year: Chelsea…of Berekum.

27. The most scarce product: LP gas.

28. My inspirer of the year: Farida Nana Efua Bedwei. It was a pleasure meeting her face-to-face this year.

29. Preacher of the year: Pastor Mensah-Otabil. His sermon “By Wisdom a House is Built” is one of the best I have ever read.

30. The worst excuse: Joshua Clottey’s poorly timed meal of Banku and okro stew with kawe. (Courtesy: Genevieve Parker)

31. Gossips of the year: Two Members of Parliament (names withheld). One said: “I saw the Minority leader threw his hands at you as the Speaker,” and the other said “Mr. Speaker, I overheard Hon. Hackman say you are not correct.” In both instances, Hon. Doe Adjaho was in the Speaker’s seat.

32. Absentee worker of the year: The Speaker of Parliament.

33. Best poetry line heard: “You said I was your heartbeat; are you still breathing? Because I just died.” From a poem by Ama Asantewaa at Ehalakasa Talk Party

34. Political bad move of the year: Gbagbo. [Gbagbo taw) ni 3gbo!] Best proverb that describes what he is doing was heard on BBC: “Only a foolish monkey climbs a tree in a burning forest.”

35. Footballer of the Year: Asamoah Gyan. My lesson from Asamoah Gyan’s progress: never listen to naysayers, including your own doubts. The journey from reject to elect is powered by belief, persistence and hardwork.

36. Boxer of the Year: Joseph Agbeko

37. The upgraded language in town: SLAFA – Suddenly & Locally Acquired Foreign Accent.

38. My satirist of the year: Francis Qouphy Obirikorang.

39. My best indigenous quote of the year: “Let’s thank God and think.” Pastor Mensah Otabil. This one came close too: “The mind of the ant is bigger than the ant-hill, afterall it [the ant] created the ant-hill.” Prof Atukwei Okai

40. Political gaffe of the year: Tie between – Rojo Mettle-Nunoo, John Jinapur and John Mahama. Rojo – For insulting Nurses; Jinapor for denying his boss, the Vice President, had signed a letter even before speaking to his boss, only to change his statement a few hours later; John Mahama – For his “Baloney” statement (Courtesy Kotei Neequaye, I added the Jinapor one).

41. The most debated word: Collateralization.

42. “Agyeeeeiiii” moment of the year: When Asamoah Gyan missed the penalty. Very very close second: when Suarez pushed the ball from the net.

43. The most forgotten Prophet: Apraku (my daughter) (courtesy Kwaku Sonny)

44. Biggest false alarm of the year: Ghana’s so called earthquake. (courtesy Sandi Nartey)

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Burger a.k.a bogga: A specialist, with practical work experience in animal/herbivore dentistry, harvesting apples and tomatoes. Visits home country on special occasions. Grand entry; incognito departure due to bankruptcy.

I.C Quaye: see tsunami

Tsunami: falsified natural occurrences. Very rare in nature. Noted for stealing academic credentials preferably certificates and transcripts.

Kotoko: one who praises you initially and condemns you in the long run. Can also mean someone well versed in the art of spiritualism. E.g. She “kotokoed” her ex-husband. Now he has swollen testicles.

Hearts: anyone who likes free things.

Kwasi Nyantakyi: a deformity where one’s 32 set of teeth shows when smiling. E.g. I dislike Roberta for her smiles. She’s always “nyantakying”.

Milovan: not all that glitters is gold, also known as fooling the masses by false pretense of not understanding a language.

Opeele Boateng: anyone who is below 4 feet. Can also mean someone who always wants to be an assistant.

Essien: KVIP commissioner

John Mensah: someone who is uncertain about his/her age. Can be due to a lot of factors some notably being late opportunities, fear of growing old and retirement-phobia.

Sule: a rebellious and spoilt brat.

Nana Aba Anamoah: well vested and gifted in booby-ology. Someone who can’t sit still for a second, and always bouncing like a gummy bear.

Gideon Aryeequaye: A man who spends a long time trying to look good can also mean a man well versed in the art of makeup.

Atta: a slow starter. Someone who’s progress is thwarted by setbacks from verbal expressions, impatient followers and also underestimating a task.

Muntakar: a large collection of meat and pampers. Can also mean someone on the most wanted list of vegetarians.

Akuffo: the act of looking for a needle in a haystack. See mirage.

Ndoum: someone who can see a light at the end of the tunnel even though that end of the tunnel is blocked.

Oscar: anyone who is unsuccessful at a business venture but will not quit due to inexplicable circumstances.

TV3: of a person; someone who copies blindly and badly.

GTV: of a person; someone who doesn’t respond to change.

Viasat: of a person; someone who does the same thing over and over again and expects different results. See a boring person.

YFM: a collection of fake people.

Malaika: a competition where beauty overshadows brains.

Politician: the deliberate attempt of using 0.00000001% of your brain.

Ministries: a place where real work is done outside the office settings.

Landlord: anyone who is nice at the beginning and grouchy at the end. See mood swings

ECG: an institution that should have been in existence during the reign of Adolf Hitler.

Kwamena: a youth with a big head and a loud mouth.

GCB: the act of putting your money in a metallic piggy bank. Deposit is very easy; withdrawal is like sleeping with the Devil.

Oxford Street: a place where the not-so-wise shops.

NADMO: Government warehouse for storing sugar, salt and used mattresses.

Batman: a loose talker; someone who talks before reasoning. E.g. “Hey Gyamfi, why the batman talk?”

Stephen Appiah: a museum artifact.

Con artists: see sellers at Kwame Nkrumah Circle.

Accra Mall: a place where 99% of people walk aimlessly, buy nothing, walk to and fro with no particular aim in mind. A place to see gold digging and lazy women.

Pure water: impure water in a sachet.

Dei Tumi: someone who combs the internet looking for free information and later sells to a larger and ignorant group of people. See entrepreneur.

Qouphy

http://www.facebook.com/anti.rhythm#!/note.php?note_id=466216416126&id=1562187031

http://www.ghanaboom.com

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You know you are in Ghana when street lights are visible decorations by day and invisible shadows by night

You know you are in Ghana when ambulances take people leisuerly away from hospitals rather than hurriedly to hospitals

You know you are in Ghana when a politician pays you to get him into office only for you to pay him when he gets out of office

You know you are in Ghana when the Fire Service rushes to the scene of a fire only to realise they have no water in the Fire tender to fight the fire

You know you are in Ghana when the Fire Service uses water to fight every kind of fire

You know you are in Ghana when high rise buildings come up every month when we do know the Fire Service cannot fight fire above four storeys

You know you are in Ghana when police cars with siren blarring are full of people going to a wedding

You know you are in Ghana when the policeman asks you for the torchlight in your car at 12 noon

You know you are in Ghana when the policeman gives you all the reasons why he should not take you to court for a traffic offence

You know you are in Ghana when a customs officer who approachs you says, “$20 is not enough because we all have to share”

You know you are in Ghana when a 60 year old man is introduced as the Chairman of the Asikuma Youth Association

You know you are in Ghana when the toll booth on the motorway is closed for maintenance at 7 am

You know you are in Ghana when a motorway still continues being referred to as a motorway when it has clearly become a street

You know you are in Ghana when a driver reverses on a motorway

You know you are in Ghana when prime time on radio is used to discuss the meaning of an insult

You know you are in Ghana when a person uninterested in a political position still stands for elections due to the pressure of the masses

You know you are in Ghana when the time a person graduates from a tertiary institutions, he would have gone through five graduations, the first one at the prime age of five years

You know you are in Ghana when the Head of State states that religious leaders have more power and authority than he has

You know you are in Ghana when annointing oil develops a flash point lower than most combustible materials

You know you are in Ghana when the headline of a major newspaper has an error

You know you are in Ghana when the headline of a story is written a week before the story develops and the two do not agree

You know you are in Ghana when herbalists weave their submissions with biblical verses, even when the guy doesn’t believe the other parts of the bible

You know you are in Ghana when all alcoholic drinks are aphrodisiacs

You know you are in Ghana when a four year old asks: ‎”Who put off the lights? President Atta-Mills eh?”

You know you are in Ghana when nobody dies a natural death

You know you are in Ghana when the cab driver accelerates when the traffic light is amber

You know you are in Ghana when drivers do a U-turn in the middle of a T-junction

You know you are in Ghana when a pastor can actually sit on radio and say he will put a curse on someone for being insolent to him

You know you are in Ghana when someone feels insulted after asking him, “what do you mean?”

You know you are in Ghana when a census enumerator asks you, “Your wife, is she married?”

You know you are in Ghana when you hear names of football clubs like Asante Akyem Weder Bremen, Gomoa Dominase Everton, Betomu Hull City, Sefwi Wiaso Barcelona, Patase Milan

You know you are in Ghana when you are branded ‘too known’ for insisting the right things must be done

You know you are in Ghana when you hear bus stops called ‘Basket’, ‘Potholes’, Tiafiahe’

You know you are in Ghana when you need permission from land guards before you build your house

You know you are in Ghana when the total cost of building a house includes the cost of keeping a land guard

You know you are in Ghana when a person accuses another of corruption without proof and insists the accused must provide evidence to show his innocence

You know you are in Ghana when a person is deemed guilty until he is proven innocent

You know you are in Ghana when you laugh about serious issues to keep your sanity

You know you are in Ghana when you laugh to prevent you from crying

You know you are in Ghana when you read this, shake your head and smile

Because you know, only in Ghana can you not have a dull day!

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I AM notorious for not being a big fan of motivational books hence I do not spend my time reading many of them. My reason is simple: it appears to me that most authors of motivational books just recycle old material, put new covers on them and then take them to the market to sell and since I hate to be swindled I stay away from them. That could be a mistake but it is what I don’t do.

I had therefore hoped that when I lay hands on ‘Through the Gates of Thought’, the new book authored by Nana Awere Damoah, it would not be a motivational book because that would have de-motivated me from reading it as much as I would love to. Thankfully it was not wholly a motivational book as I would know from turning the pages.

There are aspects of motivation and empowerment in the book but well presented by the author to ensure that it is not the normal ‘in your face’ kind of motivational writing. What you have is just a drop here and another there for good measure.

Again, it must be noted and forcefully emphasised that ‘Through the Gates of Thoughts’ is difficult to categorise into any particular genre as the author ensures that he hops around different areas of human endeavour to bring home his point. There is sometimes a sense of dé jà vu – that you have seen this somewhere before, but the way it is presented would make it difficult to trace.

Also, it is not an autobiography otherwise the author would have spoken only about himself and his life story, albeit borrowing very heavily from things that happened in his life to demonstrate some of the points that he sets out to drive home to the reader.

Furthermore, ‘Through the Gates of Thought’ is by no means a fictional work as a chunk of the material that combine to make the content of the book are factual accounts of things that have happened while Damoah was around or had been told of them to have happened. There are some which may be a bit farfetched but factual as well.

So what exactly is the subject matter of ‘Through the Gates of Thought’? It is basically a book that sets out to call on everybody who reads to come out of a certain situation by encouraging them to take an action in order to achieve certain goals. In my humble view, Damaoh’s goal in this book is to reinforce the saying that “the mind is a terrible thing to waste” and therefore I see it more as a book that exhorts and inspires the reader.

Continue reading Francis Doku’s review on his blog: The Francis Doku Blog

About the Reviewer:

Francis Doku is an ace Ghanaian arts and entertainment critic, who keeps a column in the widely circulated Graphic Showbiz, where he does a weekly review of programmes and presenters of radio and TV. He keeps a blog at http://francisdoku.blogspot.com/.

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Recently, I attended a function that had the Vice-President of Ghana in attendance. It was the first time I had seen him at close range, and it felt cool.

The start time advertised on the ticket was 6.30pm. I spent the morning with my two sons visiting some friends and family and got back home around 2.00pm. At 3.00pm, I went to the bedroom to take a nap, telling my wife wake me up at 4.30pm, so I could dress and leave home at 5.30pm for the program, which was taking place in Accra. I usually give myself an hour to drive from Tema to Accra for functions. I had a very deep sleep, and Vivian woke me up a few minutes to 6 pm. I guess she saw how tired I was and decided to have mercy on my soul!

Anyway, I was on my way soon enough and got to the venue of the program just before 7pm. The Vice-President arrived soon after I did.

A few minutes after 7pm, one of the masters-of-ceremonies (MC) came on stage and called the meeting to order. He then invited a pastor to give the opening prayer, after which the chairman for the occasion was introduced. The speech by the chairman, in response to the introduction, was delivered with fervour and the message was apt, relevant to the theme for the celebration.

The MC came back on stage just as the chairman was ending his speech and told the chairman, and us all, that we were supposed to have been on air (TV, I guessed) at 7pm, but we were still not on air, so he would have a contract with the chairman to call him back on stage to give his speech again, for the benefit of the nation! My senior colleague at Unilever and mentor, Yaw Nsarkoh, once said that sometimes we have to laugh at outrageous occurrences to prevent us from crying. I laughed at the incredulity of the suggestion!

Dinner was served, and at 8.30pm, the MC called up the pastor to repeat the opening prayer, the chairman was introduced again, and the chairman repeated his speech! I was really impressed that the chairman delivered with even greater passion (well my companions at my table indicated that he had just eaten).

The event closed eventually at 12.30 am. We had been in the hall for five and a half hours, and it was an awards program. I wondered why we couldn’t do it in two hours, really. And was it the most cost effective use of executive time, of the Vice-President’s time? I also wondered why the start time was advertised as 6.30pm when it was clear that the actual event would begin at 8.30 pm? Was it because it was envisaged that the invited guests would be late, so let the time be given two clear hours to make allowance for lateness? Was it just to get us there to eat and wait for the actual start time?

A couple of months ago, I attended an annual general meeting which started at 11 am, even though the invite indicated 10 am to start. Why?

If you invite me to a meeting, and you know it will start an hour late, give me the time plus that hour, so I am on time. I was in a meeting when someone came an hour later than the time the meeting was to start. The meeting did start an hour late, anyway, so when the person was queried, he quipped “I know I am late, but I am on time!” I didn’t find the remark funny.

We laugh about Ghanaman’s time but it is becoming a national joke. And it even shows in the lackadaisical attitude we display when our work causes delays on other’s schedules. I will explain.

On Friday 20 August 2010, I was on my way to Accra from Tema when I saw some work being done on the motorway, on a bridge close to the Abattoir. “Traffic cometh!” I thought. The following week, the traffic on that part of the road was so great it was a headache leaving work to Accra from Tema. The impact on commuters’ time is of no concern to the contractors. In some other jurisdiction, an alternative route would have been found so traffic build-up is minimised. Not so in Sikaman.

You go to offices, banks, pay points at our utility and telecommunication companies and the longer the queue for services, the more important the workers there feel, it seems.

In discussing this issue of lack of respect for time with George Owusu-Ansah, a senior colleague in Unilever, now working in Singapore, he told me that in an environment where nothing is predictable, people tend to make and accept excuses and then arriving late at a meeting becomes a norm, not an aberration. He went further to say that for the couple of years he has lived in Singapore, he has never spent more than thirty minutes driving to work from home. Such predictability makes for good planning. It takes me fifteen minutes to drive to Tema from home without traffic, with normal traffic, forty-five minutes is average. I have spent two hours making the same trip some days.

With such erraticism, one could learn not to even set off on time and does not target arriving on time for an event, knowing that just a simple “Oh, traffic!” will suffice. And that is when the indiscipline starts. But don’t develop this bad habit, don’t.

In my view, two qualities of a serious person suffice: the person keeps to time and keeps his/her promises.

Promises. We complain that our politicians don’t keep their promises but do you keep yours? Gary Jones, a former Training manager at Unilever Ghana, made a statement has been with me for a long time: “A good manager is one who does what he says he will do.”

Keeping to one’s time is a promise honoured. Keeping your promise or otherwise is a reflection of your integrity. It always amazes me how businessmen in Ghana act as if the number of times they fail to keep their promise is directly proportional to their status as crack businessmen. It gives me a very negative impression of that person. Some take your call, and promise to get back to you by email or phone, because they are engaged, in a meeting or another activity, and never get back. It is better not to promise if you know you cannot deliver, keeping to the advice by George Washington, “not [to] undertake what you cannot perform, but be careful to keep your promise.”

On a daily basis, in meetings, we promise to follow up on an action, to send an email by a certain time, to update our teams with relevant information to aid the achievement of a specific milestone. Any time we fail to deliver to such a promise, we dent our integrity, we waste time, we fail our team and company.

If we will be taken serious as a nation and a people, we need to urgently tackle the canker of lateness. And we have to learn to spend less time during functions. A four-hour church service can easily be over in two hours if we cut off the lengthy announcements and just paste them on the notice board, giving only the highlights during the notices. I used to visit an Assemblies of God church in Nottingham. The entire service took two hours – from the welcome session, praise and worship time, testimonies, music ministration, sermon and announcement, and enough time to have tea at the end of service! All in two hours. And I always felt well-fed and nurtured spiritually (and physically) after service. Most churches in Sikaman have a lot to learn, to cut down the time wastage we exhibit every Sunday. Many programs, especially our music concerts, are guilty of this.

The urgency of the precarious state of our nation is at variance with our lack of urgency, acting as if time is an unlimited resource. To borrow from Loren Eiseley, we need to refine our sense of time, to upgrade our appreciation of this resource and utilise it profitably. Philip D Stanhope speaks my mind when he says: “Know the true value of time; snatch, seize and enjoy every moment of it. No idleness, no laziness, no procrastination.”

We re-denominated our cedi in 2007; perhaps, we should have done same to the Ghana Maybe Time! Indeed, time is money, time lost is never found again and we should respect it as such in this land of our birth – Sikaman.

Action Exercise

Quite simple: keep the promise you just made before reading this article. Plan to be on time for the next meeting you have planned, after reading this. And make it a habit. A habit is something you do repeatedly. The change we seek in our attitude towards time consciousness and keeping promises in our nation starts with you, and now.

Quotes

“We are all manufacturers – making good, making trouble or making excuses.” H V Adolt

“You never get a second chance to make a good first impression.” Will Rogers

“Always tell yourself: The difference between running a business and ruining a business is i.” Frank Tyger

“Punctuality is one of the cardinal business virtues. Always insist on it in your subordinates.” Donald Robert Perry Marquis

“Punctuality is the soul of business.” Anonymous

“I recommend you to take care of the minutes, for hours will take care of themselves.” Philip D Stanhope

“You may ask me for anything you like except time.” Napoleon Bonaparte (to one of his officers)

“Those who make the worse use of their time are the first to complain of its brevity.” Jean de la Bruyere

“Many people take no care of their money till they come nearly to the end of it, and others do just the same with their time.” Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

“Wasted time means wasted lives.” R Shannon

“From time wasted there can be no salvage. It is the easiest of all waste and the hardest to correct because it does not litter the floor.” Henry Ford

“Nothing inspires confidence in a business man sooner than punctuality, nor is there any habit which sooner saps his reputation than that of being always behind time.” W Mathews

“Be avaricious of time; do not give any moment without receiving it in value; only allow hours to go from you with as much regret as you give to your gold.” LeTourneux

“Lost, somewhere between sunrise and sunset, sixty golden minutes. Each set with sixty diamond seconds. No reward is offered, for they are gone forever.” Horace Mann

“Without the management of time, you will soon have nothing left to manage.” William D Reiff

“Thus we play the fool with time and the spirits of the wise sit in the clouds and mock us.” William Shakespeare

“Life is too short, and the time we waste in yawning never can be regained.” Stendhal

“Waste of time is the most extravagant of all expense.” Theophrastus

“A promise is an I.O.U.” Robert Half

“We must leave exactly on time. From now on everything must function to perfection.” Benito Mussolini

“The innocent and the beautiful have no enemy but time.” W B Yeats


End note

Nana Damoah is the author of Through the Gates of Thought (April 2010) and Excursions in my Mind (October 2008), both published by Athena Press UK.

All these articles are listed on his blogs Nana Awere Damoah (www.nanaaweredamoah.wordpress.com) and Excursions in my mind (www.excursionsinmymind.blogspot.com) as well as on the author’s Facebook pages.

Both books can be purchased online from http://www.amazon.com, http://www.amazon.co.uk, and http://www.athenapress.com, as well as Amazon sites in France, Germany, Finland, Japan and Canada. You can also purchase them from Exclusive books in South Africa and Botswana, Kalahari.co.ke in Kenya and and other online outlets.

In Ghana, obtain copies in Accra Silverbird bookshop (Accra mall) and Beacon Books, East Legon.

Contact Nana on +233264631209 or ndamoah@yahoo.co.uk for any enquiries.

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